WASHINGTON -- A bill that would give the controlling party of either chamber of Congress veto power over any major new regulation passed the House of Representatives Wednesday.The measure, dubbed the Regulations From the Executive in Need of Scrutiny -- or REINS -- Act, would require Congress to sign off on any new rule estimated to cost more than $100 million. It passed 241 to 184, with a handful of Democrats crossing the aisle.The REINS Act is only the latest of a slew of bills aimed at peeling back regulations, which House Republicans have pushed for in the name of cutting red tape and freeing up businesses. The GOP sees the regulations as overbearing rulemaking by unelected bureaucrats."Who do the regulators answer to? No one," said Rep. Ted Poe (R-Texas) in debate on the House floor."When the regulators go to work everyday, like most people go to work, their work assignment's a little different," Poe said. "In my opinion, they sit around a big oak table, sipping their lattes. They have out their iPads and their computers, and they decide, 'Who shall we regulate today?' And they write a regulation and send it out to the masses and make us deal with the cost to that."Rep. Ben Quayle (R-Ariz.), argued that if Congress can stop rules in their tracks, businesses will flourish."Poll after poll of small business owners, of medium-sized business owners -- they will show you and tell you that major regulations are holding back their expansion and the ability of them to hire more workers," Quayle said.The bill would effectively give either chamber a veto on a regulation because leaders could simply not put it on the calendar for a vote, and the rule would expire after 70 congressional working days.The Senate is unlikely to pass the measure.Opponents of the bill argue that there is actually no evidence that regulation is a drag on the economy. Although REINS advocates frequently point to an estimate that regulations cost business more than $1 trillion a year, opponents point to a recent report from the Congressional Budget Office that found the benefits of regulations often outweigh their costs by spurring economic activity.Environmental advocates have been especially alarmed about the REINS Act because many environmental regulations fall into the "major" category, with their impact often exceeding $100 million in cost. They fear the measure is simply a way to let the Tea Party and special interests shoot down any new rule to protect the air and water.The Act's opponents also note that it's ironic the GOP legislative attempt comes during an administration that has promoted fewer regulations that the previous one, and that the regulations Congress wants to block stem from laws passed by Congress itself.Democrats cast the entire exercise as a partisan distraction from attempts to do something about the economy, including extending a payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits that run out at the end of the year."Christmas is coming, the goose is getting fat -- please to put a dollar in the workers' hand," House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said. "I urge my colleagues to vote no on this REINS Act, and to get to work to extend the payroll tax cut and unemployment insurance for the American people.""Only then will we increase demand in our economy, create jobs, promote economic growth and put money into the pockets of 160 million Americans," Pelosi said. "Think of the difference that will make instead of putting forth legislation that has no impact on our economic growth is not in furtherance of job creation."
About the REINS Act “All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives.” – U.S. Constitution, Article 1, Section 1Excessive delegation of Congress’ constitutional responsibility for making the law of the land to the Executive Branch has created a lack of accountability in Congress for many of the most burdensome federal regulations. Although this trend is not new, allowing major decisions to be made by unelected, unaccountable bureaucrats is not consistent with the constitutional responsibilities of our representative government. To restore Congressional accountability for the regulatory process, Congressman Geoff Davis [KY-04] introduced the Regulations from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny (REINS) Act. The REINS Act would require Congress to take an up-or-down, stand-alone vote, and for the President to sign-off on all new major rules before they can be enforced on the American people, job-creating small businesses, or State and local governments.Major rules are those that have an annual economic impact of $100 million or more. Last year, 100 major rules were finalized by the Executive Branch.A recent study commissioned by the Small Business Administration found that annual regulatory compliance costs in the United States hit $1.75 trillion in 2008. A staggering figure that exceeds the total collected from income taxes that year ($1.449 trillion).Not all regulations are bad; many provide important public safeguards. However, when a proposed regulation could have an impact in the hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars on our economy, it should be subject to the review by the elected representatives of the people.The REINS Act is about improving the regulatory process. If the REINS Act becomes law, Members of Congress will be accountable to their constituents on the question of whether a new regulation is truly needed, or is an unnecessary burden. This will encourage Congress and agencies to work together to develop and pass regulations that implement the original intent of laws.Furthermore, the REINS Act would prevent Administrations from either party from bypassing Congress to implement a political agenda through regulation.The REINS Act is a commonsense reform that will increase congressional accountability, improve the regulatory process, and protect the American people from further unnecessary regulatory burdens on our economy.
