President Trump will spend his first full workday at the White House signing executive orders — which will include the formal withdrawal from the Trans Pacific Partnership, or TPP, trade deal — as well as meeting business executives, union leaders, workers and top members of Congress.

“Busy week planned with a heavy focus on jobs and national security. Top executives coming in at 9:00 A.M. to talk manufacturing in America,” Trump said in a Monday morning tweet.

According to the White House, Trump will sign executive orders at 10:30 a.m., receive the presidential daily briefing at 11 a.m., host Vice President Mike Pence for lunch at noon, meet with union leaders and American workers at 3 p.m., meet with congressional leaders at 5 p.m. and end the day with a one-on-one meeting with House Speaker Paul Ryan.

It was not yet known what executive orders the newly sworn-in president plans to sign.

But according to a report in Axios, Trump plans this week to sign orders that would put into place an executive branch hiring freeze, create a lobbying ban on officials who serve in his administration, call for the creation of a plan to beat ISIS and seek to implement his immigration policy.

The report also states Trump may officially withdraw from TPP and order a review of another trade deal, NAFTA, do something related to cybersecurity and reinstitute the Mexico City policy, which limits abortion providers around the world from receiving US taxpayer money.

CNN reports that withdrawal from TPP will be the first order. The US Congress, however, never adopted the trade deal.

Elsewhere in the White House, Press Secretary Sean Spicer is scheduled to hold his first press conference at 1:30 p.m.