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1 bill on this topic
“Major federal rules could not start unless Congress approves them and the President signs that approval, except the President could let some urgent rules start for up to 90 days while Congress reviews them.”
1 bill on this topic
“Smaller agency rules should usually be able to start without advance approval, but Congress should have a faster yes-or-no process to block them after they are issued.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal agencies should send existing major rules back to Congress in yearly batches covering at least 10 percent of them, Congress should be able to vote on rules separately or attach conditions, and any existing major rule that is not approved within 10 years should stop operating.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal rules that are not classified as major should be allowed to take effect after they are sent to Congress, but Congress should still be able to cancel them through a fast-track vote, while some urgent rules and some hunting, fishing, and camping rules can start on the agency's own timeline.”
1 bill on this topic
“New major federal rules would usually end after 10 years unless Congress renews them, and older major rules would have to go to Congress over a 10-year schedule or stop being in effect.”
1 bill on this topic
“Agency rules and major guidance with at least $100 million in yearly economic effects should go through the major-rule process, while Federal Reserve monetary policy, some deregulation, and certain hunting, fishing, camping, and similar outdoor-program rules would be exempt from some of those steps.”
1 bill on this topic
“Congressional review should cover not just formal regulations but also many agency guidance documents and policy statements, and it should apply to rules with at least $100 million in yearly economic effects, rules that sharply raise costs or harm jobs or competition, and rules that increase required vaccination.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal Reserve monetary policy should be left out of this system, rule rollbacks should skip the new approval votes, smaller rules should still be open to fast congressional cancellation, and some seasonal or urgent smaller rules should be allowed to start sooner.”
1 bill on this topic
“Most new major federal rules should end after 10 years unless Congress extends them, agencies should not be allowed to bring back nearly the same expired rule without new authority from Congress, and the President should have only a narrow 30-day delay for one expiring rule in urgent cases.”
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