logo
Trump's most absurd executive order yet

Trump's most absurd executive order yet

The Hill29-04-2025
On April 9, President Trump issued an executive order titled 'Directing the Repeal of Unlawful Regulations.' This document has mostly gone under the national radar, undoubtedly due to the ceaseless parade of headline illegalities pouring out of the White House. But the order's legal and practical implications are massive.
Trump purports to rely on a series of Supreme Court rulings to justify ordering agencies to identify and 'begin plans to repeal' what he calls 'unlawful' regulations that are 'often promulgated in reliance on now-superseded Supreme Court decisions.' In short, he claims that any regulations that were put in place before the court issued rulings in a series of controversial cases are now automatically unlawful and must go.
The myriad constitutional problems with this maneuver strike at the heart of the separation of powers. The order is also in line with the Republican Party's pro-corporate 'deregulation' agenda, which prominently began with President Ronald Reagan in 1981.
Given the complexities of our system of government and its reliance on checks and balances and compromise, that agenda could not be fully achieved through lawful means. Then came Trump.
For starters, the federal courts — not the president — have the authority under Article III of the Constitution to decide cases involving questions of federal law, including whether recent Supreme Court decisions undermine the legality of an existing federal regulation. Trump is pretending he has the power to issue a king-like proclamation condemning unidentified federal regulations as unlawful. Not so. He is not a federal judge.
Moreover, Trump's order baldly impedes on the authority of the legislative branch. Regulations are created pursuant to statutes, which fall within the province of Congress. Although regulations function like statutes, the Supreme Court has long upheld agencies' power to enact regulations that function like statutes on the theory that the agencies themselves are creatures of Congress.
So long as Congress includes an ' intelligible principle ' guiding how agencies promulgate regulations, the court has concluded that it can give that power to agencies, even though they are housed within the executive branch, which is headed by the president. Because Congress creates agencies and sometimes gives them the power to enact regulations, the legislature has the exclusive power to enact statutes that override those regulations, as well. Trump does not.
A final option for repealing final regulations (which number 3,000 to 4,000 per year) is for agencies themselves to do it. Congress has given agencies a list of procedures they must follow for enacting or repealing regulations. Those procedures are contained in a statute called the Administrative Procedure Act.
Enacting or repealing regulations with the force of law (i.e., the ones that function like statutes) is laborious, requiring the agencies to give notice to and get input from the public, among other hurdles. A decision to enact or repeal regulations is also subject to legal challenges under the Administrative Procedure Act. (See point above about the exclusive role of the courts here.)
So, for Trump to lawfully repeal what he deems 'unlawful regulations,' he must either go through Congress or invoke the Administrative Procedure Act's time-consuming process for repeal. If he chooses that latter route, he must then defend those repeals in the courts, which can take years to resolve. And if he doesn't like the tedium of the Administrative Procedure Act, which has been in place since 1946, he must persuade Congress to repeal or amend it. No Congress has been willing to do this in nearly 80 years, except to enhance executive accountability, as with the 1966 Freedom of Information Act.
Trump's cynical team of lawyers offers a fig leaf of legal justification for this obnoxious turn of events. The 'good cause' exception to the Administrative Procedure Act's notice-and-comment process for repealing a regulation. The law basically says that a 'good cause' shortcut is permissible if 'the agency for good cause finds' that compliance with the notice-and-comment process would be 'impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.'
Congress included this language mostly for emergencies — if there is a national health crisis involving imported chicken, for example, the Department of Agriculture might decide to invoke the good-cause exception to put rules on the books in a pinch, on the theory that waiting for the full process to play out would put public health at risk. But even if that's the case, agencies usually conduct full rulemakings after the fact in order to make sure that the regulations hit the right mark. Trump's executive order promises no such thing.
To justify the good-cause exception, Trump's order asserts that 'retaining and enforcing facially unlawful regulations is clearly contrary to the public interest.' But this circular reasoning virtually obliterates Congress's careful process for rulemaking altogether. If a president can just declare regulations unlawful, then the good-cause exception can simply swallow up the Administrative Procedure Act's bigger requirements for notice and comment. There is no way Congress intended such a self-defeating result.
What about Trump's power to issue executive orders — doesn't that give him the authority to do this? The Constitution says nothing about executive orders. Article II instead gives the president the 'executive power' and mandates that he 'take care that the Laws be faithfully executed.' Trump's order declaring the repeal of 'unlawful' regulations attempts to erase actual laws by presidential fiat. The Supreme Court has long made clear, however, that presidents cannot use executive orders to override or contradict legislation enacted by Congress.
Presidents are not kings. They do not act by edict. Legally, they can only act pursuant to constitutional and statutory law. Trump's action does neither.
For now, it will be up to Trump's loyal Cabinet — and whatever career federal employees still remain — to enact his edict by 'repealing' regulations that evince something on the list of disfavored features contained in the executive order. The courts will be asked to step in, and some will strike down the administration's actions. The Supreme Court justices may or may not back their colleagues on the lower courts, and Trump may or may not abide by those rulings.
But in the meantime, Congress — and the country — must stop treating this as normal.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Commentary: What Trump should be doing instead of attacking the Fed
Commentary: What Trump should be doing instead of attacking the Fed

