by Thomas Catenacci
The Daily Caller

Two climate experts sent a letter Monday to Republican leadership in Congress, recommending energy actions that could be taken if the GOP takes back majority control of the legislature.

Steve Milloy, a senior legal fellow at the Energy & Environment Legal Institute, and James Taylor, president of the Heartland Institute, addressed the letter to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.

“Wetlands is a very important issue,” Milloy, who served on former President Donald Trump’s transition team in 2016, told the DCNF in an interview. “I think that issues need to be teed up for (Republicans) so that — going into the campaign — they can have an agenda like what we did on the transition team for President Trump.”

“So this is the first of a number of these that will come out trying to get Republicans focused on what needs to be fixed by Congress on the environment and energy,” he continued, hinting at a sustained effort to inform Republicans about key energy issues ahead of the midterm elections.

The letter, obtained exclusively by the Daily Caller News Foundation, cited a recent report from the Energy & Environment Legal Institute highlighting the need to nix burdensome federal regulations pushed by the Biden administration.

The letter specifically noted the administration’s actions on the Waters of the United States (WOTUS) rule. In December, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Department of the Army issued a proposal reversing a Trump-era rule, giving power back to the federal government to regulate water sources nationwide…

“The (WOTUS) rule is supposed to prevent harm to navigable waterways, not prevent development,” Milloy told the DCNF. “But, of course, anti-development Democrats starting with the Obama administration use the rule to really tighten up and make possible to regulate, drainage ditches and, even in extreme cases, mud puddles that had no connection to navigable waters like streams and rivers and lakes.”

“The rule is just used to prevent development,” he added. “Wherever there’s water, this rule comes into force.”

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