What’s Happening
Donald Trump on Friday declared that all executive orders and official documents signed by Joe Biden via an “autopen” device — rather than by hand — are “terminated” and have “no further force or effect.” According to Trump, these autopen-signed documents were executed illegally and without Biden’s direct authorization. He warned that if Biden claims the opposite, he could face perjury charges.
Trump’s announcement affects an array of presidential directives: he said he is nullifying not just executive orders, but anything else signed via autopen during Biden’s presidency.
Background: What Is the Autopen & Why It Matters
- An autopen is a mechanical device that reproduces a person’s signature automatically — historically used by presidents to sign large volumes of documents.
- Use of autopen is not unprecedented: earlier presidents have authorized its use under certain conditions, and U.S. legal precedent allows bills or documents to be signed this way when properly directed.
- During his administration, Biden reportedly signed many orders via autopen — though exact number and which orders are affected remain unclear.
Why Trump Says He’s Invalidating the Orders
- Trump argues that the use of autopen by Biden wasn’t authorized directly by the president himself — calling the process “illegal.”
- He claims the method reflects a power grab by staff behind Biden, undermining the legitimacy of those executive actions.
- While presidents can legally use an autopen — a rule affirmed by the Justice Department in 2005 — Trump contends that such use should be restricted to “very unimportant papers,” not major executive orders or high-stakes government directives.
Possible Implications & Open Questions
- Legal and Constitutional Uncertainty: It’s unclear whether a sitting president can retroactively invalidate a predecessor’s orders simply on the basis of how they were signed. Legal scholars have historically accepted autopen-signed documents as valid, raising doubts about Trump’s move.
- Policy Reversals: If the cancellation holds, many of Biden’s executive orders — potentially spanning immigration, environmental regulation, pardons, and more — could be undone or require reauthorization.
- Political Fallout: The move may intensify debates about executive power, precedent, and administrative continuity in the U.S. — especially surrounding sensitive topics like pardons and high-impact legislation.







