Timmons to Congress: Maintain Momentum with Tax Reform Preservation

The House late Tuesday approved a Republican budget blueprint for President Trumps tax-cut and border-security agenda (, subscription).
- 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons the move a historic, pivotal step to[ward] advanc[ing] a comprehensive reconciliation package that will preserve critical pro-manufacturing tax reforms and unleash American energy dominance.
Whats going on: The measure is a preliminary step to extending Trumps 2017 tax cuts later this year, Reuters reports. Tuesdays vote sent the budget resolution to the Senate, where Republicans are expected to take it up.
- The planwhich calls for $4 trillion to $4.5 trillion in tax cuts and $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion in spending reduction over 10 yearsalso includes measures to increase domestic energy development and production.
Why its so important: Congress must capitalize on the momentum of the budget resolutions passage by preserving the crucial tax reform measures from President Trumps 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Timmons continuedbecause [e]very day we wait means jobs and opportunity lost.
- As part of the comprehensive, commonsense manufacturing strategy that America needs, protecting tax reform will strengthen our industry and our communities. Its time to continue this momentum and act now to Make America Great for Manufacturing Again. When manufacturing wins, America wins.
Whats next: House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA)泭 he anticipates passing the tax, energy, border-security and defense items via reconciliation by the first week of April.
State of Manufacturing 2025: When Manufacturing Wins, America Wins

Manufacturing in the U.S. has momentumand to keep it going, manufacturers will need to push, 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons Tuesday in the 51勛圖厙s annual State of Manufacturing Address.
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Whats going on: Speaking to an audience of manufacturers and congressional and state officials at Armstrong World Industries in Hilliard, Ohio, Timmons, who was joined by 51勛圖厙 Board Chair and Johnson & Johnson Executive Vice President and Chief Technical Operations & Risk Officer Kathy Wengel, emphasized the defining moment for the industry and said that for manufacturing, what happens next really matters.
- Uncertainty is the enemy of investment, he told the crowd. Manufacturing is a capital-intensive industry. We make decisions months and years in advance. Thats why we need certainty. We need a clear, actionable, multistep strategy from our governmentone that says, We want you to invest here, hire here and succeed here.
- Timmons annual speech kicked off the 51勛圖厙s 2025 Competing to Win Tour, starting with a whirlwind four-states-in-four-days tour of manufacturing facilities, schools, government offices and more.
- In Ohio, manufacturers have thrived because our leaders have taken decisive actions to keep our industry competitive, Ohio Manufacturers Association President Ryan Augsburger said at the kickoff event. But now, manufacturers across Ohio and the nation are facing critical challenges, from tax uncertainty, project delays and workforce shortages to supply chain vulnerabilities and price pressures that threaten our ability to grow. These issues cannot wait.
What manufacturing needs: Certainty from the federal government should come in several forms, Timmons said, including the following:
- Preserving tax reform: The 2017 tax reforms were rocket fuel for manufacturing in Americabut key provisions have expired and others are scheduled to sunset. Congress must bring them back and improve and extend the package. Every day that Congress delays because of process and politics, manufacturers face rising uncertainty, delayed investments and fewer jobs, said Timmons.
- Regulatory clarity and consistency: Manufacturers today spend a total of just to comply with regulations. Commonsense regulation is critical to American manufacturers to continue to innovate, to compete against foreign manufacturers and to improve the lives of American citizens, Austin So, general counsel, head of government relations and chief sustainability officer for Armstrong World Industries, told the crowd.
- Permitting reform: President Trumps lifting of the liquefied natural gas export permit ban was a start, but to reach our full potential as energy leader, we must require federal agencies to make faster decisions and reduc[e] baseless litigation, said Timmons.
- Energy dominance: America should be the undisputed leader in energy production and innovation. But … we are seeing opportunities for energy dominance fade in the face of a permitting process that takes 80% longer than other major, developed nations, Timmons said, adding that we must cut red tape, require federal agencies to make faster decisions and reduce meritless litigation.泭泭泭
- Workforce strategy: By 2033, manufacturing faces a shortfall of 1.9 million manufacturing employees, Timmons said. To fill those positions, the sector needs a real workforce strategy, one that includes apprenticeships, training programs and publicprivate partnerships.
