Joe Biden doesn't seem to have plans to delay acting or rest as soon as he steps into the White House.

US President-elect Joe Biden and his hand-over team are preparing to push all the way to push Congress through an ambitious new economic stimulus package, while at the same time outlining plans for a series of actions.

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Joe Biden in Delaware in July Photo: Reuters

Biden will take office on January 20, 2021, with the urgent task of addressing medical, economic and racial crises.

The scope of the stimulus bill will likely be affected by the Senate seat race in Georgia as early as January next year, about two weeks before Biden takes office.

Biden is a cautious man with executive decrees.

In an interview with NBC News last week, Biden particularly emphasized the stimulus package, pledging that it will target the most vulnerable communities and support local governments.

"There will be a lot of things going on at the same time," Biden said.

The medical staff and emergency responders should be the first to receive the Covid-19 vaccine once it is licensed and distributed to the public.

However, Biden admits whether his agenda is met or not "depends on what kind of cooperation I may or may not get from Congress".

The President-elect mentioned his pledge to send a bill to the Senate to help promote the granting of citizenship to 11 million undocumented immigrants, but also said he was ready to immediately reverse some of the executive orders.

Before the election, Biden's campaign said he intends to take a series of measures to help reduce emissions, increase public investment in clean energy and encourage reform and innovation in the private sector.

According to observers, Biden's to-do list after being elected will be very long.

Biden simultaneously announced to him that he would reconnect with government labor unions.

The shadow from Trump's tenure overshadowed much of Biden's early-stage agenda.

The first step would be to issue an executive order that "prohibits all White House employees or any member of the government from initiating, encouraging, obstructing or improperly influencing investigations, or

Biden's "day one" agenda also included a promise to immediately rejoin the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and the World Health Organization (WHO), after Trump withdrew the United States.

Biden's desire on climate change is to host a "global summit" capable of finding and building more ambitious platforms than was agreed upon in Paris.