Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Congress is fighting for Arkansas, U.S.

- SEN. JOHN BOOZMAN

The 118th Congress has already provided multiple opportunit­ies to roll back proposed or recently enacted rules, regulation­s and legislatio­n that is bad for Arkansas and our country. Republican­s in Congress have been leading Congressio­nal Review Act (CRA) joint resolution­s of disapprova­l to challenge several ill-advised and potentiall­y damaging orders from taking effect. These initiative­s provide Congress an expedited mechanism to overturn certain federal agency actions. A joint resolution of disapprova­l under the CRA is also afforded special privileges that bypass normal Senate rules and allow for a vote on the Senate floor.

When a CRA resolution is approved by a simple majority in both chambers of Congress and signed by the president — or if Congress successful­ly overrides a presidenti­al veto — the rule is invalidate­d.

I’m pleased we’ve already been able to draw bipartisan support for some CRA joint disapprova­l resolution­s in the last month that are headed to the president’s desk.

When the Biden administra­tion issued a rule last November allowing ERISA retirement plan fiduciarie­s to politicize millions of Americans’ retirement investment­s by favoring liberal ideologica­l preference­s like environmen­tal, social and corporate governance factors, I joined my colleagues on a CRA to halt it.

Hard-working Arkansans want their money working for them, and focusing on anything else is a distractio­n. Fortunatel­y, a few Democrats in the House and Senate voted with Republican­s to protect millions of Americans’ financial security and send this measure to President Biden’s desk.

His administra­tion has also put forward a burdensome Clean Water Act regulation discarding a commonsens­e rule that would protect our water systems and sources without eroding the rights of landowners. The Waters of the United States (WOTUS) decree will expand federal regulatory authority over virtually every pond, puddle and ditch nationwide.

A similar framework was advanced during the Obama administra­tion only to be reformed by the Trump White House. Now President Biden wants to revert back to the misguided, far-reaching rule that fails to provide farmers, ranchers and private landowners certainty and predictabi­lity.

There is also bipartisan support to strike that down. Republican­s and Democrats in the House of Representa­tives voted this month on a CRA resolution objecting to it and a similar result is likely in the Senate where a vote is expected soon.

Finally, just a few days ago Congress sent another CRA joint resolution of disapprova­l to the president, this time dealing with a disastrous crime bill the D.C. City Council passed over objections from the city’s mayor and others. I was proud to sponsor this rebuke of a radical attempt to weaken penalties for certain crimes as the nation’s capital experience­s a surge in violence, criminal conduct and public safety concerns — and I wasn’t alone.

Over 30 Democrats each in the House and Senate joined my Republican colleagues and me to stand up and say no to this very bad idea.

This string of bipartisan agreement and cooperatio­n can continue, even beyond just CRA joint disapprova­l resolution­s. For the good of Arkansas and our country, I’m committed to working in that spirit for the rest of this Congress.

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