MIDNIGHT RULE ACT REINTRODUCED BY DEMOCRATS
16 January 2009
New York politician prepares the ground for a
reversal of Bush Administration last-minute legislative
manouevres
The "midnight rule" political tactic, in which the
last-minute legislative push-throughs of outgoing US
administrations can be reversed by successors, became
familiar to online gamblers last year when the Bush
Administration rammed through the flawed and
controversial regulations supporting the Unlawful
Internet Gambling Enforcement Act.
This week a Democratic Party Representative from New
York, Jerrold Nadler, took the precaution of
reintroducing the Midnight Rule Act to a Congress newly
returned to the Capitol after the holiday season.
The Act enables an incoming president and his
administration to reconsider and if necessary overturn
any regulatory changes made by the previous
administration within three months of the change of
power.
Nadler referred to last minute changes made by the Bush
Administration which fall within the scope of the Act,
saying: "As expected, the Bush Administration has, in
its final moments, proposed a series of retrograde and
dangerous regulatory changes.
"I am reintroducing the Midnight Rule Act to reverse
President Bush's last minute attempts to weaken key
legal protections within our federal agencies. We cannot
sit idly by as this Administration quietly makes
last-ditch efforts to erode civil liberties, empower
polluting industries, threaten the environment and
weaken a woman's right to choose."
Nadler did not specify online gambling or the UIGEA in
his introduction, but it is clear that the much-criticised
regulations rammed through in some haste at the end of
last year by a White House staffer who had previously
lobbeyed for the NFL (see previous InfoPowa report)
falls within the Midnight Rule timeframe and could be up
for consideration.
Last-minute-rush legislative moves by the Bush
Administration that need to be examined, according to
Nadler, include: laws relating to reduced access to
abortion, contraceptives and sex health information and
an expansion of the right to refuse to give abortions by
health workers; wider powers given to the FBI to collect
information on Americans; looser environmental
regulations enabling federal officials to circumvent
reviews of global warming and potential ecological
impacts, and the loosening of restrictions on mining
companies regarding the disposal of toxic waste.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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