A Vacancy at OIRA
From its onset, it was no secret that the Biden Administration would depend
heavily on leveraging the resources of the federal bureaucracy to implement
its agenda. Sure enough, through its first six months, the administration has
relied on executive orders and agency action
as it reverses course from the Trump
Administration’s regulatory policy.
That makes it all the more surprising that halfway through President Biden’s
first year, he has yet to nominate a head of the White House office that
coordinates federal regulations. For the uninitiated, that responsibility falls
on a Senate-approved administrator of the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA), an office within the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB).
According to Bridget Dooling of the George
Washington University Regulatory Studies Center, it is now more than two
months beyond the latest initial OIRA nomination of any recent
administration. By this point in their first year, the last four presidents
had their chosen OIRA administrator nominated, and the Senate had held
confirmation hearings. Three of the four nominees had been confirmed and were
on the job.
A primary reason why an OIRA administrator nominee has failed to
materialize was the failure of the administration to get its chosen nominee
for OMB director, Neera Tanden, approved by the Senate. Despite withdrawing
her nomination in early March, no new nominee for OMB’s top job has been put
forth either.
But that is not a sufficient reason to hold off on an
OIRA nomination. While we wait, the work of reviewing and clearing
proposed and final regulations, along with coordinating regulatory actions
directed by wide-ranging executive orders such as the recent one on competition, continues. There are three
reasons why the lack of a confirmed administrator is concerning.
The first is a lack of accountability. When Congress made the administrator a
Senate-confirmed position in 1986, it did so to make OIRA more transparent
and responsive. In the absence of a permanent administrator, non-Senate
confirmed White House staff have stepped into the void to keep
things moving. But Congress has less ability to get answers out of such staff
than a confirmed administrator.
The second is that it reduces the ability of OIRA staff, who are responsible
for reviewing draft regulations to ensure they meet minimum standards of
regulatory and economic analysis, to push back when agencies fail to do so. A
confirmed administrator can garner more respect and influence among agency
officials when challenging factual assertions underpinning draft regulations.
The third is unique to the Biden Administration. On his first day, the
president tasked OMB with revising the
regulatory review process that has been in place for three decades and
do so in a way that would allow OIRA to “play a more proactive role in
partnering with agencies to explore, promote, and undertake regulatory
initiatives.” Presumably, this process is happening right now. It would be
ideal to have a permanent head of OIRA advocating the views of its career
staff – the experts on how the process currently works and those likely to
have good ideas on how it could be strengthened.
Congress will soon leave Washington for its August recess. Here’s hoping that
when the Senate returns in September there is an OIRA nominee waiting to be
confirmed.
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