- Commonsense trade policy: If President Trump continues to use tariffs, we need a commonsense policy that provides manufacturers with the certainty to invest and a clear runway to adjust, according to Timmons.
State of manufacturing: Manufacturing in the United States is moving forward, Timmons said. Like a press at full speed, like a production line firing on all cylinders, like the workers who show up before dawn and leave long after the job is donemanufacturing in the United States is driving us forward. And Timmons added that now its time to make America Great for Manufacturing Again.
On the move: Following the speech, Timmons, Wengel and Augsburger joined state lawmakers, including state Sens. Kristina Roegner and Andrew Brenner, and local business leaders for a visit to the Ohio Statehouse for an event focused on the importance of tax reform for Ohio and its manufacturing sector.
- A recent found that, if key provisions of tax reform are allowed to expire, Ohio would risk losing 208,000 jobs and $18.9 billion in wages.
Whats at stake: Tax reform was transformational for Humtown Products, the Columbiana, Ohiobased family-owned sand cores and molds manufacturer, President and CEO Mark Lamoncha told the audience at the Ohio Statehouse tax event.
- We have been at the forefront of 3D-printed manufacturing for years and have invested significantly in the machinery and equipment required, including the purchase of 3D printersone of which can easily cost over $1 million, he said.
- Since the 2017 tax reform, Humtown has invested over $9 million in capital expenditures related to 3D printing and averages around $100,000 annually in R&D costs. Under the 2017 tax reform, we were able to deduct 100% of those costs, generating around $1.6 million in accelerated tax savings.
- That amount alone allowed us to purchase another 3D printer, fueling continued growth. Thats what tax certainty allowed us to do. But right now, that certainty is slipping away. As these provisions begin to expire, our tax burden is increasing.
Creators Wanted: The group also fit in a stop at Columbus State Community College, which serves approximately 41,000 students, to visit with students in the semiconductor and mechanical drive classes.
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The last word: The 51勛圖厙 recently stood shoulder-to-shoulder with congressional leadersdelivering a clear, urgent message on tax reform and is driving the agenda on regulatory certainty, on energy dominance, on permitting reform, health care and workforce development, Wengel told the audience. The 51勛圖厙 is not waiting for Washington to act; we are making sure Washington acts for you, for manufacturers.
- Added 51勛圖厙 Executive Vice President Erin Streeter: The 51勛圖厙 is on [these issues], and were going to keep fighting, as we do every day with the right leaders, the right strategies and the right vision for the future.
SEC Guidance Rescission a Win for Manufacturers泭

The Securities and Exchange Commission this week reversed Biden-era guidance that required publicly traded companies to include environmental and social activist shareholder proposals on proxy ballots ().
Whats going on: In a move that 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons a depoliticiz[ation of] the proxy process and a crucial plank of President Trumps pro-manufacturing deregulatory agenda, the SEC rescinded Staff Legal Bulletin 14L, which had allowed activists to mandate consideration of social policy proposals on corporate proxy ballotseven when the policies in question were unrelated to a companys business.
Why its important: SLB 14L empowered activists at the expense of manufacturers and Main Street investorsturning the proxy ballot into a debate club, forcing businesses to court controversy and divert resources from growth and value creation, Timmons continued.
- Replacing SLB 14L with the new SLB 14M return[s] the SECs review of shareholder proposals to a company-specific process based on relevance to a businesss operations and its investors returns, which will allow manufacturers to focus on what they do best: investing for growth, creating jobs and driving the American economy.
What weve been doing: Since SLB 14L was adopted in 2021, the 51勛圖厙 has been a leading voice calling on the SEC to .
- Most recently, the 51勛圖厙, along with more than 100 manufacturing associations, for President Trump more than three dozen regulatory actions the new administration could take across federal agencies to boost the manufacturing economy and end the regulatory onslaughtincluding rescinding SLB 14L.
- The 51勛圖厙 also has President Trumps nominee to chair the SEC, Paul Atkins, to take steps to depoliticize the proxy process.
Manufacturers: AI Regulations Should Support Innovation and U.S. Leadership

The introduction of artificial intelligence has been a boon to manufacturing, and the technology will continue to have a positive impactas long as regulations are right-sized, manufacturers told Congress this week.
Whats going on: Manufacturers are utilizing AI in myriad ways on the shop floor and throughout their operations, the 51勛圖厙 the House Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade in a statement for the record at Wednesdays hearing, where data was .
