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 When rules are outdated, outmoded, or overreaching, we work to improve or eliminate them in the agencies, in Congress, or in the courts.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
This Hill letter was sent to the Members of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, opposing H.R. 2668, the "Consumer Protection and Recovery Act."
Mr. Roberto ViolaDirector GeneralCommunications Networks, Content and TechnologyEuropean Commission1049 Bruxelles/BrusselBelgium Subject: Cybersecurity – review of EU rules on the security of network and information systems
The AI Act may be an inflection point in Europe’s digital future.
The U.S. Chamber supports a EU proposal to establish a forward-looking strategic dialogue around trade and technology policy.
Without a new Privacy Shield, U.S. businesses face the specter of data localization in Europe.
This Hill letter was sent to the Members of the United States Senate on the manager’s amendment to S. 1260, the, "United States Innovation and Competition Act."
This Hill letter was sent to the Members of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, on H.R. 2668, the “Consumer Protection and Recovery Act."
The Federal Trade Commission is seeking, through legislation, authority it is not supposed to have.
The civil rights organization says H.R.1/S.1 would "unconstitutionally burden the speech" of Americans.