Difficulty: Congress almost never passes substantive laws anymore.
No way you’re getting a with-teeth EPA law, for example, through a modern Congress until we’re back to smog clouds over our cities and burning rivers and creating new, large cancer districts and superfund sites. And that’ll have to go on for a while before it happens. Then, maybe.
We’ve been coasting on good laws from the 70s and earlier, mostly, while weakening regulation has been eating our foundation like termites (especially Chicago-school-driven judicial rulings on how the executive is allowed to enforce anti-trust, in the late 70s, and later removal of media ownership consolidation rules). Now they (people who wish they could hurt people while making money and not be told to stop) can attack those good laws directly.
No way you’re getting a with-teeth EPA law, for example, through a modern Congress until we’re back to smog clouds over our cities and burning rivers and creating new, large cancer districts and superfund sites. And that’ll have to go on for a while before it happens. Then, maybe.
We’ve been coasting on good laws from the 70s and earlier, mostly, while weakening regulation has been eating our foundation like termites (especially Chicago-school-driven judicial rulings on how the executive is allowed to enforce anti-trust, in the late 70s, and later removal of media ownership consolidation rules). Now they (people who wish they could hurt people while making money and not be told to stop) can attack those good laws directly.