President-elect Donald Trump vowed to start the U.S. withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, institute a five-year ban on federal officials lobbying after leaving government, and cancel “job-killing” regulations on energy production within his first 100 days in office.

Trump detailed executive actions he can take “on day one” — as soon as he is sworn in as president in January — in a video released Monday. He included a proposal that “for every one new regulation, two old regulations must be eliminated.”

Absent from the list were some of his most controversial plans, such as building a wall between the U.S. and Mexico, repealing Obamacare, and undoing the nuclear deal with Iran.

He directed his message at the American people amid transition planning that he said is going “very smoothly efficiently and effectively,” despite reports of infighting, increased scrutiny of his business dealings, and press groups’ transparency concerns.

“My agenda will be based on a simple core principle: putting America first,” he said, whether it is “producing steel, building cars or curing disease.”

As on the campaign trail before the Nov. 8 election, he said the TPP trade deal was “a potential disaster for our country.”

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He also vowed to cancel regulations on shale production, clean coal and other energy sources, develop a plan to secure vital infrastructure from cyber-attacks, and investigate all abuses of visa programs that undercut the American worker.

Trump said he would also take action designed to “drain the swamp,” or fight political corruption in Washington. In addition to the five-year ban, he said he’d seek a lifetime ban on former administration officials lobbying for foreign governments.

The video was released as Trump packed another day full of meetings with potential administration picks and those offering counsel. Trump on Tuesday said on Twitter that more meetings were scheduled at his namesake Manhattan tower. He’s expected to travel to Florida for Thursday’s Thanksgiving holiday.

A top adviser said there is no rush to fill the top ranks of his White House and Cabinet.

“His appointments will come out when he’s ready and not a moment sooner because these are big decisions and they shouldn’t be rushed,” Kellyanne Conway, who served as Trump’s campaign manager, said Monday in New York. She said the Trump team already is “weeks and weeks and weeks ahead” of previous presidential transitions.

On Trump’s schedule in New York on Monday were onetime primary rival Rick Perry, the former Texas governor; former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a Trump loyalist; Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, who’s been mentioned as a potential secretary of the Department of the Interior; former U.S. Labor Secretary Elaine Chao; and former senator Scott Brown, a possible candidate for Veterans Affairs.

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Also meeting with Trump was Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, who broke with much of her party’s establishment to back Senator Bernie Sanders over Hillary Clinton during the Democratic nomination race.

Along with potential administration officials, Trump met Monday with anchors and executives from ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox News, and CNN for an off-the-record discussion. During his campaign, Trump had lashed out at all of the networks at some point for how they covered his run.

Conway called the session “very cordial, very productive, genial, but it was also very candid and very honest.”

Amid anti-Trump protests in some cities, Conway said the media share a responsibility to deliver the message that the election is settled and the results should be accepted.

Separately, in an interview Monday on Bloomberg Television’s “With All Due Respect” program, Conway dismissed questions about how Trump will deal with potential conflicts of interest involving his business empire. She said Trump has a team of legal advisers who will “make sure he complies with the law” regarding his financial affairs. Management of his businesses will be turned over to the control of his adult children, she said.

“He will have no authority whatsoever over his business,” Conway said.

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Trump returned to New York after spending the weekend receiving a parade of visitors at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, including at least three potential Treasury secretary candidates with deep Wall Street experience: billionaire investor Wilbur Ross; Jonathan Gray, global head of real estate at Blackstone Group; and David McCormick, president of the hedge fund Bridgewater Associates.

The transition team also announced more so-called landing teams that will begin meeting with top officials at federal agencies to begin the process of handing over the keys to a Trump administration. There are some 4,000 executive branch jobs that the new administration will be filling with political appointees.

Among those named to the landing teams were Charter Holdings Chief Executive Officer Ray Washburne, a Republican financier, to liaise with the Department of Commerce. Washburne also may be under consideration for interior secretary, CNBC reported, citing sources it didn’t identify.

Two more names have been floated for the Homeland Security Department. The Washington Post reported that Trump is considering retired Marine Corps general John F. Kelly, who was head of the U.S. Southern Command, and Francis Townsend, who was President George W. Bush’s adviser on homeland security and counterterrorism.

Of the three candidates Trump interviewed over the weekend for Treasury secretary, according to a person familiar with the hiring process, Steven Mnuchin, a member of the transition team’s executive committee, is thought to be the front-runner.

The final decision could hinge on whether Trump opts for a loyal and known quantity — Mnuchin was also the finance chairman of his presidential campaign — or looks outside his inner circle.

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Ross, who may be on the short list for Commerce secretary as well, spent about 30 minutes with Trump, with both men declaring it a “very good meeting.” Ross, who turns 79 next week, was involved in high-profile bankruptcy restructurings in the 1980s and 1990s, including those of Eastern Airlines and Drexel Burnham Lambert.

The Ross meeting covered “negotiating the best foreign deals, American manufacturing and job creation,” as well as “engaging Ambassadors to participate in creating more economic opportunities for America,” Trump’s office said.

McCormick, a West Point graduate who served in the first Gulf War, later worked at Treasury and in the White House during the George W. Bush administration. With McCormick, Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence talked “global financial markets, currency and the American economy,” and “special emphasis was placed on restoring long-term economic growth rates on an annual basis of four to five percent,” Trump’s office said.

The “in-depth” discussion with Gray “included the economy, global capital markets and the world financial situation,” as well as “future legislation regarding the tax code and long-term debt,” Trump’s transition office said in a statement Sunday night.

James Mattis may have the inside track to run the Pentagon after Trump gave the retired Marine Corps general a big thumbs-up for a second day, while 2012 Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, a former Trump critic who the president-elect met with on Saturday, is under consideration to be the nation’s top diplomat.

Mattis, who rose from rifleman to U.S. Central Command leader, spent about two hours at the golf resort on Saturday with Trump and Pence. In brief remarks on Saturday, Trump termed Mattis, 66, a “great man.”

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Among those also said to be in the mix to run the Pentagon or take another administration job is Perry, who served in the Air Force. Trump met with Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, who served on combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, on Nov. 18, also to talk about the defense position, said two people with knowledge of the meeting. Another of Trump’s meetings Sunday was with retired general Kelly, the former head of the Southern Command.

Romney, who called Trump “a phony, a fraud” during the 2016 campaign, now appears to be a top contender to become secretary of state.

Pence told “Fox News Sunday” that the former Massachusetts governor and private equity executive is “under active consideration.” Romney, 69, spent about an hour with Trump and Pence on Saturday, and also spent time alone with the president-elect.

Besides Romney, Trump’s short list to become the nation’s top diplomat is said to include former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee, John Bolton, a former U.S. ambassador to the UN, and Nikki Haley, the governor of South Carolina.

Brown, the former senator from Massachusetts, said he was interested in the VA job. “I think the toughest job in the Cabinet is to lead the VA because while it has so many angels working there, it has so many great problems as well,” he told reporters at Trump Tower after meeting with the president-elect. “The VA can’t do it all. We’re going to have to outsource some of those cases to private vendors, obviously.”

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