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Analysis: Trump’s New “10-Out, 1-In” Executive Order — Part Three

This post is the third and final in a series. Click to read the first and second posts.

Over the course of two posts, I have explored in detail my major takeaways from the new “10-out, 1-in” executive order. President Donald Trump sort of announced the order last Friday night with a Fact Sheet, but not the actual order itself. Remarkably, the order is still not on the White House website but can be viewed on a third-party website.

In this post, I offer my final set of observations on what the order is likely to mean during the second Trump administration. Note that the order specifically calls on the Director of the Office of Management and Budget — Russell Vought — to provide clarifying guidance on the details of implementing the order’s instructions to agencies. That could change some of the analysis below. I will provide additional analysis once that guidance drops.

With that, away we go.

The order also reverses the Biden administration by expanding OIRA review authority. As noted in yesterday’s post, the 10-out, 1-in executive order does more than just construct the Trump administration’s new iteration of a Rube Goldberg-esque regulatory budget regime; it is also dedicated to undoing the Biden administration’s valuable and important Modernizing Regulatory Review reforms.

One of the underappreciated steps the Biden administration took through this campaign was to actually relinquish presidential authority over the administrative state. I will repeat because I know that it sounds nuts: Biden voluntarily gave up presidential power. He did this by raising the threshold for what constitutes an economically significant regulation and by exempting the Department of the Treasury’s Internal Revenue Service (IRS) regulations from OIRA review. This may seem modest, but it flies in the face of a 50-year-long trend of presidents accumulating more and more power at the expense of the other branches of government.

It is no surprise, then, that Trump and Vought, both of whom are committed to a vision of an imperial presidency and a radical expansion of the unitary executive theory, have reversed both of these Biden-era changes.

The order reinforces the role of regulatory policy as a tool for maintaining racism and other forms of entrenched power disparities. As I’ve written elsewhere, the institution of cost-benefit analysis serves to entrench structural racism and other forms of entrenched power that run counter to widely shared American values. The Biden administration was sensitive to that and sought, through its revisions to Circular A-4, to sand off some of the most racist features of cost-benefit analysis, including by better accounting for regulations’ distributional effects and explicitly recognizing the legitimacy of human dignity and civil rights as legitimate regulatory ends — albeit ones that are improper to monetize. In rescinding Biden’s revised Circular A-4, the 10-out, 1-in order reinstates the previous racist order of cost-benefit analysis.

Similarly, the scope of the order’s regulatory budgeting requirements provides an insight into existing power structures, as well. With respect to cost-benefit analysis, it is indeed telling what kinds of policies must demonstrate their “economic efficiency” and which are deemed so important that they are exempt. Unsurprisingly, regulations that primarily benefit those lower rungs of the economic and political power ladder — environmental, worker health, and consumer protection, for example — have the most direct route to the cost-benefit analysis woodchipper. Those championed by elites — most notably, national security and military — receive a “get out of cost-benefit analysis free” card.

The order builds on this by exempting elite-preferred policies from its regulatory budgeting requirements. Specifically, it exempts “regulations issued with respect to a military, national security, homeland security, foreign affairs, or immigration-related function of the United States.” And it backs that up by providing the OMB Director with unilateral authority to provide exemptions for “any other specific regulation or category of regulations.” Now, who do you suppose will prevail on the OMB Director in securing those kinds of exemptions?

The order fails to make a persuasive policy argument that a regulatory budget scheme like the one it creates is even a good idea. To be fair, though, there is no persuasive policy argument for regulatory budgets — they are indefensible. First, capping the total amount of regulation is ridiculous unless there is some theoretical maximal level of regulation that is desirable in society. Obviously, that is not the case since new and emerging industries — chemicals manufacturers, the banking industry, artificial intelligence firms — are constantly finding new and innovative ways to harm the public interest.

Second, as noted in my previous post, under Executive Order 12866, which governs the White House centralized review process, generally all new regulations must pass a cost-benefit analysis test. In short, the rule’s very existence must make our society better off. The “logic” of regulatory budgeting, then, is to draw an arbitrary line in the sand and say, we, as a society, don’t want to be any better off than we are this point. It makes it official federal policy to leave proverbial points out the field. A while back, my Center colleagues and I explored the flawed theoretical underpinnings of regulatory budgeting. You can check that out here.

Given the Trump administration’s campaign to build an authoritarian administrative state, the order may not really matter in the grand scheme of things. At the risk of ending on a bleak note, it’s fair to ask whether — in light of all the truly outrageous things the Trump administration is perpetrating right now — this order really merits much concern. Our trans community friends are under attack. Our private data is being compromised. Entire programs are being illegally dismantled. Our constitutional order is being shredded before our eyes. By comparison, this order seems downright silly. (To give you a yardstick for how far we’ve come, the 2-out, 1-in executive order was one of the most radical, signature acts of Trump’s first term.)

