The House voted to axe the Biden administrationâs approval of the California rules, which aim to cut pollution and planet-warming emissions from trucks, using a tool known as the Congressional Review Act (CRA).
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The CRA allows Congress, with just a simple majority in both chambers and presidential approval, to reverse recent regulations, evading the Senate filibusterâs 60-vote threshold. Itâs sometimes used at the start of a new administration to eliminate regulations put forward by the last one.
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However, the votes come in defiance of the Government Accountability Office (GAO), a nonpartisan congressional watchdog that sometimes issues legal opinions.Â
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That office has determined that because the EPAâs approval came in the form of a waiver rather than a rule, it is not subject to the CRA.Â
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By holding the votes anyway, House Republicans are demonstrating that they are willing to carry out their agenda regardless of whether the nonpartisan arbiter deems them legal.Â
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Senate Republicans, who also want to go after Californiaâs rules, are facing a similar challenge. The Senate parliamentarian, a rules authority for the upper chamber, has also ruled that the waivers allowing the rules to go forward are not subject to the CRA.
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Senate Republicans have signaled that they could seek to defy the parliamentarian, but have not yet said definitively whether they actually plan to do so.
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If they do, they could be setting up a legal and procedural kerfuffle â especially as the parliamentarian also sets the rules for what provisions can go into a high-stakes budget package that also evades the filibuster.
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The House was initially slated to also vote to axe Californiaâs phaseout of gas-powered cars, but postponed that vote until Thursday.
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Read more at TheHill.com.