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Memo to Biden: Regulation Is Infrastructure

President Joe Biden's April 28 speech to a joint session of Congress — his first major address since his inauguration — offers him a chance to outline and defend his policy priorities. He should use this opportunity to articulate a positive vision of regulation as an institution within our democracy and to champion the crucial role it plays in promoting the public interest.

Biden will likely focus much of his speech on his ambitious infrastructure plan, from which he can easily pivot to regulation. After all, robust regulations are essential to the success of the U.S. economy, no different from traditional "gray" infrastructure like roads, bridges, pipelines, and power lines.

Strong regulatory protections provide a foundation of trust, which is critical for keeping our economy humming. Imagine, for example, if the Biden administration's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) issued its long overdue emergency temporary standard to protect workers from being exposed to COVID-19 on the job. Such a standard would give workers and consumers confidence that they can safely get back into the marketplace, providing a much-needed jolt of economic activity.

Like bridges, regulatory protections also link, in durable and meaningful ways, the interests of disparate economic actors to promote their mutual well-being. An Obama-era regulation that sought to require financial advisors to make decisions based on their customers' economic interests instead of what would yield them the greatest compensation was intended to have this effect. Such measures may come at a short-term cost to the financial services industry — cheating can be lucrative, after all. Over time, though, more people would be likely to avail themselves of the services this industry offers, as they come to recognize financial advisors as worthy of their trust. If this rule hadn't be wrongly struck down in court in 2018, it would have meant financial services customers getting better results, and the financial services sector getting more customers. With interests aligned, it was a win-win.

When strongly enforced, regulations are essential guardrails for our economy. Indeed, if the United States is to do our part in stopping humanity from driving over the edge into climate change-fueled cataclysm, we must pursue an aggressive strategy to wring greenhouse gas emissions out of our economy as quickly as possible. Regulations targeting the emissions of individual industrial sectors will play a crucial role in that strategy — and hopefully prevent our country from careening off the climate cliff.

Civic infrastructure

The value of regulation extends well beyond its contributions to our economic infrastructure. It also forms a critical part of our civic infrastructure. Regulation, in short, is democracy in action. Though far from perfect in practice, the regulatory system offers an irreplaceable public sphere in which we all can work together to give life to our common values through policies that promote our common goals.

Through its public participation opportunities, the regulatory system creates a foundation of trust between and among fellow Americans, regardless of where we might stand on a particular policy issue. Brought face-to-face to contest and deliberate, we are ultimately empowered to recognize the innate dignity and humanity of even those with whom we disagree. In this way, a vibrant regulatory system can help repair the partisan and cultural divisions that have long embroiled this country.

Similarly, the regulatory system can restore a sense of connectedness between ourselves and our government. It offers us opportunities to interact with public officials on an ongoing basis, which can help bridge the divide that has left many of us feeling like our government is some distant "they" instead of an extension of ourselves, as if our government is somehow not part of "we the people."

Better still, when we see the impact that we have on regulatory policymaking, we have a greater sense of authorship over our shared destinies as members of the broader American community.

And, as we increasingly feel a sense of having "reclaimed our government," we will become more invested in developing our civic persona and carrying out our public-minded responsibilities, including not only showing up to the ballot box but also embracing other deeper forms of democratic engagement. In turn, rejuvenated civic empowerment will buffer future incursions of creeping authoritarianism that threaten the American democratic experiment.

If the Obama administration was any guide, conservative lawmakers and their allies in industry will waste no time in attacking the foundational legitimacy of the Biden administration's use of regulation to advance its public-centered policy agenda. The Biden team must not merely rebut these attacks on their own terms, but rather preemptively reframe the debate over regulation by laying out an affirmative vision of its essential role in our economy and democracy. With the eyes of the nation watching, Biden's speech to Congress provides an opportune moment to do just that.

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James Goodwin | April 27, 2021

Memo to Biden: Regulation Is Infrastructure

President Joe Biden's April 28 speech to a joint session of Congress -- his first major address since his inauguration -- offers him a chance to outline and defend his policy priorities. He should use this opportunity to articulate a positive vision of regulation as an institution within our democracy and to champion the crucial role it plays in promoting the public interest.

