You're invoking the expressio principle to argue the EPA has no power to regulate pollutants not positively stated by Congress, and the EPA has no discretion to levy penalties beyond that positively stated by Congress, despite Congress'
intentionally broad delegation of powers to the agency through the Environmental Protection Act and subsequent legislation. In other words, Congress' language in those acts is not specific enough to be an effective mandate, and therefore the delegation is not a constitutional exercise of power.
That
is strict constructionism.
So answer the challenge: show me where in the Constitution that judicial review is an enumerated power.
EDIT: I'm going to bring this farce to its end, actually. For those of you reading not in the know, tstorm's dodging the question because judicial review is
not an enumerated power and they know it. Under the language of the Constitution, the judiciary has
zero authority to overturn or nullify acts by the Executive or Legislative branch; John Marshall cut the doctrine out of whole cloth in
Marbury v. Madison, the first and greatest-scale act of "judicial activism" to this day in US history.
Strict constructionism is a self-terminating legal philosophy in the United States, which is why conservative jurists flee from the term like rats from a sinking ship while playing lip service through dress-up language like "textualism" or "originalism". An intellectually honest and self-aware strict constructionist looking to remain consistent with their own legal philosophy can come to one and only one conclusion about American jurisprudence: courts have no power to engage in judicial review, and all cases pertaining to the constitutionality of Congressional or Presidential acts are political questions and therefore nonjusticiable.