
Donald Trump has a great fondness for the policies of the late 19th Century, praising that period’s focus on tariffs and its lack of a federal income tax. Yet there is another practice from that time that Trump abhors: independent regulatory agencies.
In 1887 Congress created the Interstate Commerce Commission to oversee the railroad industry, which then played a commanding role in the economy and was not known for having high ethical standards. The ICC was not completely autonomous—the president appointed its members—and it had some significant flaws, but the agency was the beginning of a system in which federal oversight of business would take place outside the direct control of the White House.
Part of the Trump Administration’s campaign to remake the federal government is the elimination of independent regulation. In February, Trump signed an executive order taking a significant step in that direction by giving the Office of Management and Budget extensive powers to oversee the agencies. He has gone on to fire their Democratic commissioners, brazenly violating the legal requirement of bipartisanship in the running of those entities and a 90-year-old Supreme Court ruling that presidents cannot fire board members without just cause.
Unfortunately, the current Supreme Court has shown no inclination to block Trump’s power grab. It has just allowed him to proceed with the dismissal of three commissioners at the Consumer Product Safety Commission. This ruling, issued as part of the Court’s ever-expanding shadow docket, followed a similar decision allowing Trump to remove a Democrat from the National Labor Relations Board. Trump has also fired commissioners at agencies such as the Federal Trade Commission and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. And, of course, he is openly weighing whether to illegally fire Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell; the Fed is a banking regulator as well as being in charge of monetary policy.
Aside from the general issue of undue consolidation of presidential power, Trump’s moves at the independent agencies are likely to be detrimental to the oversight process itself.
It is true that the agencies have a mixed record when it comes to enforcement. Entities such as the Nuclear Regulatory Commission have traditionally been too close to the industries they were supposed to oversee. On the other hand, independent agencies have brought major actions against major companies for various kinds of violations. The FTC, for example, has imposed multi-billion-dollar penalties on Meta Platforms and Volkswagen.
Trump, of course, is exerting more power over the agencies not to make them more aggressive but rather to weaken their oversight, especially when it comes to companies favored by the Administration. Or else he is seeking to turn the agencies into weapons against those he disfavors. This is seen most clearly at the FCC, whose Trump-appointed head Brendan Carr, is an eager MAGA partisan.
Overall, Trump’s campaign against independent regulation is an enormous gift to Big Business and a serious setback for consumers, workers, and communities depending on those agencies for some measure of protection against corporate misconduct.