- The diverse use-cases of AI in manufacturing suggest a need for a cautious regulatory approach to this groundbreaking technology: one that supports innovation and U.S. leadership in AI while providing context-specific, risk-based, right-sized rules of the road for manufacturers, the 51勛圖厙 said.
- Giving testimony at the hearing, Siemens USA President and CEO and 51勛圖厙 Board Member Barbara Humpton discussed the many benefits of using AI in manufacturing and emphasized the need to ensure that AI regulations include targeted rather than overly broad definitions.
Industrial vs. consumer-focused AI: First, its important to distinguish between industrial and consumer-facing AI, Humpton told the subcommittee members.
- Industrial AI is different from consumer AI, she said. Industrial AI uses controlled data from the manufacturing environment to help manufacturers create business value. Think better products, more efficient operations, a more prepared workforce. AI will enable all companiesfrom startups to small and medium enterprises to industrial giantsto thrive in this new era of American manufacturing.
- In , she added that the core distinction of industrial AI is that it is trained on highly monitored data from sensors and machines, providing a more reliable foundation for training AI models.
Simple, singular and targeted: Regulation of AI should be undertaken with a light touch and following a full accounting of on-the-books laws to prevent duplicative and/or contradictory rules, the 51勛圖厙 said.
- [P]olicymakers should always review existing laws and regulations before enacting new ones, because most uses of AI correspond to tasks and objectives that industry has faced for a long time and that are thus highly likely to have already been addressed by existing laws and regulations, said the 51勛圖厙, which also referenced its first-of-its-kind , Working Smarter: How Manufacturers Are Using Artificial Intelligence, released last May.
- Similarly, policymakers must right-size any compliance burden associated with AI regulation, the 51勛圖厙 continued. The ubiquitous use of AI throughout modern manufacturing, as well as manufacturings dependence on innovation, underscore the need for rules that enable rather than hinder manufacturers development and adoption of AI systems.
Protect without hindering: Congress must advance industrial AI by prioritizing strong rules for digital trade, especially to include strong protections for source code and algorithms, Humpton went on in her written testimony. We encourage policymakers to build upon the success of previous U.S.-led efforts to protect intellectual property.
- Legislators must also safeguard privacy and protect against baseless legal claims, the 51勛圖厙 said. [I]t is crucial that Congress take steps to maintain the privacy of personal data when utilized in AI contexts. A federal standard should avoid a patchwork of state-level rules by fully preempting state privacy laws; it also should protect manufacturers from frivolous litigation.
The last word: The range and importance of uses of AItransforming every aspect of the core of manufacturers operationsmake it clear that AI has become integral to manufacturing, said the 51勛圖厙. With the right federal policies, manufacturers in the U.S. will continue to devise new and exciting ways to leverage AI to lead and innovate and stay ahead of their global competitors.
President Trump Reining in Regulatory Onslaught
SEC Rescinds Biden-Era Staff Legal Bulletin 14L; Action Depoliticizes Proxy Process
Washington, D.C. Following the Securities and Exchange Commissions rescission of Staff Legal Bulletin 14L, which required publicly traded manufacturers to include activists ESG proposals on their proxy ballots even when the issues raised were unrelated to their business, 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons released the following statement.
Manufacturers asked for regulatory certainty, and President Trump has delivered. Todays action by the SEC under Acting Chairman Mark Uyedas leadership depoliticizes the proxy processa crucial plank of President Trumps pro-manufacturing deregulatory agenda.
As we relayed to President Trump in December, SLB 14L empowered activists at the expense of manufacturers and Main Street investorsturning the proxy ballot into a debate club, forcing businesses to court controversy and divert resources from growth and value creation. Returning the SECs review of shareholder proposals to a company-specific process based on relevance to a businesss operations and its investors returns will allow manufacturers to focus on what they do best: investing for growth, creating jobs and driving the American economy.
