But two people familiar with White House thinking said the
president may reverse that decision and issue the order if Congress does
not pass broader legislation offering protection for gays in the
workplace.
In trying to slow climate change, Obama is considering
acting through the Environmental Protection Agency to issue new rules
governing carbon emissions by existing power plants, according to three
people familiar with White House discussions. The move would face fierce
corporate opposition but is among the top goals of environmentalists.
The
executive order calling for new cybersecurity standards would apply to
industries such as transportation that are regulated by executive branch
agencies. It also would increase the amount of computer threat data
that the government shares with companies.
-snip-Under the slogan “We Can’t Wait,” Obama took actions
beginning in late 2011 to boost the housing market, lower payments on
student loans and delay deportation of young illegal immigrants. He also
installed key officials in regulatory agencies without congressional
approval, producing loud complaints from Republicans.
In the
months ahead, some people close to the White House said Obama must weigh
the prospect of making progress on his priorities with the risk that
acting aggressively could hurt the chances for more substantial
legislation on Capitol Hill.
“That has to be part of an analysis
of what are his powers under the Constitution and statutes of the United
States,” said John D. Podesta, a former chief of staff to President
Bill Clinton, who used executive actions in the face of a hostile
Congress in his second term. “I think given where he wants to go and
where Congress has blocked and stalled and Republicans are recalcitrant
to do anything . . . he’s going to move.”
In the
realm of economic policy, Obama may expand a program — the Better
Buildings Initiative — which seeks to hire workers to rehab federal and
private-sector buildings to make them more efficient. Officials say the
cost of the program is offset by energy savings.
-snip-On social policy, Obama is
reconsidering whether to issue an executive order prohibiting federal
contractors from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation or
gender identity. When he decided not to issue such an order last year,
the White House said it would prefer to pass a law applying to gays and
lesbians in the workplace.
But if Congress seems unlikely to act on the broader legislation —
called the Employment Non-Discrimination Act — officials have signaled
to people working on the issue outside the administration that the
president would likely consider issuing an executive order, which can
only affect government contractors.
please link here for entire article
- Veni.Vidi.Vici.
on Feb. 11, 2013 at 10:57 AM