Tag: Chevron Doctrine

  • Loper-Bright Opinion Handed Down

    Loper-Bright Opinion Handed Down

    I covered this case in a couple of articles when the oral arguments happened back in January. Well the case has been decided and the opinion released this morning, and it answers the question I asked back then, is this the end of the administrative state?

    Based on what I’ve read in the decision, the answer is a resounding yes. From the Roberts authored Majority Opinion (internal citations omitted, emphasis mine ):

    Joining Chief Justice Roberts in the Majority were Justices Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Barrett. Thomas and Gorsuch filed separate concurrences while Justice Kagan filed a dissent with Justice Sotomayor joining for both and Justice Jackson joining for case No. 22–1219 (Relentless) she took no part in the consideration or decision of the case in No. 22–451 (Loper-Bright).

    Held: The Administrative Procedure Act requires courts to exercise their independent judgment in deciding whether an agency has acted within its statutory authority, and courts may not defer to an agency interpretation of the law simply because a statute is ambiguous; Chevron is overruled.

    Seeing as the Chevron deference is the basis for almost all of the administrative rule-making since the case was decided in 1984, you can be sure that the unfettered rule-making and the larger part of the administrative state will cease to exist.

    Your editor is not an attorney (Thank GOD), but he does follow the courts and has read a great deal of Law and Jurisprudence in his time. From my quick reading of the majority opinion in Loper-Bright it seems that this particular Court has had a difficult time squaring Chevron with the Administrative Procedures Act – a law that codifies federal agency administrative rules and procedures.

    We will see the total effect of this ruling in the coming years. From my perspective, it will be a reining in and deconstruction of the administrative state as we’ve come to know it over the last 40-ish years.

  • The End of the Administrative State?

    The End of the Administrative State?

    I mentioned the then-pending oral arguments in Loper Bright and Relentless in The View From Here on Tuesday. Well, those arguments happened yesterday, so now it’s time for some analysis.

    Before we get to that, a little background is in order.

    In 1972, Congress passed the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, “to respond to the threat of overfishing and to promote conservation.” That law created eight regional fisheries councils. Each of those councils is charged with producing a fisheries management plan. Under the plan created for New England herring fisheries, half of all fishing trips had to carry a federal monitor. Originally, all the observers were employed by the federal government. In 2020, the management plan required the fishing boats to pay for monitors reporting to the federal government. The cost was over $700. Many vessel owners complained that this additional expense resulted in zero profit or even a loss for a day’s fishing. 

    Congress did not authorize billing private fishing companies for federal monitors. However the Department of Commerce interpreted the requirement that it may “require that one or more observers be carried on board a vessel of the United States engaged in fishing for species that are subject to the plan, for the purpose of collecting data necessary for the conservation and management of the fishery,” to mean that half the fishing boats had to pay for those observers.

    This brings us to the Chevron deference. That precedent comes from a case called Chevron V Natural Resource Defense Council inc. Decided in 1984, that case is the basis of the modern administrative state. In a nutshell, the opinion in that case requires courts to give the widest deference to administrative regulations. The decision reads, in part:

    When a challenge to an agency construction of a statutory provision, fairly conceptualized, really centers on the wisdom of the agency’s policy, rather than whether it is a reasonable choice within a gap left open by Congress, the challenge must fail. In such a case, federal judges—who have no constituency—have a duty to respect legitimate policy choices made by those who do. The responsibilities for assessing the wisdom of such policy choices and resolving the struggle between competing views of the public interest are not judicial ones ….

    — Chevron, 467 U.S. at 866

    The Chevron deference is a two-stage test. If the law explicitly permits an action, the agency can do whatever it wants. If the law is ambiguous, the courts can review the agency’s decision to determine if the resulting regulation was a possible way to go about enforcing the law. If so, the courts lose their ability to interfere. 

    Loper Bright and Relentless, both independently owned herring fishers, sued in federal court, saying that having to pay for the monitors exceeded the scope of the Magnuson-Stevens act. In both cases the district and appeals courts relied on the Chevron deference to find that making the fishermen pay for the observers was allowable under the law. SCOTUS granted certiorari in the Loper Bright last May, and in Relentless in October and the cases were scheduled to be argued at the same time.

    Now on to yesterday’s arguments. As a slightly more than casual observer of SCOTUS, I came away with the impression that the majority of the Justices were ready to throw Chevron on the dust heap.

    Relentless attorney, Roman Martinez opened his arguments this way:

    Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court:
    For too long, Chevron has distorted the judicial process and undermined statutory interpretation. It should be overruled for three reasons.
    First, Chevron violates the Constitution. Article III empowers judges to say what the law is. It requires them to interpret federal statutes using their best and independent judgment.


    Chevron undermines that duty.

