Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump’s biggest success story

The president and regulatory relief

- Gary Sylvester Las Vegas

The federal regulatory state has been growing like kudzu for more than eight decades. While many mandates do indeed promote health and safety, a great deal of others choke freedom, productivi­ty and growth. During the past six months, however, President Donald Trump has been doing his best to scale back the overreach.

By the time President Barack Obama left office, the Heritage Foundation reports, his administra­tion had saddled the United States with some 23,000 regulation­s with a cumulative annual price tag of $122 billion. As the Daily Signal notes, the annual regulatory costs left behind by Mr. Obama were nearly double that of his predecesso­r, President George W. Bush. And that number doesn’t even include covert costs such as lost innovation, reduction in individual liberties or costs associated with dozens of regulation­s issued by independen­t agencies — agencies that are not obligated to perform cost-benefit analyses for new major rules.

In 2016 alone, the Obama administra­tion issued more than 2,600 new regulation­s, including 54 major rules, that dumped $14.7 billion in new annual costs on the private sector. Some 40 percent of those major rules were finalized after the November election on Nov. 8, including some of the costliest rules of the year.

When Mr. Trump took office the next day, his administra­tion inherited 1,986 so-called “midnight” and other regulation­s in various stages of publishing and adoption. Like presidents before him, he immediatel­y directed his department heads to suspend any proposed rules until a senior administra­tion appointee approved them. According to the Daily Signal, he also instructed agency heads to withdraw regulation­s that had been sent to the Office of the Federal Register but had not yet been published, and to postpone rules that had been published but had yet to take effect.

And he didn’t stop there.

Between Inaugurati­on Day and June 30, his administra­tion finalized only eight major rules, with only two increasing regulatory burdens. His administra­tion’s Office of Informatio­n and Regulatory Affairs also conducted far fewer reviews — and withdrew a higher proportion — of new rules, the lowest number since the 1990s. On top of that, Mr. Trump worked in conjunctio­n with Congress to apply the Congressio­nal Review Act to get rid of 14 Obamaera regulation­s. He has also issued 39 executive orders and 17 memoranda, two of which are designed to significan­tly alter the nation’s regulatory process.

As the Daily Signal aptly describes, the amount of regulation imposed on our nation “acts as a stealth tax on the American people and the U.S. economy and exacts an incalculab­le toll on individual liberty.” Mr. Trump’s effort to wither the administra­tive state has been the White House’s biggest success story. Here’s hoping it continues.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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Fax 702-383-4676 100 gun fatalities each day — and with 521 mass shootings in the last 477 days, according to The New York Times — I have to ask when will it finally be appropriat­e, decent and unshameful to address the scourge of gun violence.

Maybe after the next incident?

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