In sweeping move, Trump puts regulation
monitors in U.S. agencies
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[February 25, 2017]
By David Shepardson and Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump signed an executive order on Friday to place "regulatory reform"
task forces and officers within federal agencies in what may be the most
far reaching effort to pare back U.S. red tape in recent decades.
Trump signed the directive in the Oval Office with chief executives of
major U.S. corporations standing behind him including Dow Chemical Co
<DOW.N>, Lockheed Martin Corp <LMT.N> and U.S. Steel Corp <X.N>.
The sweeping order directs every federal agency to establish a task
force to ensure each has a team to research all regulations and take aim
at those deemed burdensome to the U.S. economy and designate regulatory
reform officers within 60 days and must report on the progress within 90
days.
"Excessive regulation is killing jobs, driving companies out of our
country like never before," Trump said before signing the order. "Every
regulation should have to pass a simple test; does it make life better
or safer for American workers or consumers?"
The effort is part of a Republican push to undo many of the actions of
former President Barack Obama, who left office last month after two
four-year terms.
In 1981, President Ronald Reagan created a presidential task force on
regulatory relief but that effort did not establish task forces at the
cabinet level. Other presidents including Bill Clinton and George W.
Bush, carried out attempts to reduce or streamline government
regulations.
Trump's order requires agencies to "measure and report progress in
achieving the president’s directives." Each task force will make
recommendations on which regulations to repeal or simplify, Trump said.
The order says agencies should seek to repeal regulations that "inhibit
job creation," are "ineffective," impose costs that exceed benefits or
"create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with regulatory
initiatives and policies."
Trump on Friday said the United States does not need "75 percent of the
repetitive, horrible regulations that hurt companies, hurt jobs."
The Republican has vowed a sweeping cut in U.S. regulations and
previously ordered agencies to repeal two rules for every new one
adopted.
Trump's chief strategist Steve Bannon told a gathering of conservatives
on Thursday that deregulation, which he called "the deconstruction of
the administrative state," was a top priority for the administration.
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President Donald Trump is surrounded by business leaders as he signs
an executive order on regulatory reform at his desk in the Oval
Office at the White House, U.S. February 24, 2017. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst
Scott Slesinger, legislative director at the Natural Resources
Defense Council environmental group, said "this order is a directive
to kill the safeguards Americans depend on for clean air, drinkable
water and safe food."
OBAMA REGULATIONS
The Trump administration says executive orders from the previous
government cost hundreds of billions of dollars. The Obama
administration said the benefits of those regulations to the public
far outweighed the costs.
The White House said the Obama administration finalized more than
3,000 regulations. Many of those were required by Congress.
Robert Verchick, president of the Center for Progressive Reform, a
think tank, criticized Trump's new order as "clearly aimed at
embedding his overtly political, anti-protections agenda at federal
agencies that are supposed to be using science and expertise to
safeguard us all."
U.S. Chamber of Commerce senior vice president Neil Bradley praised
the Trump administration for "tackling the regulatory state head
on.... We look forward to working with the federal agencies to help
identify rules that harm the economy and threaten jobs."
The order Trump signed in January sets an annual cap on the cost of
new regulations but does not apply to most financial reform rules
introduced by the Obama administration.
The Trump administration also ordered a freeze on regulations
pending review and has stopped some regulations from taking effect.
(Reporting by David Shepardson and Steve Holland; Editing by Lisa
Von Ahn and Alistair Bell)
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