Circulating in Congress in the fall of 2012 was a
bill that would have allowed "the White House to second-guess major rules and mandate that
agencies carefully study the economic effects of new regulation. The change
could, in effect, delay a number of rules for the financial industry. Those who support preserving the status
quo where Wall Street regulates itself will find much to like in this
legislation," said Amit Narang, a regulatory policy advocate at Public
Citizen, a nonprofit government watchdog group.[1] President Obama had received $1 million from Goldman Sachs as a campaign contribution in 2008. Yet of how much value to Wall Street is a mere delay in regulation? Some, surely, but not enough to make this the decisive issue here. Rather, I submit that the president's control as chief executive of the regulatory agencies and the added bureaucracy are more salient in this case study.
The full essay is at "Presidential Authority and Bureaucracy."
The full essay is at "Presidential Authority and Bureaucracy."