Posted on 01/31/2017 6:19:48 AM PST by VitacoreVision
White House officials described President Donald Trumps Executive Order for Reducing Government Regulations and Controlling Regulatory Cost as Trumps one in, two out plan: For every regulation promulgated by a federal agency, that agency must identify two existing regulations to be targeted for extinction.
The order also sets a cap of $0 for the cost of new regulations, with the only exceptions being military and national security regulations. The president said when signing the order, This will be the biggest such act that our country has ever seen. There will be regulation, there will be control, but it will be normalized control.
Budget hawk Mick Mulvaney, head of the Office of Management and Budget, will be the final arbiter over which regulations go into effect and which ones will be repealed or abolished.
The purpose of the new executive order is to be prudent and financially responsible in the expenditure of funds, from both public and private sources. Public funds (i.e., tax revenues) will be handled through Congress budgeting process, while private funds (i.e., those costs borne by private companies and industries saddled with compliance) will be required to comply with [the new] Federal regulations. To that end, for every new regulation issued, at least two prior regulations be identified for elimination.
Trumps EO is five pages long. President Ronald Reagans 1981 executive order reducing the burdens of existing and future regulations, on the other hand, was twice as long and did little to shrink the size, cost, or reach of the federal government. Reagans approach was to use both the Office of Management and Budget, headed by David Stockman, and his Presidential Task Force on Regulatory Relief as curbs to excessive regulation.
Reagans approach was different from Trumps in significant ways. As Reagan stated in his executive order:
Administrative decisions shall be based on adequate information concerning the need for and consequences of proposed governmental action.
Regulatory action shall not be undertaken unless the potential benefits to society from the regulation outweigh the potential costs to society.
Regulatory objectives shall be chosen to maximize the net benefits to society.
Reagan required that every major rule $100 million in impact or greater would be subject to a Regulatory Impact Analysis, which allegedly would give Stockman more information about its impact before his decision whether or not to approve it.
In 2009, Ray Harvey, a follower of Ludwig von Mises and a freelance writer, looked at just how effective Reagans executive order was in cutting government. Although Harvey focused on government growth in general under Reagan rather than specifically on the growth of the regulatory state, his conclusions were discouraging:
Statistically speaking, the size of bureaucracy, in terms of sheer civilian manpower, increased dramatically under Reagan, so that by the time he was finished, there were well over 200,000 more government workers than in 1980, when he took office.
In addition:
Government spending had increased to 28.7 percent of the national income even higher that Jimmy Carters outrageous numbers;
Under Reagan, Social Security spending went from $179 billion in 1981 to $269 billion;
Farm programs skyrocketed: $21 billion to $51 billion;
Medicare jumped from $43 billion in 1981 to $80 billion in 1987;
During the Reagan era, federal entitlements alone rose from $197 billion to $477 billion;
Reagan also upped the spending a few notches, thus: the Gross Federal Debt went from $900 billion to $2.7 trillion;
Foreign aid went from $10 billion to $22 billion;
He ... placed a five-cent-per-gallon tax on gas;
He hiked up taxes on the trucking industry;
Reagan increased regulation of the auto industry by not opposing that monstrous thing known as the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE).
Reagan promised that he would abolish both the Department of Energy and the Department of Education but he did neither. In fact, those agencies budgets more than doubled under Reagan, according to Harvey. Harvey left out the fact that, after four and a half years, Stockman resigned over Reagans failure to abolish those departments and his inability to rein in out-of-control government spending.
It may be that Trumps approach to cutting the regulatory state is different enough from Reagans to have some success. But history isnt comforting.
This should keep libs hopping. Hundreds of regs eliminated. They will need to protest each roll back and explain why “this is not who we are.”
I think this is my favorite among the 100 day endeavors as a great kick in the head to regulators.
The way it is written, wondering if a conniving agency could “identify” two existing regs to be “targeted for extinction”, with the targeting lasting a year, two years, or forever, while the new regulation is in place and in force.
Unfortunately, very hard to inforce.
Regulations are not unitary and simple, easily numbered for deletion.
I would like to see it work, but I see many ways for the bureaucracy to weasel out of this.
This is my favorite one so far:
In Blow to Globalism, Trump Withdraws From TPP Trade Regime
http://www.thenewamerican.com/world-news/asia/item/25218-in-blow-to-globalism-trump-kills-monster-tpp-trade-regime
While I agree 100% with the intent of this, I question if it is allowable by executive order. Isn’t legislation — its passage or its revocation — supposed to be the exclusive purview of the Congress? Executive branch’s involvement is supposed to be only the enforcement (or non-enforcement, a la Obama years).
My understanding is that Congress has abdicated it’s responsibilities and turned over a lot of authority to the agencies.
Agree. Bureaucracies are, by definition, full of weasels. Hence, the weasel-like behavior. The only way this EO will actually have an effect is if the weasels who attempt to subvert the process are thumped, i.e., assigned to count rocks in Adak (unaccompanied tour) for the duration of their career. No “rubber rooms” like the NY school system; just butt-freezing weather and tedious assignments.
Like Thunderdome?
I like this policy. Now what if we apply it to immigration also?
We’ll accept one LEGAL immigrant for every lib that leaves. I think we could start with Hollywood since they were so anxious to leave if Trump won.
I meant to say one LEGAL immigrant for every THREE libs that leave.
That’s a good ratio to start with.
I remember him mentioning this during the debates. It’ll be challenging but very much needed.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.