Trump makes heavy use of executive orders despite past criticism

The president will reportedly reach 32 orders by the end of his 100th day.

The White House, earlier this week, lauded the president’s use of the pen, saying he “has accomplished more in his first 100 days than any other President since Franklin Roosevelt," though this claim has been disputed by historians.

And a measure of this success was comparing the number of executive orders he signed to that of previous presidents:

Trump himself, has slammed the use of executive orders as an example of weak leadership and inability to work with Congress, and most of that criticism was directed at a president who had Republican majorities in Congress opposing him.

On CBS's "Face the Nation" in August 2015, Trump said: “The leadership is what you have to do. I don't like executive orders. That is not what the country was based on. You go, you can't make a deal with anybody, so you sign an executive order… So now [Obama] goes around signing executive orders all over the place, which at some point they are going to be rescinded or they're going to be rescinded by the courts.”

In further remarks in December 2015, Trump described Obama by saying, "I don't think he even tries anymore. He just signs executive actions."

Even prior to launching his bid for the presidency, Trump weighed in on the subject, writing on Twitter in July 2012, "Why is @BarackObama constantly issuing executive orders that are major power grabs of authority?"