Texas Insider Report: WASHINGTON D.C. Congressman Lamar Smith (R-Texas) today applauded House passage of H.R. 185 the
Regulatory Accountability Act. Smith first introduced the bill in 2011 during his tenure as House Judiciary Committee chairman and was a lead sponsor when the House passed it in the 113
th Congress.
Congressman Smith: This White House has repeatedly bypassed Congress and the American people to pursue its extreme and aggressive regulatory agenda. The fact that the same White House is threatening to veto the
Regulatory Accountability Act tells me we must be doing something right.
We have been working to rein in overreaching regulations and pass this common-sense legislation since my time as House Judiciary Committee Chairman in 2011. I applaud its passage today and hope that the Senate will swiftly pass it as well."
The White House has issued a veto threat against the bill which would hold federal agencies accountable for implementing laws in the least burdensome and least costly manner for the taxpayer. Americans currently face more than $3 trillion from federal taxation and regulation or approximately thirty percent of the average American household income in 2013.
The legislation would:
- Require agencies to choose the lowest cost rulemaking alternative that meets statutory objectives.
- Improve public outreach and agency fact-finding to identify better more efficient regulatory alternatives.
- Require agencies to use the best reasonably obtainable science.
- Provide on-the-record but streamlined administrative hearings in the highest-impact rulemakingsthose that impose $1 billion or more in annual costsso interested parties can subject critical evidence to cross-examination.
- Require advance notice of proposed major rulemakings to increase public input before costly agency positions are proposed and entrenched.
- Strengthen judicial review of new agency regulations to make sure the federal courts can enforce these requirements.
Congressman Smith represents the 21st District of Texas. He was named the most effective lawmaker in the 112th Congress when he served as chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. He also serves on the Committee on Homeland Security and as chairman of the House Science Space & Technology Committee.