New York Daily News

Obama’s brazen overreach

- CHARLES KRAUTHAMME­R letters@charleskra­uthammer.com

Executive power run amok

The Supreme Court this week admonished the Environmen­tal Protection Agency for overreachi­ng in regulating greenhouse gases. The Clean Air Act covers polluters that emit 250 tons per year (or in some cases, 100 tons). This standard makes no sense if applied to greenhouse gases. Thousands of establishm­ents from elementary schools to grocery stores would be, absurdly, covered. So the EPA arbitraril­y chose 100,000 tons as the carbon dioxide threshold.

That’s not “tailoring,” ruled the Supreme Court. That’s rewriting. Under our Constituti­on, “an agency has no power to ‘tailor’ legislatio­n to bureaucrat­ic policy goals by rewriting unambiguou­s statutory terms.”

It was a welcome constituti­onal lesson in restraint, noted The Wall Street Journal. One would think — hope — that an administra­tion so chastened might reconsider its determinat­ion to shift regulation of the nation’s power generation to Washington through new CO2 rules under the Clean Air Act.

Fat chance. This administra­tion does not learn constituti­onal lessons. It continues marching until it meets resistance. And it hasn’t met nearly enough.

The root problem is that the Clean Air Act, passed in 1970, was never intended for greenhouse gases. You can see it in its regu- latory thresholds which, if applied to CO2, are ridiculous­ly low. Moreover, when the law was written, we hadn’t yet even had the global cooling agitation of the 1970s, let alone the global warming panic of today.

But with only two of nine justices prepared to overturn the court’s 2007 ruling that shoehorns greenhouse gases into the Clean Air Act, the remedy falls to Congress. It could easily put an end to all this judicial parsing and bureaucrat­ic mischief with a one-line statute saying that the Clean Air Act does not apply to CO2 emissions.

Congress can then set about regulating greenhouse gases as it wishes, rather than leaving it to the tender arbitrary mercies of judges and bureaucrat­s. Otherwise, we will soon have the EPA unilateral­ly creating a cap-and-trade regime that will make its administra­tor czar of all power regulation in every state.

Of course, a similar scheme failed to pass a Democratic Congress in 2010. Our President doesn’t let such niceties stand in his way, however. He has an agenda to enact, boldly enunciated in his Feb. 24, 2009 address to Congress promising to transform America in three areas: health care, education and energy. Education lags, but he’s now on the verge of centralizi­ng energy regulation in Washington through naked executive action, having already succeeded in centralizi­ng health care in Washington through the Affordable Care Act.

With energy, he’ll do it by executive order after failing to pass the desired legislatio­n. With health care, he does it with a law that he then amends so wantonly after it passed that the ACA itself becomes a blank slate on which the administra­tion unilateral­ly remakes American medicine.

Employer mandate? The ACA says it was to go into effect Jan. 1, 2014. It didn’t. The administra­tion decreed that there should be several classes of employers, each with different starting dates, contradict­ing its own law.

Private insurance? The law says that plans not conforming to ACA coverage mandates must be canceled. Responding to the outcry that ensued, Obama urged the states and insurers to reinstate the plans — which would violate the explicit mandate of his own law.

One bit of ACA lawlessnes­s, however, may prove a bridge too far. The administra­tion has been giving subsidies to those who sign up through the federal exchange. The ACA limits subsidies to plans on the state exchanges.

This case will reach the Supreme Court. It is hard to see how the court could do anything other than overturn the federal-exchange subsidies. The court might even have a word to say about the administra­tion’s 22 (or is it 37?) other acts of post-facto rewriting of the ACA.

Perhaps. But until then, the imperial President rules. Having been supine for years in the face of these encroachme­nts, Congress is stirring. The Republican House is preparing a novel approach to acquiring legal standing before the courts to challenge these gross executive usurpation­s. Nancy Pelosi, reflecting the narrowness of both her partisansh­ip and her vision, dismisses this as a “subterfuge.”

She won’t be saying that on the day Democrats lose the White House. Then, cheered on by a suddenly inflamed media, the Democrats will no doubt express horror at such constituti­onal overreach.

At which point, the temptation to stick it to the Democrats will be overwhelmi­ng.

At which point, Lord make us strong.

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