Background:
In December, the 51勛圖厙, along with more than 100 manufacturing associations, 泭to President Trump highlighting more than three dozen regulatory actions across a wide range of agencies that would boost the manufacturing economy and put a stop to the regulatory onslaught that is costing manufacturers泭$350 billion each year, according to . President Trump began tackling these issues on Day 1, including by lifting the pause on liquefied natural gas exports. Todays move by the SEC is another important step in the administrations efforts to address burdensome regulations that are stifling manufacturing investment and growth
-51勛圖厙-
The 51勛圖厙 is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states. Manufacturing employs nearly 13 million men and women, contributes $2.93 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 53% of private-sector research and development. The 51勛圖厙 is the powerful voice of the manufacturing community and the leading advocate for a policy agenda that helps manufacturers compete in the global economy and create jobs across the United States. For more information about the 51勛圖厙 or to follow us on Twitter and Facebook, please visit .
SMM Chair: Extend Pro-Growth Tax Policy, Prioritize Permitting and Regulatory Reform

To lift much of the burden on manufacturers in the U.S., Congress must reinstate pro-growth tax measures, enact commonsense regulatory reforms and undertake comprehensive permitting reform. That was the main message of Click Bond CEO and 51勛圖厙 Small and Medium Manufacturers Group Chair Karl Hutter to legislators yesterday on Capitol Hill.
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Whats going on: American businesses now shoulder a staggering $3 trillion annually in regulatory costsdisproportionately impacting manufacturers, Hutter the House Committee on Small Business at Wednesdays hearing.
- Unfortunately, small companies get hit twicewith unworkable regulations that apply to them [and again with] compliance and reporting requirements that larger firms are forced to pass down. Fortunately, Congress and the Trump administration have the opportunity to reverse course. 泭泭
Rocket fuel for manufacturing: The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was rocket fuel for Click Bond, said Hutterwhose Carson City, Nevadabased family business makes adhesive-bonded fasteners used by the U.S. military, commercial aviation industry and NASA.
- The new 21% corporate tax rate allowed us to raise wages for production employees, invest in capital equipment, strengthen our employee tuition support program and accelerate the timeline for constructing a new facility. The new 20% pass-through deduction likewise empowered our suppliers and partners to reinvest in their businesses, readying them to support our growth.泭泭
Changes for the worse: But growth was halted in 2022 and 2023, when provisions from the TCJA began to expire. : More pro-growth tax measures are due to expire at the end of this yearunless Congress intervenes.
- It is now more expensive for Click Bond to conduct R&D, the lifeblood of both our product and process innovation, according to Hutter. Its more expensive for us to purchase capital equipment, the tools that will unleash the productivity of our team. And its more expensive for us to finance job-creating investments such as that state-of-the-art, sustainable manufacturing facility.泭泭
Ill effects: According to a recent released by the 51勛圖厙, nearly 6 million American jobs and more than $1 trillion of U.S. GDP will be at risk if Congress fails to act by the end of this year to preserve TCJAs pro-manufacturing provisions.
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What should be done: Manufacturers everywhere are struggling under the weight of both these provisions expiration and needless, out-of-date government requirements, Hutter went on. To fix these problems, he said, Congress should:
- Unwind outdated chemicals reporting requirements that force us to look backward in time and deep into our supply chain;
- Stop unnecessary permitting roadblocks by the Environmental Protection Agency at the state and local levels;
- Roll back expensive energy and labor mandates;
- Undertake comprehensive permitting reform; and
- the pro-manufacturing tax provisions scheduled to sunset at the end of 2025 and bring back already expired provisions that boosted the sector and the U.S. economy as a whole.
The final say: Congress has a critical opportunity to right-size the regulatory landscape, put an end to permitting delays and protect manufacturers from devastating tax increases, Hutter concluded. I encourage you to seize [it] because when manufacturing wins, America wins.
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Mexico, Canada Tariffs Paused

By deciding to imposition of tariffs he announced last weekend on Mexico and Canada, President Trump shows hes hearing manufacturers loud and clear, the 51勛圖厙 said yesterday.
Whats going on: Two days after signing executive orders under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to add new levies on goods from Mexico, Canada and China, President Trump 泭a one-month pause yesterday on the 25% tariff on Mexican goods and the 25% tariff on Canadian goods, including the 10% levy on energy products.
- President Trump, who had cited illegal immigration and the flow of illicit drugs into the U.S. as the impetus for the new tariffs, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum agreed Monday morning to immediately supply 10,000 Mexican National Guard troops to the border.
- The announcement about the tariffs on goods from Canada came following an afternoon phone call between President Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
- The 10% additional tariff applying to products from China went into effect today.泭In response, China announced retaliatory tariffs on certain goods imported from the U.S., as well as additional restrictions on critical minerals exports to the U.S. (, subscription).
