Main Manufacturing Group Hand Trump’s deregulation plan to cancel Biden’s damage
Jeff Flock of Fox Business speaks with EOS Energy CEO Joe Mastrangelo, returning to the US from China to bring back manufacturing to the US and showcases the company’s battery production line.
Exclusive – The largest manufacturer in the United States has sent a series of policy recommendations to 10 federal agencies, with the aim of highlighting the Trump administration.
The National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) said US manufacturers spend $350 billion a year just to comply with federal regulations alone.
The group, which supports 13 million people who make things in America, said it would help answer President Donald Trump’s February 19 executive order “a call for an outline of the Department of Government Efficiency’s ‘restriction initiative’. Trump instructed his agency heads to conduct a top-to-bottom review within 60 days to identify regulations that would burden small businesses, hamper private companies and entrepreneurship, and “thwart technological innovation, infrastructure development, disaster response, inflation reduction, research and development, economic development, economic development, energy development, land use and foreign policy.”
Americans witnessing crippling federal regulations can go to the doge directly.

Jatemonds, NAM President of Washington, DC, on Thursday, September 12th, 2019. (Getty Images/Andrew Haller via Getty Images/Bloomberg)
The NAM has identified 44 regulations in 10 institutions that manufacturers groups said Trump should consider revising or withdrawing.
Fox News Digital has only obtained copies of the letter detailing the necessary changes to the Environmental Protection Agency, Department of Energy, Department of Interior, Department of Labor, Department of Cybersecurity and Security, Department of Health and Human Services, Department of Commerce, Commerce of Commerce, the National Standards and Technical Committee of the Federal Trade Commission, the General Assembly Committee and the headquarters of the TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and TREASERIED and
This effort is part of recommendations to Congress and the administration. Unleashing American energy.” According to the Manufacturers Association.
Fox News Digital also obtained a copy of the letter NAM is sending to the Director of the Administration and Budget Office. The manufacturer says it is collectively donating $2.93 trillion to the US economy. “And to maintain the manufacturing power that supports our country’s prosperity, right-sized regulations are important,” he said.
“In other words, when manufacturing wins, America wins,” the letter says.
“Rebalance regulations are an important pillar of our comprehensive manufacturing strategy. Tax reforms in 2017 will forever be “It will unleash America’s energy, promote reforms that will allow for the implementation of common sense trade policies,” NAM president and CEO Jay Timmons said in a statement.
“The administration has already responded to calls from manufacturers across the country to rethink and rebalance regulations that are obstructing manufacturers,” Timmons added. “Using these recommendations as guide posts, manufacturers look forward to continuing to work with managers to mean 13 million men and women who make things in the US, trap cold investments, trap projects with cold investments, and fix rules that cost too much.”

President Donald Trump will speak at the Cabinet meeting held at the White House on April 10, 2025 in Washington, DC (Anna Money Maker/Getty Images/Getty Images)
The group has identified several Biden-era policies that stem from reduced compliance costs.
In a letter to Energy Secretary Chris Wright; Nam said the Biden administration, shipped in December 2024, “completed a multi-volume study to update the DOE’s understanding of the potential impact of US liquefied natural gas exports,” and that those updated studies “contained misleading and incomplete conclusions based on flawed and flawed data.”
NAM’s Vice President of Policy Charles Crain has urged the Department of Energy to reissue “the decision that LNG exports are in the public interest with a new, accurate study that reflects the true economic impact of LNG exports.” Crain said US manufacturers are “leading global competition to build the infrastructure needed to expand and export American energy production, including LNG.”
“The US natural gas boom has created tens of thousands of jobs, reduced the US and its allies’ dependence on safer, hostile countries like Russia, opened up important new sources to address global energy poverty, and helped reduce US emissions by around 20% since 2005,” writes Crane.

Fishing far away on Seal Beach, California, on January 5, 2025 with Ester, an offshore oil and gas platform. President Joe Biden has permanently banned future offshore oil and gas drilling in the next 625 million acres of federal waters (Mario Tama / Getty Images / Getty Images)
One of the recommendations to Secretary of Home Affairs Doug Burgham was to reverse the ban on offshore oil and gas leases.
On January 6, 2025, the Biden administration withdrew. Over 625 million acres The outer continental shelf from future oil and natural gas leases, including the resilient areas of the North Bering Sea climate, off the US Pacific and Eastern Atlantic coasts, the US Eastern and the Alaska coast.
Click here to get your Fox business on the go
“By limiting access to America’s abundant oil and natural gas resources, this action undermined efforts to ensure US energy control. If not completely reversed, it could have serious consequences for access to the energy resources needed to promote the US economy,” writes Crane.
NAM told EPA administrator Lee Zeldin that many “burden and ineffective” regulations in the Biden administration have been issued by the institutions that currently control it. The Manufacturers Association said the United States does not need to choose to protect economic development and environmental and public health.