From The NYTimes:
President Trump issued an executive order
on Tuesday that seeks greater authority over regulatory agencies that
Congress established as independent from direct White House control,
part of a broader bid to centralize a president’s power over the
government.
The order requires
independent agencies to submit their proposed regulations to the White
House for review, asserts a power to block such agencies from spending
funds on projects or efforts that conflict with presidential priorities,
and declares that they must accept the president’s and the Justice
Department’s interpretation of the law as binding.
You can read the White House's fact sheet on the EO here.
More from The Times:
The directive applies to various executive branch agencies that Congress
established and empowered to regulate aspects of the economy,
structuring them to be run by officials the president would appoint to
fixed terms but whose day-to-day actions he would not directly control.
And:
Ending the independence of such agencies
and consolidating power over them in the White House has long been an
aim of the conservative legal movement, which sees that goal as a means
toward reducing regulations and rules the government has imposed on
powerful business interests.
But the
movement has lacked the votes to persuade Congress to simply rescind the
statutes and abolish or curtail such agencies. Instead, since the
Reagan administration, conservative lawyers have developed and pushed an
ideology called the unitary executive theory, under which the
Constitution should be reinterpreted as not allowing Congress to create
any pockets of independence within the government from direct
presidential control.
Ah, the Unitary Executive Theory.
Where are the originalists, those guardians of Constitutional orthodoxy regarding Trump's power grab?
At least he wasn't putting mustard on a cheeseburger.