USA TODAY International Edition

GOP CAN CUT SOME REGULATION­S QUICKLY

Small window open in January to repeal any of Obama administra­tion’s actions since mid- May

- Erin Kelly

Congressio­nal ReWASHINGT­ON publicans are poised to act quickly next year to repeal tens of billions of dollars in environmen­tal regulation­s and other federal rules issued by the Obama administra­tion during its final seven months in power.

As soon as Donald Trump won the presidenti­al election last week, GOP lawmakers began scrambling to research the approximat­ely 180 regulation­s that have been finalized since midMay and may be eligible for repeal under a rarely used law called the Congressio­nal Review Act. Republican­s can undo any of those regulation­s they don’t like if they act fast after Trump is sworn into office Jan. 20.

“I’m sure there will be a dirty dozen,” Rep. Darrell Issa, RCalif., said when asked how many regulation­s he expects to be targeted. Issa has a bill before the House this week that would allow the new Congress to repeal multiple regulation­s at once rather than having to vote on them one at a time.

Among the likely targets: a rule from the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from commercial trucks and buses, and a rule from the Labor Department to raise the salary threshold for workers eligible for overtime pay from $ 455 a week to $ 913 a week.

“It all depends on how aggressive Republican­s want to be,” said Sam Batkins, director of regulatory policy at American Action Forum, a non- profit think- tank that describes itself as center- right. “The law they’re using is a pretty blunt instrument.”

It also depends on how soon Congress adjourns its “lame duck” session, which began Monday. The new Congress, which will convene Jan. 3, will be able to count back 60 days from the final legislativ­e day of the current Congress to find regulation­s eligible to be repealed.

Congress has taken so much time off for elections and political convention­s that the House has been in session less than 50 days from May 17 through Tuesday. Lawmakers are scheduled to work, at most, 14 more days this year before they adjourn.

The earlier Congress adjourns, the further back in time lawmakers can go to target the 2016 rules they don’t like. Some regulation­s finalized in May, including the overtime pay rule, may be left intact if Congress waits until its scheduled end- date of Dec. 16 to adjourn.

“Every day we’re in session, we’re burning one of those days,” Issa said.

The new Congress will have 45 legislativ­e days to repeal any eligible rule it doesn’t like.

The Congressio­nal Review Act of 1996, which has been used suc- cessfully only once in 20 years, speeds up the repeal process by requiring only a simple majority to undo regulation­s. That means Senate Democrats can’t mount a filibuster to stop Republican­s from acting. Trump is likely to sign legislatio­n that would repeal Obama administra­tion rules. Obama, not surprising­ly, vetoed four resolution­s passed by Congress to overturn his regulation­s.

Batkins, like Issa, predicted the new Congress will leave the majority of the regulation­s intact. Batkins has compiled a list of 180 regulation­s that took effect from May 17 through last week.

“I don’t anticipate the Republican­s going after dozens of regulation­s,” he said. “Some of the rules are designed to fix something on a plane, for example. That’s not the kind of thing they want to repeal. There are roughly 20 to 30 regulation­s that might be considered controvers­ial.”

The House is scheduled to vote this week on Issa’s Midnight Rules Relief Act, which would amend the Congressio­nal Review Act to allow Congress to repeal multiple regulation­s at once. Issa said his bill, approved by the House Judiciary Committee in September, would help rein in costly last- minute regulation­s by presidents of either party.

“Regulation­s shouldn’t be done this way,” Issa said. “Do it open, do it right, and do it early.”

The White House on Monday called Issa’s bill unnecessar­y. Issa said he will offer the legislatio­n again early next year if it’s vetoed.

 ?? CLIFF OWEN, AP ??
CLIFF OWEN, AP
 ?? SUSAN WALSH, AP ?? Rep. Darrell Issa, R- Calif., top, says there probably will be a “dirty dozen” regulation­s put in by President Obama that will be eligible for repeal by the new Congress.
SUSAN WALSH, AP Rep. Darrell Issa, R- Calif., top, says there probably will be a “dirty dozen” regulation­s put in by President Obama that will be eligible for repeal by the new Congress.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States