Texarkana Gazette

Proposal would help to curtail bureaucrat power

- Las Vegas Review-journal

To understand the dangers of an overactive administra­tive state, go back to high school civics class.

You learned that the Founding Fathers divided American government into three branches. Congress makes laws. The executive branch, led by the president, executes the laws. The judicial branch oversees legal cases and rules on constituti­onality.

Each branch was given unique and distinct powers because if one branch had too much power, it could overwhelm the others. As the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce laid out, unrestrain­ed centralize­d power is a major reason the colonists rebelled against England. They objected to “the establishm­ent of an absolute Tyranny over these States.”

These checks and balances restrain federal authority. As James Madison, writing under the pseudonym Publius, put it in Federalist 51, “Ambition must be made to counteract ambition.” He continued, “It may be a reflection on human nature, that such devices should be necessary to control the abuses of government. But what is government itself, but the greatest of all reflection­s on human nature?”

The Constituti­on reflected that “the constant aim is to divide and arrange the several offices in such a manner as that each may be a check on the other.” But “in republican government, the legislativ­e authority necessaril­y predominat­es.”

That’s not the case today. For decades, Congress has passed laws delegating its authority to executive branch agencies and unelected, unaccounta­ble bureaucrat­s. The regulatory state has become the de facto fourth branch of government, upending the intended constituti­onal order.

Madison’s mistake was believing that members of Congress would prioritize power. Instead, most crave re-election. They’re happy to let bureaucrat­s make the rules because it helps them avoid tough, unpopular votes.

There are some elected representa­tives who understand the danger in this. Last year, Rep. Kat Cammack, R-fla., introduced the REINS Act. It would require Congress to approve major regulation­s that agencies sought to enact.

“During the first year of this administra­tion, the Biden White House added more than $200B in new regulatory costs,” Rep. Cammack said in a release introducin­g the bill last year. These costly regulation­s went into effect “without the proper oversight from the legislativ­e branch.”

The House passed this bill last June. Tellingly Southern Nevada’s three Democratic House members– Reps. Dina Titus, Steven Horsford and Susie Lee– opposed it. The bill is currently stalled in the Democratic-run Senate. It’s unlikely to pass until that changes. But state versions of this bill can and should be moved forward, including in Nevada.

Restoring the country’s constituti­onal order won’t be easy. But the REINS Act is a tangible step toward doing just that.

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