Rep. Tom Tiffany Introduces Legislation to End Birthright Citizenship Loophole Being Explo...
Is This PA Congressional Candidate Already Living the D.C. Insider Lifestyle?
Roy Cooper Waged War on North Carolina's School Voucher Program, but Sent His...
Oregon Senate Committee Guts Gun Control Bill
President Trump Blasts Tucker Carlson: 'He’s Not MAGA'
GOP Rep Defends American Foreign Policy, Explains Why Operation Epic Fury Was Inevitable
Senator Tim Sheehy Helps to Forcibly Remove Crazed Protester During Senate Hearing
Wisconsin Congressional Candidate Rebecca Cooke Flees When Confronted About Her Stance on...
Zohran Mamdani Pledges Universal Child Care Services to Illegals Immigrants
Federal Court Sentences Illegal Alien to Prison for $343K SNAP Benefits Fraud
CENTCOM: U.S. Has Destroyed More Than 30 Iranian Ships
NY AG Letitia James Sues Video Game Maker Over Loot Boxes
New Jersey Man Pleads Guilty in $600M Nationwide Catalytic Converter Theft Ring
U.S. House Rejects Resolution to Stop Strikes on Iran
Juror Bribery Plot in Feeding Our Future Fraud Trial Leads to 57-Month Sentence
Tipsheet

Trump Wants to Cut 75 Percent of Regulations

Trump Wants to Cut 75 Percent of Regulations

President Trump said Monday that regulations are “out of control,” which is why he plans to cut 75 percent of them.

“We’re going to be cutting regulation massively,” Trump said during a meeting with business leaders. “We think we can cut regulations by 75 percent, maybe more.”

Advertisement

The president’s statement echoes calls he made on the campaign trail to cut regulations by “70 to 80 percent.”

At the time Trump was sworn in on Friday, the Federal Register contained 89,535 regulations published since 1994 — many of which Republicans say are outdated and duplicative.

But liberals are warning of doom and gloom if he follows through on his pledge.

“There is no way for President Donald Trump to slash regulations by 75 percent without cutting into bedrock public protections that hold Wall Street accountable, keep our water and children safe from lead poisoning, and contain food contamination outbreaks,” said Public Citizen’s regulatory policy advocate Amit Narang, reports The Hill.

Drastically cutting regulations would “permit corporations to rip off consumers, poison our environment, [and] cheat and mistreat workers,” he added.

Trump has offered few specifics about how his administration intends to cut so many regulations. While Republican lawmakers can repeal a small number of recently published rules through the Congressional Review Act, they have less authority over rules that have been on the books for years.

House Republicans have expressed interest in passing the Searching for and Cutting Regulations that are Unnecessarily Burdensome (SCRUB) Act. This would establish a commission to repeal old rules.

But the SCRUB Act has little chance of passing the Senate, as Democrats could filibuster the bill.

The Trump administration would likely need to write new rules that repeal the outdated regulations.

Advertisement

In a November video outlining his first 100 days in office, Trump said he “will formulate a rule which says that for every one new regulation, two old regulations must be eliminated.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement