Top regulatory officials met with agricultural and chemical industry representatives dozens of times in the first few months after President Donald Trump took office in January, government records show — meetings that were followed by a series of regulatory rollbacks and a downplaying of pesticide concerns by the administration’s “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) Commission.
It would have to be repealed by Congress. The main problem is enforcing it against a regime that regularly flouts the law, especially when there’s not a lot of oversight to ensure they’re fully in compliance when they do “comply.”
They don’t have to repeal it. They only need to pretend to participate.