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Supreme Court Conference Preview: Two Loper Bright Cert Petitions, Plus a Loper Relist

Jan 8, 2026

Tomorrow, the Supreme Court will consider for the first time two cert petitions at its conference presenting Loper Bright-related questions. A third, more tangentially Loper Bright-related petition will return as a relist.

United National Foods is Back

The petition in United National Foods, Inc. v. NLRB raises at least two Loper Bright implementation questions:

Whether Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo . . .  permits a court to (a) accept an agency’s reasonable construction of a statute without exhausting all relevant tools to find the single, best meaning or (b) give precedential weight to decisions affording deference under Chevron . . . when the court evaluates different agency action.

By way of background, this case returns to the Court for a second time after United National Foods’s original cert petition was GVR’d in light of Loper Bright.  In an earlier decision, a divided Fifth Circuit panel relied on Chevron deference to uphold the authority of the NLRB’s General Counsel to unilaterally dismiss an administrative complaint after a party has filed for summary judgment, concluding the National Labor Relations Act was ambiguous on that point. On remand from the Supreme Court the same divided panel ruled once more in favor of the agency. Judge Oldham again dissented, suggesting “‘further consideration’ was an empty formality. . . .  Same reasoning, same result, different day.”  In his view, “that result conflict[s] with Loper Bright and the Supreme Court’s GVR order[.]” Should the Court grant cert, it will also have the opportunity to clarify that Loper Bright applies with full force to the NLRB’s interpretation of the NLRA, putting that arguably open question to rest.

Poore Over This Sentencing Commission Case

The petition in Poore v. United States likewise raises an important question about the applicability of the principles announced in Loper Bright:  Whether the limits on agency deference announced in Kisor v. Wilkie and Loper Bright constrain the deference courts may accord the Sentencing Commission’s interpretation of its own rules via commentary. The New Civil Liberties Alliance filed an amicus brief in support of Mr. Poore’s petition, underscoring the importance of the question. Recasting Regulations previously covered the Poore petition in greater detail here.

Loper Relist Watch

The Court has also relisted the petition in Tennessee v. Kennedy. Although the questions presented do not directly implicate Loper Bright, the decision below does insofar as it addresses the broader question of the scope of statutory stare decisis that applies to Chevron-era precedent after Loper Bright. That is, the decision below raises the question whether statutory stare decisis travels with the specific agency action at issue or with the agency’s interpretation of the statute. Recasting Regulations has covered this case in greater detail here.

Mr. Pepson is regulatory counsel at Americans for Prosperity Foundation.

Loper Bright Looms Large in EPA’s Exempted Renewable Fuel Reallocation Plan 

Dec 19, 2025

Earlier this month, a group of Republican U.S. Senators, led by Ted Cruz (Texas) and Mike Lee (Utah), sent a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) discouraging the agency from moving forward with a proposal to reallocate exempted renewable volume obligations pursuant to the agency’s Renewal Fuel Standard program. Loper Bright figured prominently in the coalition letter and, specifically, the legislators’ argument that Congress’s failure to authorize such reallocation by statute deprived the EPA of authority to do so in the face of statutory silence. 

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Applying Loper Bright, Federal Circuit Upholds OPM Overtime Rule

Dec 19, 2025
criminal justice issues

AFP Foundation’s Michael Pepson mentioned Lesko v. United States as a case to watch for understanding how Loper Bright might guide restraint over agency authority without Chevron deference earlier this year. At the time, the Federal Circuit had ordered en banc review to reconsider whether the Court of Federal Claims correctly upheld the Office of Personnel Management’s (“OPM”) overtime regulations. Last week, the full Circuit ruled in favor of OPM after applying the new Loper Bright paradigm for judicial review. 

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DOJ Eliminates Disparate-Impact Liability from Title VI Regulations in the Wake of Loper Bright 

Dec 12, 2025

When the Supreme Court decided Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, overturning Chevron deference, it clarified the principle that federal agencies cannot extend their authority beyond what has been clearly authorized by Congress. In declaring that “statutes . . . have a single, best meaning,” the Court made clear that agencies must follow the law as written and not their policy preferences. Over the past year, this clarity has prompted many agencies to scrutinize long-standing policies, even those created before Chevron deference.  The Trump Administration has even made such reevaluation a central pillar of its deregulatory agenda, as reflected in Executive Order 14219 and guidance from the Office of Management and Budget. The Department of Justice’s (“DOJ”) new Title VI rule, which eliminates disparate-impact liability, is just one of the clearest and most recent examples of the real impact Loper Bright is having on the American regulatory space. 

