ESTABLISHED 2024 A CIVIC RECORD OF ACTIONS TAKEN AGAINST THE AMERICAN PEOPLE — AND HOW WE RESTORE THEM July 12, 2026
A nonpartisan civic restoration project

UndoTrump.com

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Tracking every rollback, reversal, and overreach — and the path back to the America we know.

1,233
Actions Tracked
967
Still Active
43
In the Courts
40
Restored
538
Days Tracking

The Record

124 Actions  ·  Page 13 of 13
Expired

Public Service Recognition Week Proclamation 2017

President Trump signed Proclamation 9634 on May 5, 2017, designating the week of May 7-13, 2017 as Public Service Recognition Week. The proclamation honors federal, state, local, and tribal government employees for their service. This is an annual ceremonial proclamation with no direct regulatory or budgetary impact on Americans.

Expired

National Charter Schools Week Proclamation 2017

President Trump signed Proclamation 9678 on April 28, 2017, designating the week of May 1-7, 2017 as National Charter Schools Week. The proclamation calls for recognition of charter schools and encourages Americans to observe the week through appropriate ceremonies and activities. As a proclamation, it carries no regulatory force and does not directly change policy or law affecting Americans' access to or enrollment in charter schools.

Expired

National Foster Care Month Proclamation 2017

President Trump signed Proclamation 9657 on April 28, 2017, designating May 2017 as National Foster Care Month. The proclamation directs federal recognition of foster care and children in the foster system. The direct impact on Americans is symbolic recognition; the proclamation itself does not create new programs, funding, or policy changes.

Expired

President's Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis

Executive Order 13784 was signed on March 29, 2017, establishing a commission to study federal drug addiction and opioid crisis response policies. The commission was tasked with reviewing existing federal programs, identifying gaps, and making recommendations to the President. The order created a temporary advisory body; it did not directly change drug policy, funding, or treatment access but initiated a review process that informed subsequent administration proposals on opioid response.