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Commentary: What Trump should be doing instead of attacking the Fed

Republicans have a problem. Their signature economic package for 2025, the tax bill President Trump signed into law in early July, is deeply unpopular. Voters think it will harm the poor and reward the wealthy, and sober analysis suggests they're right. The last time Republicans passed a law like this, in 2017, voters pummeled them in the subsequent election. As the leader of his party, President Trump bears responsibility for selling the tax bill to voters. He's not doing that. Instead, his main economic messaging effort this summer has been a sustained attack on the Federal Reserve and its chair, Jerome Powell. Trump has routinely suggested he'll try to fire Powell, perhaps hoping the Fed chair will crack under pressure and quit before his term expires next May. He has hurled a dictionary of insults at Powell, calling him 'dumb,' 'stupid,' 'major loser,' 'knucklehead,' 'numbskull,' 'Mr. Too Late,' and 'the worst Federal Reserve chairman in history.' Since Powell has shown no signs of quitting, Trump has suggested he'll announce a "shadow" Fed chair who will offer different monetary policy guidance until Powell's term finally ends. Trump's war on Powell serves at least three purposes. His stated reason for browbeating the Fed is to compel sharp interest rate cuts to stimulate the economy. But Trump also has a penchant for creating villains he can blame when something goes wrong, and as head of a cautious central bank, Powell fits the profile. Trump also manages his many controversies by creating new kerfuffles to distract people from existing ones. Threatening mayhem at the Fed has been a way for Trump to deflect attention from tariff-related inflation, slowing economic growth, and now, the mushrooming Jeffrey Epstein scandal. The Fed is not really causing Trump any problems. It has kept interest rates steady since last December, one source of calm in financial markets otherwise roiled by Trump's tariffs and their many unintended consequences. The Fed most likely will end up cutting rates by later this year or early next, just not as dramatically as Trump wants. Read more: How much control does the president have over the Fed and interest rates? Tax bill blowback should be a more pressing concern for Trump. As analysts figure out what's actually in the megabill, the political peril for Republicans becomes increasingly apparent. Most voters don't know all the details, but they already dislike the tax law and could oppose it even more strongly once it begins to affect real people. A recent CNN poll found that 61% of people oppose the bill while only 39% approve. Fifty-eight percent say Trump has gone too far in cutting federal programs, which most likely reflects the blunt-force DOGE cuts overseen by Elon Musk earlier this year. And in the CNN poll, approval for Trump's handling of the federal budget was a lowly 37%.In an Associated Press poll, 62% of respondents said the tax bill would help the wealthy, while just 20% felt it would help low-income people. The portion saying it would harm 'people like me' was twice the portion saying it would help. Trump's approval rating on handling the economy in that poll was a scant 38%, with 60% disapproving. Trump is now deeply underwater on what used to be one of his most winning issues. Voters are correctly assessing the complicated bill. The Yale Budget Lab found that the bottom 40% of earners would actually suffer a net loss of income from the bill, mainly because of cutbacks in food aid, Medicaid, and other health subsidies. The top 20% of earners would gain about $6,500 in annual after-tax income, while the savings for the top 1% would be $30,000. That's highly regressive, in that it benefits the rich at the expense of the poor. Healthcare cuts are likely to be a particularly controversial aspect of the legislation, which could increase the number of uninsured Americans by 11 million, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Other GOP policies could boost that number to 16 million within 10 years, and real people will start to feel the cutbacks in 2026. Republicans have essentially given voters every plausible reason to blame them for increasing healthcare costs, lost coverage, and medical disasters. Democrats will be eager to help heap it on. They're already erecting billboards near closing rural hospitals blaming Trump for the shutdowns. Whether such claims are accurate or not, Republicans put the target on their own backs. When Republicans passed a big tax-cut law in 2017, during Trump's first term, they thought voters would reward them for a bill that financially benefited a majority of Americans. It didn't work out that way. The law was unpopular from the start, with many Americans feeling it heavily favored businesses and the wealthy. While that law harmed few people, many felt it did nothing to help them. In the 2018 midterm elections, Democrats outperformed, gaining 40 seats in the House of Representatives and retaking control of the chamber. The 2025 tax cut law is more punishing than the 2017 vintage, because of the cuts to food aid and healthcare. And Republicans have a far narrower edge in the House this time around. If the pattern holds, Republicans will take a beating in next year's midterms, losing the House and maybe the Senate. If Trump has a plan to prevent that, he might want to reveal what it is. The Fed will probably be cutting interest rates by the time of next year's election, blunting Trump's vilification of the central bank. He'll need somebody else to blame for everything voters dislike, unless he finds a way to persuade them that things are better than they think. Rick Newman is a senior columnist for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Bluesky and X: @rickjnewman. Click here for political news related to business and money policies that will shape tomorrow's stock prices. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Fact check: Five false claims Trump made about inflation last night
Fact check: Five false claims Trump made about inflation last night

