Executive Order 13771

Executive Order 13771 —entitled Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs— was an executive order signed by U.S.

President Donald Trump on January 30, 2017.

Executive Order 13771
Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs
Seal of the President of the United States
Executive Order 13771
Executive Order 13771 in the Federal Register
TypeExecutive order
Executive Order number13771
Signed byDonald Trump on January 30, 2017 (2017-01-30)
Federal Register details
Federal Register document number2017-02451
Publication dateFebruary 3, 2017 (2017-02-03)
Summary
Directs agencies to:
  • identify at least two existing regulations for repeal in place of every new regulation;
  • manage expenditure so that the total cost of new regulations does not increase.

On January 20, 2021, President Joe Biden rescinded the executive order.

Provisions

Executive Order 13771 required any executive department or agency planning to publicly announce a new regulation to propose at least two regulations to be repealed. The cost of the implementation of these new regulations was supposed to be less than or equal to 0 dollars. If costs above 0 dollars were accrued, the payment of these costs were to be funded through the elimination of more regulations. Advice on the financial aspect of these matters was provided by the director of the Office of Management and Budget. Under the executive order, it was up to the director to notify agencies of their total incremental costs for a given year. The director was allowed to issue both increases or decreases in said costs. The director also had the authority to exempt regulations/agencies from compliance with the Executive Order.

Lawsuit

In February 2017, Public Citizen, Natural Resources Defense Council, and Communications Workers of America filed a lawsuit seeking to block implementation of the Executive Order 13771. The plaintiffs argued that Trump's executive order unconstitutionally violated the separation of powers; violated the Constitution's Take Care Clause; and would force federal agencies to violate governing statutes, like the Administrative Procedure Act which establishes the way agencies pass regulations, by forcing agencies to repeal beneficial regulations and arbitrarily preventing new regulations to be passed. The plaintiffs alleged that the executive order would also endanger public health, safety, and the environment and will force federal agencies to violate current governing statutes by ignoring the non-financial benefits current and potential regulations bring to the public. Fourteen Republican-led states filed an amici curiae in support of the executive order.

In December 2019, U.S. District Judge Randolph D. Moss dismissed the case, concluding that plaintiffs lacked standing. The court found that "it is certainly plausible, and perhaps likely" that the executive order and accompanying OMB guidance "have delayed or derailed at least some regulatory actions that, if adopted, would materially benefit Plaintiffs or some of their members." However, the court found that this was insufficient to establish standing, since "it is hard to say with the requisite degree of confidence which actions those are, what would have occurred in the absence of the Executive Order, how any identifiable individual (or entity) is harmed, and whether any such harm—or risk of harm—is sufficient to establish standing," because the administration did not identify "whether and when a proposed . . . regulatory action [has been] delayed or abandoned due to the requirements of the Executive Order." The plaintiffs opted not to appeal the dismissal of the case.

Rescission

Former Obama-era Director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection and Public Citizen Litigation Group lawyer David Vladeck called the executive order "unconstitutional, illegal and stupid," saying "if you really want to reduce the regulatory load, you can't use a shotgun, you have to use a scalpel."

President Joe Biden rescinded the executive order, along with certain other Trump executive orders, on January 20, 2021, on his first day in office.

Notes

See also

References

This article uses material from the Wikipedia English article Executive Order 13771, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license ("CC BY-SA 3.0"); additional terms may apply (view authors). Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.
®Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wiki Foundation, Inc. Wiki English (DUHOCTRUNGQUOC.VN) is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wiki Foundation.

Tags:

Executive Order 13771 ProvisionsExecutive Order 13771 LawsuitExecutive Order 13771 RescissionExecutive Order 13771

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

OnlyFans2024 World Snooker ChampionshipRajasthan RoyalsConan O'BrienStripchatBlue Lights (2023 TV series)Abigail (2024 film)Aaron HernandezGoogle MapsTelegram (software)Euphoria (American TV series)Bharatiya Janata PartyKim KardashianKYURBernard ArnaultMasters of the AirOzzy OsbourneSex positionDickey Betts.xxxArticle 370 (film)Noel GugliemiThe Sympathizer2024 Persian Gulf floodsLinkedInSaint George's DayMinnie RipertonMia KhalifaBarry KeoghanVirat KohliMadonnaQueen VictoriaMain PageMount TakaheBaby ReindeerBrad Pitt2024 AFC Futsal Asian CupWalton GogginsPokémonPankaj TripathiKevin HartList of ethnic slursJimmy CarterLeonardo DiCaprioWomen's Candidates Tournament 2024Kingdom of the Planet of the ApesBenjamin BrandAli KhameneiList of Spotify streaming recordsIndonesiaBiggest ball of twineHozier3 Body Problem (TV series)Hangout with YooList of American films of 2024Giannis AntetokounmpoNational Hockey LeagueBillie EilishMark WahlbergSkibidi ToiletShogunAnthony Edwards (basketball)Salman RushdieIan NepomniachtchiAnsel AdamsWhitey HerzogYashasvi JaiswalSex and the CityChinaTimothée ChalametTucker CarlsonRohan MarleyAadhaarGiancarlo EspositoThe First OmenShaquille O'NealTranscaucasian Democratic Federative RepublicTerry A. Anderson🡆 More