Three House committees - Agriculture, Oversight, and Education
and Workforce - targeted agencies including the Environmental
Protection Agency, the Securities and Exchange Commission and
Department of Labor in what the chamber's No. 2 Republican,
Steve Scalise, called a "fight to free the American people from
the power-hungry administrative state."
The letters follow a Supreme Court ruling in June that struck
down the so-called Chevron deference. The latter refers to a
1984 precedent involving oil company Chevron that gave
government experts the final say in how laws passed by Congress
should be interpreted.
Conservatives have insisted for decades that the ruling gave too
much power to government bureaucrats over elected lawmakers.
The letters from the three committees' chairs requested lists of
existing regulations that were challenged in court and upheld
based on the Chevron deference, as well as pending rules that
could have been defended using the Chevron deference.
The chairs also asked for a list of rules that could have an
annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more, a "major
increase in costs or prices for consumers," or "significant
adverse effects" on competition and employment, among other
factors.
The requests could provide a road map for conservative activists
to sue agencies over specific regulations.
Michael Regan, the administrator of the Environmental Protection
Agency, told the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday that the
court's decision "hits the EPA extremely hard."
(Reporting by Moira Warburton in Washington; Editing by Scott
Malone and Matthew Lewis)
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