Uses of the Congressional Review Act during the Trump administration

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See also: Congressional Review Act

This page documents usage of the Congressional Review Act (CRA) during the Donald Trump (R) administration. During his presidency, 16 administrative rules were repealed using the CRA. This page only covers CRA resolutions that passed through at least one house of Congress, there are others that representatives introduced that did not move beyond that stage in the legislative process.

The CRA is a federal law that affords Congress a check on the rulemaking activities of federal agencies. The law creates a review period during which Congress, by passing a joint resolution of disapproval later signed by the president, can overturn a new federal agency rule and block the issuing agency from creating a similar rule in the future.[1][2][3] At the end of the Trump administration in January 2021, the CRA had been used to repeal 17 rules, 16 under the Trump administration.[4][5] On June 30, 2021, Joe Biden (D) signed three CRA resolutions into law, bringing the total number of rules repealed to 20.[6]

Background

The Congressional Review Act was passed in 1996 and signed into law by President Bill Clinton (D).[7][8][9] With the CRA, Congress intended to establish a review system to address the complaint that "Congress [had] effectively abdicated its constitutional role as the national legislature in allowing federal agencies so much latitude in implementing and interpreting congressional enactments," according to the official legislative history of the law.[8]

Historical usage of the CRA

Before 2017, the only successful use of the CRA was in 2001 when the recently sworn-in Congress and President George W. Bush (R) reversed an ergonomic standards rule issued by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration during the final months of the previous administration. During his presidency, Barack Obama (D) vetoed five CRA resolutions addressing environmental, labor, and financial policy.[3][4]

Usage of the CRA under the Trump administration

See also: Federal agency rules repealed under the Congressional Review Act and Uses of the Congressional Review Act during the Biden administration

In the first four months of his administration, President Donald Trump (R) signed 14 CRA resolutions from Congress undoing a variety of rules issued near the end of Barack Obama's (D) presidency.[1][2][3][10] Congress repealed 16 rules using the CRA during the Trump administration.[11]

The following chart, published by the Regulatory Studies Center at The George Washington University, shows each CRA resolution that passed through at least one house during the 116th Congress and what happened to them.[12]

New applications of the CRA during the Trump administration

Beyond repealing rules made by agencies following the rulemaking process, the Trump administration took steps to apply the CRA to a broader range of agency decisions, including guidance documents.

May 21, 2018: CFPB guidance repealed

See also: Congress votes to repeal an agency guidance document for the first time

On May 21, 2018, President Trump signed a CRA resolution invalidating a guidance document issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).[11] It was the first time that the CRA was used to overturn a guidance document rather than a rule issued through the rulemaking procedures of the Administrative Procedure Act. The repeal resolution was introduced to Congress in March 2018 by Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.). The U.S. Senate passed the resolution on April 18, 2018. The vote was 51-47, with all present Republicans and West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin voting in favor. Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) were absent.[13] The U.S. House of Representatives passed a corresponding resolution on May 8 by a vote of 234-175. The measure was mainly supported by Republicans, with 11 Democrats also voting for the resolution.[14]

Guidance documents, agency documents created to explain, interpret, or advise interested parties about rules, laws, and procedures, are not typically subject to the CRA. However, on December 5, 2017, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) issued a determination that the CFPB's indirect auto lending bulletin was a rule for the purposes of the CRA. The GAO made this determination in response to a study request from Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.).[15]

April 11, 2019: Memo outlined White House review of independent agencies and guidance documents

An April 11 guidance memo published by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) established rules for compliance with the CRA.[16] It amended earlier OMB guidance for implementing the CRA published in 1999 to affirm that Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) review procedures apply to historically independent agencies. It also stated that some guidance documents fall within the definition of rules subject to the CRA.[16]

The guidance memo told agencies not to publish any rules in the Federal Register or anywhere else until both OIRA determined whether the rule is major and the agency has complied with the CRA.[16]

The memo affirmed the broad scope of the CRA over rules coming out of the administrative state. Under Clinton-era Executive Order 12866, agencies have to submit any significant regulatory actions to OIRA for review.[16] However, agencies do not submit all CRA-covered actions to OIRA.[17] In addition to notice-and-comment rules, the new OMB memo said that agencies have to submit statements of policy and interpretive rules to OIRA and Congress.[16] That instruction included guidance documents, which agencies often fail to submit for CRA review.[17] The memo required agencies to include a CRA compliance statement in the body of new rules, which gives Congress notice that OIRA determined whether the rule was major.[16]

Guidance documents, memoranda, and other statements by agencies issued outside the requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) can have practical effects on the public even if they are not always legally binding. Some critics of the administrative state have called those kinds of agency actions regulatory dark matter. The OMB memo included regulatory dark matter within the CRA review process and could result in "more accurate accounting of the economic effects of rules and guidance, with the opportunity for more informed action by Congress and the public," according to professor Bridget C. E. Dooling.[16][17] Others saw the memo as more than a clarification of the existing requirements of the CRA. The memo was "a controversial step that has long been a goal of conservative groups," according to Damien Paletta, writing for the Washington Post.[18] Paletta also wrote that "[t]he step could have the effect of nullifying or blocking a range of new regulatory initiatives."[18]

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 U.S. News, "Democrats Push to Repeal Congressional Review Act," June 1, 2017
  2. 2.0 2.1 The Hill, "The Congressional Review Act and a deregulatory agenda for Trump's second year," March 31, 2017
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Smithsonian Magazine, "What Is the Congressional Review Act?" February 10, 2017
  4. 4.0 4.1 Quartz, "The obscure law Donald Trump will use to unwind Obama's regulations," December 1, 2016
  5. George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center, "Congressional Review Act ," accessed December 18, 2020
  6. The White House, "Remarks by President Biden Signing Three Congressional Review Act Bills into Law: S.J.Res.13; S.J.Res.14; and S.J.Res.15," June 30, 2021
  7. Congress, "H.R.3136 - Contract with America Advancement Act of 1996," accessed April 23, 2019
  8. 8.0 8.1 Congressional Record, "S3683, Congressional Review Title of H.R. 3136," April 18, 1996
  9. Congressional Research Service, "In Focus: The Congressional Review Act (CRA)," accessed April 22, 2019
  10. New York Times, "Which Obama-Era Rules Are Being Reversed in the Trump Era," May 18, 2017
  11. 11.0 11.1 Congress.gov, "S.J.Res.57," accessed May 22, 2018
  12. Regulatory Studies Center, "Previous CRA Activity Tracker," accessed January 12, 2021
  13. The Hill, "Senate repeals auto-loan guidance in precedent-shattering vote," April 18, 2018
  14. The New York Times, "House Votes to Dismantle Bias Rule in Auto Lending," May 8, 2018
  15. Government Accountability Office, "Applicability of the Congressional Review Act to Bulletin on Indirect Auto Lending and Compliance with the Equal Credit Opportunity Act," December 5, 2017
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 16.4 16.5 16.6 Office of Management and Budget, "Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies," April 11, 2019
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 The Hill, "How independent are government agencies? OMB's move on 'major' rules may tell us," Bridget C.E. Dooling, April 13, 2019
  18. 18.0 18.1 Washington Post, "White House seeks tighter oversight of regulations issued by Fed and other independent agencies," Damian Paletta, April 11, 2019