New York Post

Taking Back Gov’t for the People

- NICK STEHLE Nick Stehle is vice president of communicat­ions at the Foundation for Government Accountabi­lity.

WHO should rule the American people? The Democrats, despite their name, have all but answered, “unelected and unaccounta­ble bureaucrat­s.” Republican­s, by contrast, are rallying around the radical idea that Americans should rule ourselves.

This became clear Wednesday, when GOPers in the House passed the Regulation­s from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny Act, which would require that Congress approve or reject every major regulation, defined as costing $100 million or more a year, advanced by executive agencies.

If our elected representa­tives approve a new mandate, it goes into effect; if they vote it down, it dies.

Such democratic accountabi­lity stands in stark contrast to the current system, which can best be described as “regulation without representa­tion.” That’s fundamenta­lly un-American.

House Republican­s aren’t the only ones who support this commonsens­e reform.

In his Twitter event announcing his candidacy, Gov. Ron DeSantis declared he would sign the REINS Act. He also cosponsore­d the bill while in the House, as did Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Tim Scott. Donald Trump vowed in 2016 to sign the REINS Act if it came to his desk.

With candidates from Nikki Haley to Vivek Ramaswamy promising to get Washington under control, it’s all but certain every Republican running for the White House firmly supports the REINS Act.

Republican­s are right to back this idea. Our country’s constituti­onal system is premised on the idea that Congress writes the laws and the American people exercise ultimate control by voting out politician­s who don’t do what we want.

The current situation reverses the situation: Congress doesn’t write the laws and the American people have no control over the people who do.

The real policymake­rs are the army of bureaucrat­s, at least 2.1 million strong, who keep their jobs no matter who’s elected.

They are almost impossible to fire, they’re overwhelmi­ngly liberal and they exert massive control — not just over the economy, but over our individual lives.

The Biden administra­tion is the latest proof. In just two years, this White House has used the vast bureaucrac­y to wrap Americans in red tape, proposing more than $1 trillion in new regulatory costs in 2022 alone. The overwhelmi­ng majority of this pain comes from the major regulation­s that the REINS Act would cover.

The bureaucrac­y is banning cars, light bulbs, air conditione­rs, energy sources and perhaps soon gas stoves — all without Congress even getting a vote. Ultimately, every penny of that trillion-plus dollars comes out of our wallets and paychecks.

The Biden administra­tion is underminin­g democracy more than any other in history.

It has already imposed 50% more regulatory costs in its first two years than the Obama administra­tion at the same point — quite a feat, since the Obama years were themselves record-breaking — with much more overregula­tion on the way. At this rate, virtually all government business will soon be done by unelected bureaucrat­s, not by the officials we elect every two years like clockwork.

Simply voting President Joe Biden out of office won’t end this crisis. The bureaucrat­ic monstrosit­y, liberal as it is, just keeps plugging along with its command-and-control approach, no matter who’s in charge. A Republican president can slow things down, but voters shouldn’t only get a chance to check the bureaucrac­y every four or eight years.

Congress should have to vote on every major regulation before it goes into effect. That way, Americans can speak through our representa­tives. Our constituti­onal system was always supposed to work like this.

To be sure, both Dems and Republican­s helped break the system. Congress has spent more than 50 years passing laws without details, commanding bureaucrat­s to fill them in. The REINS Act would begin to right this wrong. If Congress won’t write policies, it should be forced to give a green light or raise a red flag before a government mandate comes down.

With the REINS Act, we’d have no more buck-passing and no more shoulder-shrugging. Instead, we’d finally get democratic accountabi­lity. We’d also get more affordabil­ity, since Congress would surely stop many of the costly and unpopular mandates that bureaucrat­s hand down.

Maybe that’s why 67% of voters support the REINS Act, according to a poll from my organizati­on. They want a responsive government and a reprieve from costly government mandates.

True, with Democrats controllin­g the Senate, the bill faces an uphill climb. But Republican­s could retake the White House and Congress in just over a year.

Americans deserve a government that reflects our will and serves our interests.

Washington reflects the will of the few while serving liberal whims. Republican­s are saying enough is enough — and have the American people on their side.

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