Republicans Exploit an Obscure Law to Open This Pristine Minnesota Wilderness to Mining |
This story was originally published by the Grist and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.
Minnesota’s Boundary Waters comprise a vast stretch of wilderness bordering Canada, with over a million acres of untouched forest and thousands of lakes and streams. Accessible largely by canoe, it is an ecological gem and one of the most popular spots in the country for outdoor recreation. On Thursday, Senate Republicans voted 50-49 to open the area up to mining—passing a resolution that repeals a 20-year moratorium using a little-known law called the Congressional Review Act (CRA).
The act was designed in the 1990s by then-House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who sought to cut back on government bureaucracy by eliminating regulations. It was engineered to allow Congress to quickly overturn regulatory rules with a simple majority, rather than the usual two-thirds vote. Critics say it’s dangerous because it enables public rules and regulations based on years of research to be quickly overturned with little debate.
With this move, Senate Republicans “disrespect tribal treaty rights and directly risk those tribes’ guaranteed access to their traditional way of life.”
“It allows Congress to basically do a thumbs up or a thumbs down, where otherwise a filibuster would apply,” explained Erik Schlenker-Goodrich, executive director of the Western Environmental Law Center, a nonprofit, public interest law firm. During the CRA’s first 20 years of existence, it was used only once by the second Bush administration. But President Trump and Republicans have worked to dramatically expand and weaponize the CRA, with the Boundary Waters case being the latest example, Schlenker-Goodrich said. In 2017, the Trump administration invalidated 17 rules from the Obama era. In 2025 alone, Trump signed 22 CRA repeals.
The CRA technically gives Congress 60 days to overturn a rule after it’s passed. The Boundary Waters protections........