I understand why you may default to that lame argument not having an understanding of how American government and law are structured.
Let's start at the beginning for you. There are three branches of government. The Executive, the Legislative, and the Judicial. As long as each branch of government operates withing its constitutional scope, it matters not whether the Legislature enacts more or less laws from one year to the next or whether a court decides more or fewer cases than another court or its predecessor.
Ditto for the Executive Branch. The President has the power to issue Executive orders in any number he wishes. Whether it is more or less than the previous president is irrelevant.
Alright, now that I have brought you up to speed, let's proceed from there.
The problem sets in when a Judge issues a court decision which is actually within the jurisdiction of the Legislative Branch. Or when a President uses an executive order to supplant the power of the Legislature. The number of properly issued executive orders by a president is neither here nor there. It is the unconstitutional ones that are problematic.
Refer to Obama's/Biden's use of Executive Order to supplant/circumvent existing immigration legislation, and Biden's use of executive order to nullify the power of Congress to exercise its powers in this area.
That was long, but one must start with the basics with you.
You are welcome.