    It reallocates interpretive authority from courts to agencies, and it forces courts to adopt inferior agency constructions that are issued for political or policy reasons. In doing so, Chevron blocks judges from serving as faithful agents of Congress. It mandates judicial bias and encourages agency overreach. And by removing key checks on executive power, it threatens individual liberty. . .

    I think that the opening statement sums up the problems of the Chevron deference quite well.

    Loper Bright council, Paul Clement opened with this:

    . . .There is no justification for giving the tie to the government or conjuring agency authority from silence. Both the APA and constitutional avoidance principles call for de novo review, asking only what’s the best reading of the statute. Asking, instead, is the statute ambiguous is fundamentally misguided. The whole
    point of statutory construction is to bring clarity, not to identify ambiguity. The government defends this practice not as the best reading of the APA but by invoking stare decisis. That is doubly problematic. First, at issue here is only Chevron’s methodology, which is entitled to reduced stare decisis effect. We have no beef with Chevron’s Clean Air Act holding, and we could not take issue with its APA holding because it failed to mention that statute. But, second, all the traditional stare decisis factors point in favor of overruling Chevron’s methodology. The doctrine is unworkable as its critical threshold question of
    ambiguity is hopelessly ambiguous. It is also a — a reliance-destroying doctrine because it facilitates agency flip-flopping. So the reality here is the Chevron two-step has to go and should be replaced with
    only one question: What is the best reading of the statute?

    While reading the transcripts of the oral arguments of Loper Bright, it became clear that the conservative Justices were generally skeptical of Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar’s claims that overturning Chevron would create chaos in the courts. Paul Clement argued that the chaos could be mitigated by the Court, and the majority of the Justices seemed to agree.

    As I said in the View, it’s past time for Chevron to go away. And based on the questions and issues raised by the Justices, that’s going to happen. We’ll know for sure in June when the Court releases its Opinion.

    Relentless Transcript

    Loper Bright Transcript

  • SCOTUS Grants Review of Case That Will Gut the Federal Bureaucracy

    SCOTUS Grants Review of Case That Will Gut the Federal Bureaucracy

    AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

     Bonchie | RedState

    In the biggest news to come out of the Supreme Court of the United States since Roe v. Wade was overturned, the Court has granted a review of Loper Bright Enterprises vs. Raimondo. In its deliberations, the court will deal with the question of whether to overrule the infamous Chevron Doctrine, a ’70s-era precedent that granted broad powers to the bureaucratic state to interpret vague, often narrow statutes with near zero accountability.

    Here’s a quick explainer on the Chevron Doctrine via Cornell Law School.

    One of the most important principles in administrative law, the “Chevron deference” was coined after a landmark case,Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 468 U.S. 837 (1984). The Chevron deference is referring to the doctrine of judicial deference given to administrative actions. In Chevron, the Supreme Court set forth a legal test as to when the court should defer to the agency’s answer or interpretation, holding that such judicial deference is appropriate where the agency’s answer was not unreasonable, so long as Congress had not spoken directly to the precise issue at question.

    The scope of the Chevron deference doctrine is that when a legislative delegation to an administrative agency on a particular issue or question is not explicit but rather implicit, a court may not substitute its own interpretation of the statute for a reasonable interpretation made by the administrative agency. Rather, as Justice Stevens wrote in Chevron, when the statute is silent or ambiguous with respect to the specific issue, the question for the court is whether the agency’s action was based on a permissible construction of the statute.

    In other words, lower courts have been bound by former Justice Stevens’ assertion that “reasonable interpretations” of statutes by administrative agencies are to not be overruled. In this case, the word “reasonable” has been stretched to absolute extremes, and that has allowed the bureaucratic state to reign supreme with near impunity.

    That’s how you get the ATF banning bump stocks despite there being no actual statutory allowance for such a violation of personal freedom. It’s also how you get the lion’s share of environmental regulations, including literal puddles in backyards being hit with ridiculous, costly EPA enforcement. The federal government has been completely out of control for decades, and the Chevron Doctrine has been at the heart of many of the abuses.

    Now, the Supreme Court is poised to overturn the doctrine at some major level. Justice Kentaji Brown Jackson is already recused from the case, meaning that the conservative wing would only need to muster four votes. On that front, most of the conservatives on the court have already signaled a willingness to curb the power of the bureaucratic state by rolling back the Chevron Doctrine.

    So while 2024 presidential candidates all make mostly unenforceable promises to roll back administrative overreach, this coming SCOTUS decision is, by far, the most probable way that actually gets done. The story won’t get weeks of headlines because it’s not sexy, but it’s incredibly important. A rollback of administrative agency power would positively impact American lives more than almost any policy Congress or a president could institute. It would send shockwaves throughout the federal government.

    The left’s bureaucratic fiefdom is facing oblivion, and that’s a very good thing.

    Original Here