Regulations
Smart regulations give businesses the rules of the road so they can operate, innovate, and invest with certainty. Regulatory overreach, on the other hand, stifles growth and innovation. Getting this balance right is essential to driving solutions that improve lives and fostering a vibrant and dynamic economy that creates opportunities for people.
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Our Work
The U.S. Chamber works with governments at the state, federal, and global levels to create a regulatory environment in which businesses can innovate, compete, and thrive. From labor and finance to technology and energy regulations, we ensure the voice of business is represented in the rulemaking process. When rules are outdated, outmoded, or overreaching, we work to improve or eliminate them in the agencies, in Congress, or in the courts.
Latest Content
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is attempting to micromanage markets in ways that would reduce competition, harm consumers, and exceed its statutory authority. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce urged USDA to abandon the rulemaking due to critical flaws.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce submitted a response to the European Commission's AI Act: Trustworthy General-Purpose AI Consultation
This Hill letter was sent to Members of the House Committee on Small Business regarding H.R. 7198, "Prove It Act of 2024" to be considered during the Committee’s markup on September 10th.
A recent fine on Uber is the latest example of Europe's unjustifiable use of penalties on American companies.
This bipartisan legislation would help unlock America’s Energy Future.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce supports the Energy Permitting Reform Act of 2024.
Helping more Americans get access to high-speed internet requires a significant broadband network buildout, but our inefficient permitting process is preventing the speedy deployment of these networks.
The Chamber released the below statement following the White House Council on Environmental Quality finalizing NEPA Phase 2 regulations:
The Chamber’s lawsuit against the FTC is our latest effort to challenge an aggressive campaign to micromanage business decisions by the Administration, which plans to enact some 2,500 regulatory actions by the end of its first term.
‘Essential Chemistry for America’ Will Seek to Protect Chemistries We Rely On