Lawsuit limits have been included in 51 rules proposed or adopted since 2005 by agency bureaucrats governing just about everything Americans use: drugs, cars, railroads, medical devices and food.
Decried by consumer advocates and embraced by industry, the agencies’ use of the government’s rule-making authority represents the administration’s final act in a long-standing drive to shield companies from lawsuits.
President Bush has campaigned for lawsuit reform since his days as Texas governor. As president, he has made little headway on the issue in Congress. He’s been thwarted by Democrats every time he’s tried to tackle the issue head-on.
Turns out there was another way, one little-noticed step at a time.
If the rulemaking at the various agencies had been a centralized effort in the White House or the Justice Department, “it would have failed because immediately everybody would have mobilized resistance,” said Michael Greve of the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative Washington think tank.
Limits on lawsuits have been ordered or proposed for drug labeling and packaging - one issue that will get a big airing today because of a case involving actor Dennis Quaid’s newborn twins -
and for rules ranging from mattress flammability standards to school bus passenger seating to dietary sweeteners and roof-crush requirements in car rollovers.



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