The following was submitted to "From The G-Man" on November 17, 2015.
STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
S.J.Res.
23 – Disapproving EPA Rule on Greenhouse Gas Emissions from New,
Modified, and Reconstructed Electric Utility Generating Units
(Sen. McConnell, R-KY, and 47 cosponsors)
The
Administration strongly opposes S.J.Res. 23, which would undermine the
public health protections of the Clean Air Act (CAA) and stop critical
U.S. efforts to reduce dangerous carbon pollution from power plants. In
2007, the Supreme Court ruled that the CAA gives the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) the authority to regulate greenhouse gas (GHG)
pollution. In 2009, EPA determined that GHG pollution threatens
Americans' health and welfare by leading to long-lasting changes to the
climate that can, and are already, having a range of negative effects on
human health and the environment. This finding is consistent with
conclusions of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and numerous other national
and international scientific bodies. Power plants account for roughly
one-third of all domestic GHG emissions. While the United States limits
dangerous emissions of arsenic, mercury, lead, particulate matter, and
ozone precursor pollution from power plants, the Carbon Pollution
Standards and the Clean Power Plan put into place the first national
limits on power plant carbon pollution. The Carbon Pollution Standards
will ensure that new, modified, and reconstructed power plants deploy
available systems of emission reduction to reduce carbon pollution.
S.J.Res.
23 would nullify carbon pollution standards for future power plants and
power plants undertaking significant modifications or reconstruction,
thus slowing our country's transition to cleaner, cutting-edge power
generation technologies. Most importantly, the resolution could enable
continued build-out of outdated, high-polluting, and long-lived power
generation infrastructure and impede efforts to reduce carbon pollution
from new and modified power plants – when the need to act, and to act
quickly, to mitigate climate change impacts on American communities has
never been more clear.
Since
it was enacted in 1970, and amended in 1977 and 1990, each time with
strong bipartisan support, the CAA has improved the Nation's air quality
and protected public health. Over that same period of time, the economy
has tripled in size while emissions of key pollutants have decreased by
more than 70 percent. Forty-five years of clean air regulation have
shown that a strong economy and strong environmental and public health
protection go hand-in-hand.
Because
S.J.Res. 23 threatens the health and economic welfare of future
generations by blocking important standards to reduce carbon pollution
from the power sector that take a flexible, common sense approach to
addressing carbon pollution, if the President were presented with
S.J.Res. 23, he would veto the bill.
H.R. 3189 – Fed Oversight Reform and Modernization Act of 2015
(Rep. Huizenga, R-MI, and 20 cosponsors)
H.R.
3189 would establish requirements for policy rules, codify blackout
periods of the Federal Open Market Committee, establish a cost-benefit
requirement for other rulemakings by the Federal Reserve Board, and
establish numerous, burdensome reporting requirements for the Federal
Reserve Board and its members. The Administration therefore strongly
opposes H.R. 3189.
The
Federal Reserve is an independent entity designed to be free from
political pressures, and its independence is key to its credibility and
its ability to act in the long-term interest of the Nation's economic
health. One of the most problematic provisions in the bill would
require the Comptroller General to audit the conduct of monetary policy
by the Federal Reserve Board and the Federal Open Market Committee. The
operations of the Federal Reserve are already subject to numerous audit
requirements that ensure it is accountable to the Congress and the
American people. The only aspect of the Federal Reserve's operations
not subject to audit is its monetary policy decision-making, and for
good reason. Subjecting the Federal Reserve's exercise of monetary
policy authority to audits based on political whims of members of the
Congress—of either party—threatens one of the central pillars of the
Nation's financial system and economy, and would almost certainly have
negative impacts on the Federal Reserve's work to promote price
stability and full employment.
H.R.
3189 also would impose numerous, burdensome requirements for the
Federal Reserve Board rulemaking authorities, including the imposition
of a duplicative requirement that the Federal Reserve Board undertake a
proscriptive cost-benefit analysis and a post-adoption impact assessment
when promulgating rules. When a Federal agency, including an
independent agency such as the Federal Reserve, promulgates a
regulation, the agency must adhere to the robust substantive and
procedural requirements of Federal law, including the Administrative
Procedure Act, the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the Paperwork Reduction
Act, and the Congressional Review Act, among other statutes.
Additionally, Executive Order 13579 encourages independent regulatory
agencies to conduct reasoned cost-benefit analysis, engage in public
participation to the extent feasible, and conduct a systematic
retrospective review of regulations. The provisions in this bill,
therefore, would create unnecessary, duplicative, and onerous
requirements for an entity tasked with ensuring the financial safety and
soundness of the Nation's financial system.
In
addition, the bill would add a number of procedural hurdles that would
impede the Federal Reserve's ability to engage with international
regulatory bodies and divert its resources to unnecessary reporting
requirements. These provisions, along with provisions imposing parallel
notification and consultation requirements on several other Executive
Branch entities, could impair the President's exercise of his exclusive
constitutional authority to conduct the Nation's diplomatic relations.
If the President were presented with H.R. 3189, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
H.R. 1210 — Portfolio Lending and Mortgage Access Act
(Rep. Barr, R-KY, and 54 cosponsors)
As
a result of the Ability-to-Repay rules issued by the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau, pursuant to the Truth in Lending Act, American
consumers are protected against harmful mortgage products and abusive
lending practices that were common in the run-up to the 2008 financial
crisis. Among other protections, the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau's Qualified Mortgage (QM) rule requires a lender to make a good
faith effort to determine that a borrower has the ability to repay a
mortgage, and that the loan does not include excessive upfront points
and fees. The final rule also contains special provisions and
exemptions that are available only to small lenders or to small lenders
that operate predominantly in rural or underserved areas.
H.R.
1210 would broaden the definition of qualified mortgages – those that
qualify for the safe harbor – to include all mortgages held on a
lender's balance sheet. Under the bill, depository institutions that
hold a loan in portfolio would receive a legal safe harbor even if the
loan contains terms and features that are abusive and harmful to
consumers. The bill would limit the right of borrowers to file claims
against holders of such loans and against mortgage originators who
directed them to the loans. H.R. 1210 also would open the door to risky
lending by allowing balloon loans made in any geographic area to
qualify for the safe harbor as long as they are held in portfolio.
The
Administration strongly opposes this bill because it would undermine
critical consumer protections by exempting all depository financial
institutions, large and small, from QM standards—including very basic
standards like verifying a consumer's income—as long as the mortgage
loans in question are held in portfolio by the institution. This bill
would undermine the essential protections provided under the Qualified
Mortgage rule. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the
mortgages offered legal protections under the bill would likely default
at a greater rate than the qualified mortgages with current legal
protections.
For these reasons, if the President were presented with H.R. 1210, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
Source: The Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget
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