Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota is the first 2020 Democratic presidential contender to reveal a comprehensive plan for her first 100 days in office, unveiling an agenda of dozens of executive actions and legislative rollouts she would spend political capital on in the early days of her presidency. Few of the items in the 16-page document outlining her plans are radical. Many are standard Democratic thinking: She’ll rejoin the Paris Agreement on climate change, end the Trump administration’s lawsuits challenging the Affordable Care Act, introduce legislation to ban assault weapons and bump stocks and end family separation at the border. Other ideas reflect Klobuchar’s personal priorities. Klobuchar, who has played up her farm state ties in an effort to boost her stock in the early voting state of Iowa, is promising to restore staffing levels at the Agriculture Department to where they were before Donald Trump took office. Klobuchar, who chairs the antitrust subcommittee in the Senate, is proposing an “aggressive retrospective review” of mergers. Many are executive actions that Klobuchar can take unilaterally. Others will require legislative action from Congress. Some of the suggestions are vague, including some promises to develop plans at a later date.

Elise Amendola/ASSOCIATED PRESS Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar rolled out a 16-page plan indicating how she would spend her political capital early on in her presidential administration.