WASHINGTON (AP) -- President
Donald Trump signed a handful of measures Monday rolling back Obama-era
regulations under the Congressional Review Act.
It's part of a larger GOP effort to eliminate an array of regulations issued during President Barack Obama's final months in office and comes days after Trump's effort to repeal and replace "Obamacare" failed. Trump has made overturning what he deems government over-reach a centerpiece of his first months in office.
"I will keep
working with Congress, with every agency, and most importantly, the
American people, until we eliminate every unnecessary, harmful and
job-killing regulation that we can find," Trump said at a White House
signing ceremony. "We have a lot more coming."
Two of the regulations nullified Monday had to do with school performance and teacher preparation programs.
One, issued by the Education Department in October, required that federally funded teacher preparation programs be evaluated based on the academic outcomes of those teachers' students. Republican senators opposed the rules, arguing such matters should be left to the states.
The other aimed to help states identify failing schools and come up with plans to improve them.
Another rule nullified by Trump required federal land managers to consider climate change and other long-term effects of proposed development on public lands. The regulation had been imposed by the Bureau of Land Management, which oversees more than 245 million acres of public lands.
Republicans argued the rule, finalized in December, shifted decision-making authority away from state and local officials to the federal government. The signing came the day before Trump was expected to reverse Obama's signature effort to address climate change, the Clean Power Plan, which restricts greenhouse gas emissions at coal-fired power plants.
The final rule targeted by Republicans had been aimed at forcing government contractors to disclose violations of federal labor laws as they sought more work. The "blacklisting rule" required contractors to disclose violations of 14 federal labor laws, including those pertaining to workplace safety, wages and discrimination.
The White House argued the rule would "bog down" the federal procurement process, while business groups said that it would increase compliance costs.
Republican
lawmakers and the Trump administration have made curbing government
regulation a top priority this year. Dozens of resolutions pulling back
various Obama-era rules have been introduced under an expedited process
established through the Congressional Review Act. Under that process, a
regulation is invalidated when a simple majority of both chambers pass a
joint resolution of disapproval and the president signs it.
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