The nation's largest oil trade group, which includes Exxon Mobil and Chevron, filed a federal lawsuit on Thursday seeking to block the Biden administration's efforts to reduce planet-warming emissions from cars and light trucks and encourage electric vehicle manufacturing. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency issued new tailpipe emission rules in March that will force automakers to produce and sell more electric vehicles to meet the new standards. The American Petroleum Institute (API) says the EPA has exceeded its congressional authority with a regulation that will eliminate most new gas cars and traditional hybrids from the U.S. market in less than a decade.
This echoes generic fear mongering of regulation from the conservative side. The EPA operates according to specific rules, it’s not just out there making random policies. Legislation creates the mandate, they promulgate within the law. What does “but will it always” do good things even mean? What are some bad things the EPA has done in your mind? Saying the government shouldn’t have the power to regulate emissions that are destroying the biosphere is absurd. There’s no right to ICE vehicles in perpetuity enshrined in the constitution. If the EPA ever start doing truly asinine things, then we elect leaders to change the laws dictating their mandate. This is just basic democracy stuff.
Saying the government shouldn’t have the power to regulate emissions that are destroying the biosphere is absurd.
I haven’t said that nor would I but $GovernmentAgency isn’t a synonym for “The Government”. What’s being discussed are the limits of an Agency attached to the Executive Branch relative to the power of the Legislative Branch.
What does “but will it always” do good things even mean?
The reality is everything is at risk with a fascist anti-environmentalist leader, especially if they have a majority of Congress and the courts. I just don’t see how exercising additional restraint with respect to fuel economy standards, as if that creates opportunities for abuse down the road, helps anything here. The EPA is following the law, and should keep doing that. Your example with asbestos is just the EPA not regulating harder, so let’s applaud harder regulation.
As to the last 20 years, considering the makeup of Congress, I’d say the IRA was monumental.
This echoes generic fear mongering of regulation from the conservative side. The EPA operates according to specific rules, it’s not just out there making random policies. Legislation creates the mandate, they promulgate within the law. What does “but will it always” do good things even mean? What are some bad things the EPA has done in your mind? Saying the government shouldn’t have the power to regulate emissions that are destroying the biosphere is absurd. There’s no right to ICE vehicles in perpetuity enshrined in the constitution. If the EPA ever start doing truly asinine things, then we elect leaders to change the laws dictating their mandate. This is just basic democracy stuff.
No it acknowledges that changes that can be made from one administration to the next.
This took nearly 30 years.
I haven’t said that nor would I but $GovernmentAgency isn’t a synonym for “The Government”. What’s being discussed are the limits of an Agency attached to the Executive Branch relative to the power of the Legislative Branch.
This, this right here is what it means.
The Trump Administration Rolled Back More Than 100 Environmental Rules.
That’s what can happen when an Agency of the Executive “does things” on its own authority.
How’s that been working out for the last 20 years?
The reality is everything is at risk with a fascist anti-environmentalist leader, especially if they have a majority of Congress and the courts. I just don’t see how exercising additional restraint with respect to fuel economy standards, as if that creates opportunities for abuse down the road, helps anything here. The EPA is following the law, and should keep doing that. Your example with asbestos is just the EPA not regulating harder, so let’s applaud harder regulation.
As to the last 20 years, considering the makeup of Congress, I’d say the IRA was monumental.