Anyway, I’m still wrestling over the question of how much we should care about Trump’s 10-out, 1-in order. It could be that this order doesn’t amount to much over the next four years. But it may quickly become Trump administration’s Plan B for advancing its policy agenda if its blatantly unconstitutional tactics end up meeting fierce resistance in the courts.

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James Goodwin | February 5, 2025

Analysis: Trump’s New “10-Out, 1-In” Executive Order — Part Three

Over the course of two posts, I have explored in detail my major takeaways from the new “10-out, 1-in” executive order. President Donald Trump sort of announced the order last Friday night with a Fact Sheet, but not the actual order itself. Remarkably, the order is still not on the White House website but can be viewed on a third-party website. In this post, I offer my final set of observations on what the order is likely to mean during the second Trump administration.

James Goodwin | February 4, 2025

Analysis: Trump’s New “10-Out, 1-In” Executive Order — Part Two

In my previous post, I began exploring some of my major takeaways from the new “10-out, 1-in” executive order. President Donald Trump sort of announced the order Friday night with a Fact Sheet, but not the actual order itself. At this point, the order is not on the White House website but can be viewed on a third-party website. In this post, I will offer some additional observations and analysis.

Center for Progressive Reform | February 3, 2025

From Threatening to Fire Essential EPA Staff to Rolling Back Key Environmental Policies, Second Trump Administration Actions Are Dangerous and Damaging

The second Trump administration’s disastrous early-term actions do nothing to address the economic inequality that our political classes have long ignored. In its first two weeks, the administration has withdrawn from the Paris Climate Accords, reversed federal initiatives on environmental justice, withheld public health information, frozen spending on environmental and climate mitigation programs, threatened to withhold federal disaster aid, and just recently threatened to fire more than 1,000 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) workers who focus on climate and environmental enforcement.

James Goodwin | February 3, 2025

Analysis: Trump’s New “10-Out, 1-In” Executive Order — Part One

Late Friday night, while news about Elon Musk’s apparent unconstitutional purge of the Office Personnel Management was beginning to trickle out, President Trump quietly announced his promised executive order calling on agencies to eliminate 10 existing “rules” for every new rule they want to institute.

Brian Gumm, Bryan Dunning, Catalina Gonzalez, Federico Holm, James Goodwin, Minor Sinclair, Rachel Mayo, Sophie Loeb, Spencer Green, Tara Quinonez | January 30, 2025

Center for Progressive Reform Staff Statement in Support of the Transgender Community

We at the Center for Progressive Reform cannot sit idly by and watch the Trump administration’s relentless attacks on the transgender community here in the United States and around the world. The Center’s staff condemns the Trump administration’s attacks on the transgender community — especially trans children.

Daniel Farber | January 29, 2025

Saving Disaster Law from the Imperial Presidency

In recent days, President Donald Trump has said that he won’t provide relief for the Los Angeles fires unless California changes its voting laws and its water regulations. He also suggested that he’d like to abolish FEMA entirely. The first of Trump’s proposals is likely unconstitutional. The second one is both a terrible idea and beyond his legal authority.

Daniel Farber | January 28, 2025

Trump’s War Against NEPA

A sleeper provision in one of President Donald Trump’s executive orders attempts to revolutionize the way the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) operates and cut environmental review to a minimum.

wind turbines on a grassy plain

Sophie Loeb | January 28, 2025

Rural Clean Energy Convening Highlights Need for a Strong ‘Rural Agenda’

On December 11, 2024, in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, 40 folks attended the first annual rural clean energy convening co-sponsored by the Center for Progressive Reform and the Center for Energy Education. Attendees included FEMA representatives, USDA and other government agency officials, local residents, county commissioners, and energy policy advocates. The main topic of the […]

James Goodwin, Rena Steinzor | January 27, 2025

The CRA is a Payday for Congressional Republicans

The U.S. Congress is back and the U.S. House of Representatives is already roiling, as exemplified by the lobbyists and pundits who trail members and staff through the halls and into their offices. Republicans are already desperate to regain momentum after tripping out of the starting gate, even astride their newly minted control of both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue—a “trifecta” in Washington lexicon. Many backroom negotiations are inevitable, and the idea that a massive legislative package will be easier to pass could run into the reality that members will want innumerable concessions to take tough votes. The process will bog down, and Republicans must find something else to do. Senator Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has already fingered the most promising possibility—killing Biden Administration rules under the Congressional Review Act (CRA). The CRA allows narrow majorities in Congress to pass “resolutions of disapproval” for recently issued final rules.