Congress clearly needs to expand its capacity to monitor and study regulations and act where necessary, either through the appropriations or reconciliation (where appropriate) processes or, of course, the Congressional Review Act. This is especially important given Chevron's likely impending demise. However, first, it must stop delegating remarkably broad rulemaking powers to agencies. The Administrative State is too big and too powerful, and Congress has only itself to blame.
Yep, right now overseeing regulations is not really part of Congress's workflow. Some committees and legislators do it, but it is catch-as-catch can. Which is not a good approach for an area so vast and complex.
Congress clearly needs to expand its capacity to monitor and study regulations and act where necessary, either through the appropriations or reconciliation (where appropriate) processes or, of course, the Congressional Review Act. This is especially important given Chevron's likely impending demise. However, first, it must stop delegating remarkably broad rulemaking powers to agencies. The Administrative State is too big and too powerful, and Congress has only itself to blame.
Yep, right now overseeing regulations is not really part of Congress's workflow. Some committees and legislators do it, but it is catch-as-catch can. Which is not a good approach for an area so vast and complex.