President Donald Trump to sign the executive command ordered federal agencies to hunt regulations violating the Constitution
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First on the fox: President Donald Trump He will sign the Executive Command on Wednesday, which will require federal agencies to evaluate all his regulations, which in the last effort from his administration could violate the Constitution to reduce priority to reduce the rodi.
Executive order – which senior administration officials call the first such kind and attempt to ensure that the Government is not armed against the American people – will require agencies to submit a list of management and budget office (OMB) within the next 60 days of all regulations that could violate the Constitution or could cause damage.
The OMB -OMA Office for Information and Regulatory Affairs (Oira) and the newly opened Department for the Efficiency of the Government (Doge) will lead the efforts and evaluate regulations among federal agencies, Senior Administration officials for Fox News Digital said on Wednesday.
Doge officials in federal agencies will collect a list of regulations that could break the Constitution and then share them with OMB. After 60 days, the Oira will go through the list of regulations and make individual decisions that are unconstitutional and will initiate the procedure for abolishing regulations in the case of a case, senior administration officials said.
The Oira monitors the regulations of the executive power, while the newly created reach aims to remove the government waste, fraud and consumption.
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President Donald Trump has signed more than 60 executive orders during his second term as president. (Andrew Hardik/Getty Images)
The command comes as Recently judged by the Supreme Court of the United States Against federal agencies that sought to broadly implement their own regulations outside the extent of its competence, including when the Supreme Court ruled against the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in May 2023. In the case of Sackett against EPA.
In that case, Mike and Chantell Sackatt bought a residential plot near Priest Lake, Idaho, to build a home. However, the EPA came in as the Sacketts began leveling the soil and told them to stop plans for the start of construction – or to face huge monetary fine – because the property fell on the federal protected land covered with the competence of the 1972 Clean Water Act.
The Law sets standards for regulating pollutants in “water of the United States”, and Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito wrote in the majority opinion that EPA sought to classify the wetlands on Sacketts property as “Water of the United States” because they were “near the goat who fed in the stream, which was fed in the priestly lake, fertile, intra -withdrawal lake. ”
Ultimately, the Supreme Court ruled in the Decision 5-4 that the Clean Water Act only refers to water that “relatively permanent, permanent or continuously liquid water bodies.”
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The United States Supreme Court ruled against the Environment Agency in May 2023. (Associated Press)
“Understanding (Clean Water Act) to apply to wetlands that are different from otherwise covered” Waters of the United States “would be significantly expanded (existing statute) to” define “sailors” as “water of the United States and neighboring wetlands “” Alito wrote.
The executive command on Wednesday will be upgraded to the efforts of Trump administration to reduce regulations.
For example, Trump signed an executive order in January, ordering the federal agencies eradicated 10 regulations for each new.
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Trump said at the World Economic Forum on January 2, January 2, that his administration would launch a “biggest campaign of deregulation in history, which has far exceeded even the record effort of my last term.”
Previous steps Trump undertook during his first term to reduce regulations, including ordering federal agencies on two regulations for each regulation issued. The White House said the agencies eventually reduced five and a half regulations for each new introduced during Trump’s first term.