Pretty sure nobody around here cares.If you're trying to make yourself look smart, nobody cares either.How about you read the actual bill instead of the biased articles written about the bill then judge it in an objective way.I sure didn't read the bill and I don't care, but the US press is extremely biased and if you are going to follow one article on the bill it will create a different opinion on your side as they tend to kneed it in a way that fits them.
This.When ever you post a some thing like this I do some thing you don't seem to...Research it. And I often find out that they reword it to make it sound horrible but really they're way off.
Quote from: Darthkatzs on December 08, 2011, 07:40:05 AMPretty sure nobody around here cares.If you're trying to make yourself look smart, nobody cares either.How about you read the actual bill instead of the biased articles written about the bill then judge it in an objective way.I sure didn't read the bill and I don't care, but the US press is extremely biased and if you are going to follow one article on the bill it will create a different opinion on your side as they tend to kneed it in a way that fits them.Darth, I have read the bill, and I quoted the Huffington Post because their report on it is one I agree with. Perhaps you shouldn't be such an ass as you usually are. Oh, and some people do care, and if you don't care don't bother posting.
Quote from: Nikolai on December 08, 2011, 02:45:57 PMQuote from: Darthkatzs on December 08, 2011, 07:40:05 AMPretty sure nobody around here cares.If you're trying to make yourself look smart, nobody cares either.How about you read the actual bill instead of the biased articles written about the bill then judge it in an objective way.I sure didn't read the bill and I don't care, but the US press is extremely biased and if you are going to follow one article on the bill it will create a different opinion on your side as they tend to kneed it in a way that fits them.Darth, I have read the bill, and I quoted the Huffington Post because their report on it is one I agree with. Perhaps you shouldn't be such an ass as you usually are. Oh, and some people do care, and if you don't care don't bother posting. I'm only an ass to people who can't get their act straight.Who are those people? People like you who think they sound smart by complaining about such things as laws and bills but never seem to come out with any (other) solution. I know dozens of people like you around here. They complain, try to sound smart. Call you stupid when you make an actual decent argument against them then go on to smoke their daily portion of weed.This is an international gaming community forums, not a political debate. If you really feel the urge to get your opinion out on this, visit your local congressman or senator.
Quote from: Darthkatzs on December 08, 2011, 05:44:37 PMQuote from: Nikolai on December 08, 2011, 02:45:57 PMQuote from: Darthkatzs on December 08, 2011, 07:40:05 AMPretty sure nobody around here cares.If you're trying to make yourself look smart, nobody cares either.How about you read the actual bill instead of the biased articles written about the bill then judge it in an objective way.I sure didn't read the bill and I don't care, but the US press is extremely biased and if you are going to follow one article on the bill it will create a different opinion on your side as they tend to kneed it in a way that fits them.Darth, I have read the bill, and I quoted the Huffington Post because their report on it is one I agree with. Perhaps you shouldn't be such an ass as you usually are. Oh, and some people do care, and if you don't care don't bother posting. I'm only an ass to people who can't get their act straight.Who are those people? People like you who think they sound smart by complaining about such things as laws and bills but never seem to come out with any (other) solution. I know dozens of people like you around here. They complain, try to sound smart. Call you stupid when you make an actual decent argument against them then go on to smoke their daily portion of weed.This is an international gaming community forums, not a political debate. If you really feel the urge to get your opinion out on this, visit your local congressman or senator.Blah blah blah.....political discussion is allowed, and if the only thing you're going to do is be an ass and not actually contribute to the thread I'd appreciate if you'd just go on your way.I posted this to get opinions from people who actually care a little bit out politics - and there are people here who do. Contribute to the thread, and stop going off-topic Darth.Also, making a judgement of me on one post when you hardly know me is really judging a book by a cover, although I honestly hate that saying.And you ask for an alternate solution? The alternate solution is simply not passing the bill. The only thing the bill truly does - after reading it over, reading various articles and appeals from Senators and Representatives and forming an educated opinion - is guarantee that if the outcome of the 2012 presidential election leads to another Democrat as president, the Republicans will be able to guarantee a deadlock in order to prevent ideology of the Democrat Party from influencing legislation.
My general idea of this is that we are getting ourselves into a worse situation then we are in now, they even have something out there that re-enables military to step in at anytime and even execute us citizens on site... The US Senate's Defense Authorization Bill redefines America as a "battlefield" and authorizes US troops to conduct military arrests of civilians on US soil, and to indefinitely detain citizens without charge or trial.