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Fact check: Five false claims Trump made about inflation last night

President Donald Trump is not only continuing to lie about inflation. He's now falsely claiming that Democrats are lying when they accurately point out that prices are up. In a speech Tuesday night to Republican members of Congress, Trump delivered a series of inaccurate assertions on the subject of prices. He wrongly claimed that gas was selling Tuesday for below $2 a gallon 'in five different states' (it was actually zero states); that prices are 'all down' (consumer prices are up under Trump); that Democrats are lying when they say prices are up (these Democrats are correct); that grocery prices 'are down' (they are up under Trump); and that core inflation is 'below 2%' (it's 2.9%, per the Consumer Price Index). Here is a fact check. Trump: 'Gasoline … we had $1.99 a gallon today in five different states.' False. Of the tens of thousands of gas stations nationwide tracked by the company GasBuddy, there was not a single station offering gas for $1.99 per gallon or less on Tuesday, said Patrick De Haan, the company's head of petroleum analysis. (Some drivers get special discounts.) And no state had an average Tuesday gas price lower than Mississippi's $2.71 per gallon, according to data published by AAA. Trump has regularly claimed this year that two, three, or five states have sub-$2 gas, but CNN has never found any of these claims to be true. Trump: 'Groceries are down.' False. Grocery prices are up during this Trump presidency. Grocery prices in June were about 0.6% higher than they were in January, the month Trump was inaugurated, and about 2.4% higher than they were in June 2024, according to the latest Consumer Price Index data. Grocery prices did fall this April, as egg prices dropped sharply after a spike caused by an avian flu outbreak, but grocery prices then increased again in May and June. Trump: 'Prices are all down. I don't think there's any price — other than we have a real terrible, terrible head of the Fed, and if he brought down interest …' False. Regardless of anyone's opinion of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and interest rate policy, US prices are not 'all down'; in reality, prices have continued to increase during Trump's second presidency. As of June, overall consumer prices were about 2.7% higher than they were in June 2024, about 0.3% higher than they were in May 2025, and about 1.5% higher than they were in January 2025. Given this overall increase in prices since January, it's obvious that prices have gone up in various individual categories — so the president's suggestion that not a single price has increased is clearly untrue. It's important to note that it's normal for prices to rise over time; the Federal Reserve generally aims for 2% inflation over the long run. Trump could fairly say that inflation remains nowhere near the levels of 2022, when it briefly topped 9%, and that his new tariffs have not immediately caused a massive inflation spike. But Trump made a signature campaign pledge to immediately bring prices down, not to keep prices increasing at a moderate pace. Contrary to his claim on Tuesday, that promised decline hasn't happened. Trump: 'I watch the Democrats, and they get on these shows. 'Well, prices are up. Energy is up. Gasoline is through the roof. Food and groceries are up.' They lie.' Nonsense. It's correct, not a lie, to say overall prices, grocery prices and food prices in general are up during this presidency. And though oil prices are down in world markets, the gasoline prices paid by US drivers have increased slightly since Trump returned to the White House. (They certainly aren't 'through the roof,' but Trump didn't identify the Democrats who supposedly claimed they are.) The national average price for a gallon of regular gas on Tuesday was about $3.14 per gallon, according to AAA data. That's up from about $3.12 per gallon on Trump's second inauguration day in January – though, as GasBuddy's De Haan noted to CNN, the national average is now lower than it was at this point on the calendar in every year since pandemic-era 2021. Trump: 'Core inflation is way down, below 2%. Think of that.' False. Core inflation is not below 2%. This measure, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, showed prices up about 2.9% in June compared with June 2024, according to the most recent Consumer Price Index data. Other oft-cited measures of core inflation are also above 2%. The most recent data from the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index showed core inflation up about 2.7% in May compared with May 2024, while the most recent data from the Producer Price Index showed core inflation up about 2.6% in June compared with June 2024. The accuracy of Trump's claim that core inflation is 'way down' depends on where you start the clock. The 2.9% Consumer Price Index core inflation rate in June 2025 was up from March, April and May (it was about 2.8% each of those months), but it was down from about 3.3% in January. Solve the daily Crossword

The Company Building Trump's Largest Immigration Detention Camp
The Company Building Trump's Largest Immigration Detention Camp

Bloomberg

time6 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

The Company Building Trump's Largest Immigration Detention Camp

The Trump administration has awarded a $1.26 billion contract to build and operate what would become the country's largest immigrant detention center at Fort Bliss, an Army base in El Paso, Texas. The work would turn the base, with more than 1 million acres of space and an airport, into a sprawling tent camp with 5,000 beds. The contract was awarded to a Virginia-based company that does not appear to have experience with detention. Immigration advocates warn the facility will likely not meet federal standards. Already, accusations of inhumane conditions have emerged in Alligator Alcatraz, a new tent facility in the Florida Everglade that Trump has suggested could be a model for other states. Read more from Sophie Alexander, Fola Akinnibi, and Rachel Adams-Heard today on CityLab: Trump Awards $1.26 Billion Contract to Build Biggest Immigrant Detention Center in US

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store