Are
we going to let interest group politics undermine public safety?
“For every one new regulation, two old regulations must be
eliminated,” Donald Trump promised after the November vote. Since then,
Republicans in Congress have voted to give themselves broader authority to strike down federal rules of all
kinds.
The way I see the difference between liberals and conservatives
is, in part, in their different approaches to our flawed body of regulations.
Liberals think we should keep them and improve them. Conservatives would rather
scrap many of them altogether.
Both approaches confront the same problem: No government
run by humans will ever be perfect. Some regulations give us clean drinking
water and safe food, whereas others may be outdated or poorly written.
And when you’re the one on the wrong side of the red tape — the
small business owner hindered by regulations written for enormous corporations,
or the innocent person wrongfully placed on the No Fly List — your anger and
frustration are justified.
Yet regulations are, at their core, intended to protect us.
We count on regulations to keep our water clean, our food safe among many other things |
When we get down to the details, no doubt we’ll differ over what
our regulations ought to be. We can debate over what the latest science
supports, and what’s in the best interest of the American people.
Each of us will have different interests of our own, too. If you
put representatives of the pesticide industry, conventional and organic
farmers, consumers, and doctors around a table, you’ll probably hear a wide
range of views about how pesticides ought to be regulated.
But when it comes down to it, most liberal and conservative
voters alike want a safe, healthy, and prosperous country for all. They just
don’t agree on how to get there.
We all want to be sure that food we buy from the store is
honestly labeled and safe to eat. We all want the water coming out of our taps
to be safe to drink. We don’t want the environment polluted so that our kids
get asthma, or more people get cancer. We want the pharmaceuticals we buy to
work.
We want to be secure. We want law enforcement to be effective.
We want good roads and schools. We want consumer goods we buy to be safe. We
want a thriving economy. At their best, that’s what regulations give us.
Sometimes, of course, they don’t.
But is the answer to wage war on “regulations” as a whole, or to
review them and improve them?
A good regulation protects American citizens in some way. A good
regulation is effective and based on the latest science. A good regulation is
only imposed where necessary, because the government should avoid restricting
the activities of private citizens and businesses wherever possible.
Should we prune away regulations that aren’t fair or effective?
Absolutely.
And we’ll have ideological differences between liberals and
conservatives, as well as between different interest groups, over what constitutes
a fair and effective regulation.
But there’s no need to vilify regulations altogether. When they
serve a purpose protecting the American people, they’re in fact part of what
makes this country great.
OtherWords
columnist Jill Richardson is the author of Recipe for America: Why Our
Food System Is Broken and What We Can Do to Fix It. Distributed by OtherWords.org.