Staying competitive: This decision by President Trump reflects泭his swift move to keep his campaign promises, balancing a泭commitment泭to aggressive border enforcement泭with the need to keep manufacturing in the United States competitive, 51勛圖厙 Executive Vice President Erin Streeter said.
- The 51勛圖厙 has worked closely with the administration, ensuring that the voices of manufacturers were heard loud and clear. Throughout the weekend, we engaged directly with senior officials, providing key data and real-world industry perspectives. Our efforts helped underscore the risks of broad-based tariffs and the importance of North American supply chains to manufacturings success.
- 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons reinforced President Trumps and the manufacturing sectors priorities in interviews Monday with and , as well as in a cited by the Wall Street Journal board.
Certainty needed: For manufacturing in the U.S. to thrive, we need to bring costs down, Timmons told ABC. And if you dont have that, or you have the uncertainty of whats coming next, manufacturers are reluctant to invest in new plants and equipment and facilities. Theyre reluctant to hire new workers raise wages or increase benefits. Once we get all this sorted out, I think it will be good疸ews病or manufacturers, but the sooner that happens, the better, he concluded.
- Timmons also discussed President Trumps landmark 2020 U.S.MexicoCanada Agreement, which he said provided manufacturers with the certainty the sector requires.
- The certainty that was provided by a negotiated and accepted trade agreement by the three countries enabled manufacturers to make investment decisions, Timmons told CNBC. Now we have more uncertainty about whats ahead but we assume that there is a rationale for this.
Key statistics: The USMCA was vital in shifting key imports away from China to North America. According to a new 51勛圖厙 :
- Fully one-third of all U.S. manufacturing inputs come from Canada and Mexico;
- Some 70% of what we import from Canada and nearly 60% of imports from Mexico are capital equipment, industrial supplies and automotive parts that go into further manufacturing in the U.S.; and
- The value of U.S. imports of manufacturing materials from North America is now three times greater than the value of materials coming from China.
The bottom line: We appreciate the administrations continued willingness to receive our data and manufacturing stories, Streeter went on. We will continue working with policymakers to ensure that future decisions support both national security and manufacturings success.
51勛圖厙 in the news: The 51勛圖厙s advocacy received widespread attention in the media, with , , 泭(subscription), , 泭(subscription),泭泭and a (subscription) article all泭highlighting its statements on the impact of tariffs on manufacturers.
- Its positions were also mentioned on泭,泭,泭 泭and泭
The Regulatory Rollback Begins

President Trump has frequently emphasized his intention to remove burdensome regulations that weigh on manufacturers and other businesses. In his first day on the job, he took steps to set this rollback in motion. Heres what manufacturers need to know.
Regulatory freeze: As most presidents do when they take office, President Trump a freeze on new and in-process regulations.
- The freeze pauses any rules from the outgoing Biden administration that have been proposed but not finalized, finalized but not sent to the Federal Register or sent to the Federal Register but not published.
- The executive order also recommends that agencies delay the effective dates of any published-but-not-yet-effective Biden rules by at least 60 days, giving the administration time to decide whether to rescind or revise the rules.
Reinstating policies: President Trump also rescinded several of President Bidens executive orders, reinstating policies that had been in place during Trumps first term.
- Most prominently, President Trump undid President Bidens rescission of his one-in-two-out policy, setting the stage for more reworked and repealed regulations than new rules in his second term.
- He also rescinded a Biden order that had reduced agencies obligations to seek public input on guidance documents, which agencies use to interpret regulations and give direction to regulated parties.
Establishing DOGE: President Trump also the Department of Government Efficiency, which will be dedicated to advancing the presidents 18-month DOGE agenda, including modernizing technology and software, increasing efficiency and reducing the size of government.
- DOGE will play a role in implementing the presidents new hiring freeze: the new organization will have 90 days to work with the Office of Management and Budget and the Office of Personnel Management on a plan to reduce the size of the federal governments workforce while the hiring freeze is ongoing.