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The Stare Decisis Effects of Loper Bright 1

Dec 1, 2025
Headphones on microphone stand

Jace Lington and Bennett Nuss discuss the implications of the Loper Bright decision on administrative law with guest Eli Nachmany. Eli’s forthcoming paper, “Deference Undisturbed,” examines the effects of the Loper Bright decision on prior cases decided under the Chevron framework. They discuss the open legal questions that remain after the end of Chevron, the role of Congress in shaping administrative law, and the future of various deference doctrines.  

Squitieri & Schmidt Discuss Law-Fact Distinction after Loper Bright

Nov 25, 2025

Separation of Powers Institute Professor Chad Squitieri hosted Professor Natalie Schmidt for a fascinating discussion about her article on the distinction between law and fact. The podcast covers formalism, functionalism, realism, agencies’ role in factfinding, and why the distinction between law and fact is critical following the Supreme Court’s decision in Loper Bright.

Listen to the Episode:

Sixth Circuit Decision Notes Growing Consensus Loper Bright Applies To NLRB

Nov 13, 2025

Loper Bright overruled the Chevron doctrine and held that the APA requires courts to independently interpret statutes without deferring to federal agencies’ views on what the law is. In its wake, questions have arisen as to whether and how Loper Bright applies to the National Labor Relations Board’s interpretations of the National Labor Relations Act, a statute that predated the APA. And the NLRB has taken the position that even after Loper Bright, its interpretations of the NLRA are entitled to deference.

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D.C. Circuit Splits on Application of Loper Bright to Furnace Regulations

Nov 7, 2025

Earlier this week, the D.C. Circuit issued a major decision in American Gas Ass’n v. Department of Energy, upholding energy efficiency standards for residential gas furnaces and commercial water heaters.  Although the case is obviously significant for the energy sector, it is equally noteworthy for its engagement with Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, the Supreme Court’s 2024 decision that eliminated Chevron deference and reshaped statutory interpretation in the administrative-law context.

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Catholic University Event on Major Questions After Loper

Nov 5, 2025

The Major Questions Doctrine After “Loper Bright”

Wednesday, November 12, 2025
12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.

Project on Constitutional Originalism and the Catholic Intellectual Tradition: In recent years, the major questions doctrine has been thought of as an exception to Chevron deference. In Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, the Supreme Court ruled that Chevron deference violated the Administrative Procedure Act. What, then, is the status of the major questions doctrine in the wake of Chevron’s demise? Join us for a panel that will explore the past, present, and future of the major questions doctrine in light of Loper Bright.

Eleventh Circuit Immigration Decision Joins Debate Over Stare Decisis After Loper Bright

Oct 31, 2025

On October 30th, in Bastias v. U.S. Attorney General, the Eleventh Circuit issued an opinion highlighting a growing debate in the lower courts after Loper Bright on how broadly statutory stare decisis shields Chevron-era precedent upholding agency actions. Loper Bright overruled the Chevron doctrine, holding that the APA requires courts to independently interpret statutes, which have a single best reading fixed at the time of enactment. But “[b]y doing so,” the Court wrote, it “d[id] not call into question prior cases that relied on the Chevron framework. The holdings of those cases that specific agency actions are lawful—including the Clean Air Act holding of Chevron itself—are still subject to statutory stare decisis despite our change in interpretive methodology.” In the wake of Loper Bright, lower courts have grappled with whether this passage refers to the specific agency decision upheld under Chevron or the agency’s interpretation of the statute, reaching differing conclusions.

In Bastias, much ink was spilled on this thorny and important question. In 2022, the Eleventh Circuit denied Bastias’s petition for review of a Board of Immigration decision that Bastias was deportable based on a 2018 Eleventh Circuit decision, Pierre v. U.S. Attorney General, deferring to the BIA’s interpretation of the Immigration and Nationality Act under Chevron. Bastias sought cert in the U.S. Supreme Court, which granted the petition, vacated that ruling, and remanded for further consideration in light of Loper Bright. The Eleventh Circuit has now once again denied Bastias’s petition. All three judges on the panel wrote separately, concurring in the judgement to explain their reasoning.

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