Republican
Bush to propose freeze on new government regulations
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[September 22, 2015]
By Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican
candidate Jeb Bush will pledge on Tuesday to place a freeze on new
federal government regulations if he is elected president in November
2016, saying bureaucratic rules are weighing down the U.S. economy.
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The former Florida governor, trying to bump up his popular support
by offering conservative policy ideas, will make the announcement in
an appearance in Iowa, the early voting state where he lags behind
front-runner Donald Trump.
For Bush, regulatory reform is a key part of a broad economic agenda
that he says would be aimed at generating annual U.S. economic
growth of 4 percent. He has already laid out ideas for tax reform
and immigration policy.
Bush will lay out his regulatory plan at a late-morning roundtable
discussion with farmers and small business owners at John Putney’s
Farm in Gladbrook, Iowa.
His campaign said in advance of the event that under his proposals,
he would stop implementation of new regulations until they are
approved by an agency head nominated by him.
Complaining that the cost of complying with regulations is costing
U.S. businesses billions of dollars, he would require that any new
regulatory costs be offset by rollbacks in regulations elsewhere.
Bush will cite in particular the costs of complying with the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform legislation enacted after the
near-collapse of the financial system in 2008-09. The law has taken
a toll on smaller, community banks, he says.
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"As a result, it has become increasingly difficult for Americans
with less than perfect credit to access capital to start, upgrade,
or expand businesses and pursue their ambitions," his campaign said.
Bush, once the heavy favorite for the Republican nomination, is now
fighting to climb higher in the polls after the summer rise of
Trump.
(Reporting By Steve Holland; Editing by Michael Perry)
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