James Goodwin | April 26, 2021

The Hill Op-ed: Now That Earmarks Are Back, It’s Time to Ban ‘Poison Pill’ Riders

Making Congress functional again is having a moment. The debates over ending the filibuster and legislation to prevent hyper-partisan congressional districts have received the most attention in this space so far. But lawmakers did quietly take an important step forward on mending congressional dysfunction when they reinstated the practice of earmarking the federal budget, reversing a decade-old ban. Lawmakers should build on this fix to the budget process by cracking down on "poison pill" appropriations riders, a gimmick that proliferated in the vacuum left by the earmark ban.

Alejandro Camacho | April 23, 2021

Biden Picks Conservation Advocate Tracy Stone-Manning to Lead the Bureau of Land Management. Here are Five Priorities for Our Public Lands.

On April 22, the White House confirmed that President Joe Biden will nominate Tracy Stone-Manning to head up the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), a federal agency charged with overseeing national monuments and other public lands, as well as key aspects of energy development. A longtime conservation advocate, Stone-Manning has worked for the National Wildlife Federation, served as chief of staff to former Montana Gov. Steve Bullock and advisor to Sen. Jon Tester, and led Montana's Department of Environmental Quality.

Brian Gumm | April 22, 2021

Connect the Dots Season Five Begins with Discussion on Energy Justice

In 2020, the world banded together to fight the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, in 2021, the world continues to change, and we seem to be progressing forward. In turn, the spotlight shifts to another great calamity: climate change. The environmental crisis has made headlines with the Biden administration making climate mitigation and renewable energy top priorities. Scientists and engineers are hard at work creating energy systems that run efficiently, withstand various constraints, and won’t pollute the air. However, as this episode of CPR's Connect the Dots podcast explains, it's also important to look at how we implement these new innovations in a way that’s equitable and purposeful to all.

Minor Sinclair | April 20, 2021

A Small Step toward Accountability: CPR Commends Guilty Verdicts in the Murder of George Floyd

Racism runs much deeper than policing and law enforcement. Racial injustice is deeply embedded in our nation’s past and present. It is systemic, institutional, and interpersonal, but it is not insurmountable. It’s time for a national reckoning that takes racism and white supremacy seriously and delivers fully enforceable policies that stamp out discrimination in policing and all other institutions in our country. Black Americans and other marginalized people are entitled to the same tenets of life and liberty as guaranteed to white people. Systemic racism and lawlessness by state actors make that impossible. On April 20, a jury found Derek Chauvin guilty of murdering George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, in May 2020. This is one small step toward accountability for those who perpetrate violence against Black people and other marginalized people.

Darya Minovi | April 20, 2021

The Promise of Environmental Justice Screening Tools in Maryland and Beyond

Since President Joe Biden assumed office, environmental justice has been at the front and center of his administration. One key initiative: developing better mapping tools to identify communities that may bear a disproportionate burden of toxic pollution and climate change impacts. Biden’s environmental justice (EJ) plan emphasizes the value of these tools and the need to improve them.

Alina Gonzalez, Allison Stevens | April 14, 2021

Advocates, Scholars of Color Call for Bold Action to End Environmental Racism

Scholars and advocates of color last week hailed the Biden administration’s efforts to ensure that disadvantaged communities reap the benefits of federal climate investments — but added that the administration must be held accountable for following through on it.

Katlyn Schmitt | April 13, 2021

Maryland Adopts Law to Ensure Safe Drinking Water for Tenants

At midnight on April 13, Maryland’s 2021 legislative session closed out with the passage of House Bill 1069 that will provide meaningful drinking water protections for tenants who rely on well water.

Sarah Krakoff | April 6, 2021

Equity and Justice Should Begin at Home

A citizen of the Laguna Pueblo, Deborah Haaland is the first Native American woman to serve as Secretary of the U.S. Department of the Interior. Haaland will oversee the federal agencies that manage nearly 480 million acres of federal public lands, while the head of the U.S. Forest Service in the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) manages the remaining 190 million acres. Haaland and her colleague, Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, have a tall double-order ahead. In his flurry of first-day executive orders, President Joe Biden announced the entwined goals of addressing racial, economic, and other forms of injustice, as well as tackling the country’s most serious environmental challenges.