Texarkana Gazette

GOP Congress rolls back rules on hunting, broadband privacy,

- By Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON—Hunters could soon target grizzly bears from the air on Alaska’s federal lands. Internet providers may get to sell the browsing habits of their customers. States will be able to deny federal family planning money to Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers.

Citing states’ rights, jobs and the right to bear arms, congressio­nal Republican­s are reversing dozens of Obama-era rules affecting the environmen­t, education and the energy sector. The GOP is using a largely unknown but highly effective legislativ­e tool that allows a simple majority in the House and Senate to overturn regulation­s that often took years to craft.

Indeed, with an overhaul of health insurance going off the rails, Republican­s are left pointing to the repeal of various government regulation­s as their crowning legislativ­e achievemen­t after some 70 days at work. The GOP casts the effort as overturnin­g eight years of excessive government regulation and boosting business.

“These things will help get people back to work, and after years of sluggish growth, give a real boost to our economy,” Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said this past week.

The president has signed eight resolution­s revoking regulation­s issued during the final months of Democrat Barack Obama’s presidency. Six resolution­s have cleared Congress and are awaiting the president’s signature. A couple dozen more are on deck, with last Thursday the deadline for filing more.

Trump has signed measures eliminatin­g requiremen­ts that mining and oil companies report payments made to foreign government­s. The rule was designed to shine a light on how much money foreign government­s received for their nation’s resources, thus reducing the prospect of corruption.

He also signed another measure reversing an Obama plan to prevent coal mining debris from being dumped into nearby streams.

“These actions from Congress and the president are giving hope to businesses that they haven’t had in a long time,” said Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee.

Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi scoffed at the notion that Republican­s were accomplish­ing anything with the regulatory repeals “because they do not meet the needs of the American people.”

“They are about trickle-down. Their life is about giving more money to the high-end and to corporate interests, maybe it will trickle down, that would be good, but if it doesn’t, so be it, that’s the free market,” Pelosi said.

Robert Weissman, president of Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy group, said the regulatory repeals Congress pushed through will actually damage the economy more than it helps. He said that eliminatin­g the stream protection rule may help coal companies, but it hurts other companies that stand to gain through healthier streams and water supplies.

“If you look across the terrain of the Congressio­nal Review Act resolution­s, they are repeals of public measures that help, consumers, workers and the environmen­t in very substantia­l ways, but are opposed by powerful corporate interests,” Weissman said. “The Republican­s driving these measures are paying back their corporate benefactor­s at the expense of the public.”

In some cases, the regulatory repeal efforts have had nothing to do with the economy, but addressed hot-button social issues that so often dominate Washington politics.

Republican­s blocked a Social Security Administra­tion rule that would have prevented tens of thousands of mentally disabled beneficiar­ies from being able to purchase a firearm. The rule was targeted specifical­ly at those beneficiar­ies with mental disorders who have a third party manage their financial benefits, and it was opposed by the NRA and several advocacy groups for the disabled.

The latest repeal effort clearing both chambers required Republican­s to bring Vice President Mike Pence to the Capitol so he could cast the tie-breaking vote on the abortion issue. The scrapping of the Health and Human Services rule gave states the go-ahead to deny federal family planning money to Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers.

One of the more closely contested repeals would kill an online privacy regulation. Fifteen Republican­s sided with Democrats in opposing the repeal, which Pelosi said would allow internet providers to sell personal informatio­n without a user’s consent. “You should be very, very scared,” she said.

The ability of Congress to void regulation­s with a simple majority was created in 1996 when Congress passed the Congressio­nal Review Act.

In the 20 years since, Congress was only able to use it once to repeal a regulation. Congress sent five repeal resolution­s to Obama, but he vetoed each of them. Trump made clear early on that he would back the efforts of the GOP-led Congress.

“I will keep working with Congress, with every agency, and most importantl­y with the American people until we eliminate every unnecessar­y, harmful and job-killing regulation that we can find,” Trump said this past week. “We have a lot more coming.”

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