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There's a reason why, when Reagan became president, he started getting rid of regulations, and we had a booming economy.
There's a gazillion different business license fees. And just keeping up with all the regulations - it just doesn't stop.
In 21st century America, capitalism has been unfettered from the regulations that democratized it and made it serve society.
You have to abide by the regulations that the regulators insist on. This is not a philosophical divide - it's a fact of life.
Laws were changed and regulations repealed until an Enron can set sail without responsibility, supervision, or accountability.
We need to cut the capital gains tax; we need to take regulations off the backs of business and allow banks to once again lend.
Dodd-Frank represents the greatest regulatory burden on our economy, more so than all the other Obama-era regulations combined.
President Trump cut regulations, allowing businesses large and small to expand and hire. The Democrats created those regulations.
Technology is rapidly changing our transportation systems, and if we craft smart regulations, these changes can be for the better.
I plan to eliminate regulations that hinder domestic companies, particularly large conglomerates from investing in other companies.
It seems the EPA has worked hard to devise new regulations that are designed to eliminate coal mining, coal burning, usage of coal.
Federal rules and regulations too often become seemingly insurmountable obstacles to simple changes that can have a positive impact.
With the right policies and regulations, the opportunities for American medical advancement and scientific innovation are boundless.
I will use my position as chairman emeritus on the Energy and Commerce Committee to try to bring some common sense to EPA regulations.
Banking, I would argue, is the most heavily regulated industry in the world. Regulations don't solve things. Supervision solves things.
I don't want to be partisan here. But please, tell me how you get out of a business recession by raising business taxes and regulations?
Ultimately, the best driver will always do something special, whatever the rules and whatever the regulations. Same thing with the teams.
All's the government should do is keep the taxes and regulations at a manageable rate, keep a decent standing army and get out of the way.
The economy needs thriving, job-creating small businesses, but excessive and ill-considered regulations too often get in the way of growth.
From my experience, there are so many regulations for investing in the United States that they become an impediment, a barrier to investing.
Success is built on organisation, determination, and experience, not to mention following the regulations, so of course it's no easy matter.
I'm not a complete libertarian. There is a proper role in some areas of the government to have rules and regulations - I'm not an anarchist.
Colonial history contains many examples of firearm regulations in urban areas that imposed obstacles to their use for protection of the home.
Apparently, the heart of opposition to new gun regulations is in the white community. Yet white people face far less daily violence with guns.
Carmakers do not lobby to remove safety regulations on their vehicles, but the NRA constantly lobbies to keep restrictions off deadly weapons.
Just like you have fire regulations, they should have regulations that no building would be made without charging points for electric vehicles.
Even when safety guidelines and regulations are in place, the rate of chemicals acceptable by law may be far higher than what is genuinely safe.
What Trump is doing is a lot more than just talking, tweets. He is rolling back regulations, standards, destroying lives. This has to be stopped.
You talk to the farmers, the ranchers, our small community bankers, and boy, one of the No. 1 issues is the regulations coming out of Washington.
We copied laws and regulations from western countries, but enforcement remains weak, and environmental litigation is still quite near impossible.
All the time, you take a look at what government rules are, so you can minimize the impact of government regulations. That's just smart business.
Because America leads the world by example, it's no surprise that some might seek to imitate our domestic rules and regulations on a global scale.
I manage my business; politicians are doing their business. I can only work within their rules and regulations. I can't pick up a political fight.
It's about businesses nervous about taking on school leavers because of a mass of red tape. It's about health and safety regulations and green fines.
We need to have much clearer regulations on things like corporate funding of scientific research. Things need to be made explicit which are implicit.
Like all small-business owners, I know what it's like to take a risk on an idea, manage cash flow, navigate regulations and tax laws, and create jobs.
What hinders the middle class the most is taxes, and what hinders business from creating jobs and moving people into the middle class are regulations.
The world needs to slash emissions by tens of billions of tons annually, which categorically requires government investment and government regulations.
The bottom line is that we cannot sit idle as unparalleled rules and regulations significantly restrict our rights and ability to care for our families.
Mark Meadows will fight for what's right, because he understands that higher taxes and more regulations are not the way to solve our country's problems.
The Supreme Court has been clear that states have the right to protect their citizens against out-of-state regulations that would burden those citizens.
Police forces across America need root-to-stem changes - to their internal cultures, training and hiring practices, insurance, and governing regulations.
Moreover, environmental health at the local level has become narrowly focused, very much defined around regulations and the attendant regulatory debates.
President Obama has piled on more taxes, more regulations, more debt for future generations and higher health care costs - hurting our Main Street economy.
Designing our own agriculture policy will mean we can put behind us the quotas and regulations that have held back U.K. output during our years in the E.U.
The process of getting regulations right is described publicly as far more political than in fact it is. It's essentially a legal and technical enterprise.
Through our deregulatory actions, the Trump Administration has proven that burdensome federal regulations are not necessary to drive environmental progress.
Motorists who want to save money on gas will demand and buy more fuel-efficient vehicles. We should not limit their freedom with more government regulations.
I don't really like the word 'religion.' To me, that's like rules and regulations and paying money to send up prayers. That kind of all weirds me out, honestly.
I believe that as a part of good governance, all agencies should be reviewing regulations and cleaning up those that may be outdated, redundant, or unnecessary.