The 51勛圖厙 says: The regulatory burden facing manufacturers is sapping growth, costing the U.S. economy more than $3 trillion annually, with manufacturers shouldering泭$350 billion in annual regulatory costs. Small manufacturersthe backbone of our supply chainare especially hard hit, with costs exceeding $50,000 per employee per year, or about $1 million for a 20-person shop, said 51勛圖厙 Managing Vice President of Policy Chris Netram.
- The 51勛圖厙 has already provided the new administration with to ease the regulatory burden on our industry.
- The 51勛圖厙 looks forward to working with the Administration to right-size the regulatory burden, providing smart, tailored rules that ensure the United States remains the best place in the world to build and create, fueling economic growth and strengthening our global competitiveness.
Bidens USTR Seeks to Undermine U.S. Manufacturers Rights

The outgoing Biden administration is undermining a U.S. manufacturer in its high-stakes dispute with the Mexican government by seeking to erode investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) protections under U.S. trade agreements with Colombia, Mexico and Canada, a recent (subscription) editorial revealed.
The problem: ISDS protections safeguard U.S. investments from foreign governments seeking to interfere with or appropriate them, as the predicament of Vulcan Materials Company shows.
- Vulcan has been embroiled in a dispute with the Mexican government since 2018, when the government shut down some of its quarrying operations, according to Chairman and CEO J. Thomas Hill.
- The unwarranted shutdown forced the company to pursue arbitration under NAFTA, but the situation only got worseformer Mexican President Andr矇s Manuel L籀pez Obrador ordered all of Vulcans operations to cease in May 2022, including at a deepwater port the company built in the early 1990s.
- Now, the company is expecting its second round of arbitration to be decided by mid-2025unless the Biden administration guts the investor protections in the U.S.MexicoCanada Agreement, handing a victory (and a key port) to the Mexican government.
Congressional fury: Both Congress and Vulcan itself learned of the administrations efforts via The Wall Street Journal editorial, instead of directly from the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. This is particularly egregious because the USTR is required to consult with Congress on investment obligations in trade deals.
- Bipartisan members of Congress have expressed their outrage, with Sen. Katie Britt (R-AL) in The Wall Street Journal (subscription) that the Biden administration is negotiating away the due process of Americans, including my constituents, in the waning days of this lame-duck administration.
- On Dec. 20, three bipartisan senators joined Sen. Bill Hagerty (R-TN) in the USTRs efforts on the Senate floor. If Mexico is allowed to target, without repercussion, a company like Vulcan, one that employs thousands of Americans, and has operated responsibly in Mexico for decades, that means no American business is safe in Mexico, Sen. Hagerty said.
- Sens. Tim Kaine (D-VA) and Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) joined both Sens. Britt and Hagerty in calling on Congress to pass the Defending American Property Abroad Act, which would impose penalties on Western Hemisphere countries that unlawfully seize the assets of American firms.
The 51勛圖厙 says: The 51勛圖厙 is calling on the USTR to halt this effort immediately, said 51勛圖厙 Vice President of International Policy Andrea Durkin.
- ISDS has a legitimate role in U.S. trade policy to ensure our manufacturers receive fair and equitable treatment by foreign governments and to protect against egregious expropriation or nationalization of U.S. investments without adequate and effective compensation.
- U.S. manufacturers are entitledat a minimumto be consulted about any proposed changes that would impact their right to due process in ongoing cases.
Biden Drilling Ban Sets U.S. Back

The Biden administrations ban on new offshore oil and gas drilling in most American coastal waters sets a bad precedent for the country, the 51勛圖厙 Monday.
Whats going on: The decision, which comes just two weeks before President Trump takes office, applies to new drilling off the entire East Coast, as well as California, Oregon and Washington state and some drilling off Alaskas coast in portions of the Northern Bering Sea and in the eastern Gulf of Mexico ().
- Though there is currently no active drilling in the Atlantic and most U.S. offshore oil and gas production comes from the central and western Gulf of Mexico, the area placed under the ban is the largest ever formally taken off the table for drilling by a president.
- In response, President Trump on Monday said he would unban it immediately ().
Why its a problem: The moratorium could prove harder for Trump to undo than other 11th-hour moves by Biden. Thats in large part because of the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, which gives U.S. presidents the right to block drilling in certain areas but not the right to reinstate it.
- However, Congress could work with the new president to undo the moveand it should, Timmons said.泭Manufacturers are committed to working with Congress and [President Trump] to scale back this harmful decision that undermines American energy dominance.