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Ryan Mulvey on Loper’s Impact on Rulemaking

Jun 26, 2026

AFP Foundation’s Ryan Mulvey in RealClearPolicy on how “Loper Bright has proven more immediately transformative for the executive branch — and it may still force Congress to confront responsibilities it has long avoided”:

In practice, agencies are increasingly approaching rulemaking with an eye toward whether their interpretations can survive independent judicial review as the best reading of the law. That shift affects not only litigation risk, but how agencies evaluate proposed regulations before they are issued, with greater emphasis on statutory text and less reliance on judicial deference as a backstop. The administration claimed it finalized 646 deregulatory actions in 2025. But after including guidance documents published in the Federal Register and proposed rulemakings, the total to date appears closer to 1,500.

The stakes of this shift are already visible in major regulatory disputes. Consider the EPA’s decision to rescind its 2009 greenhouse gas endangerment finding. The administration says the rescission will produce substantial economic benefits; critics argue it undermines federal climate policy. Public debate around that decision has centered on Loper Bright. When Rep. Rosa DeLauro recently questioned EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin’s interpretation of the Clean Air Act, Zeldin responded by invoking the Supreme Court’s insistence that agencies adhere to the best reading of the laws they administer.

John Chisholm Recounts Loper Bright After Two Years

Jun 25, 2026

Santa Fe Institute and Foundation for Economic Education trustee John Chisholm in the Wall Street Journal revisiting Justice Kagan’s worry that ending Chevron deference would “cause a massive shock to the legal system.”

What about Justice Kagan’s warning? Two years on, no “massive shock” has materialized. Agencies still prevail in most challenges. Empirical studies put their win rate at roughly 75% when courts applied Chevron and near 60% on established rules since Loper Bright. The change has been evolutionary, not revolutionary, as agencies revise and defend their rules more carefully, rather than watch them swept away.

Overturning Chevron is often cast as a fight over control of the administrative state. It is better understood as a question about the quality of decision-making—whether a federal law is best interpreted by one, often partisan agency or by a distributed network of courts engaged in continuous, real-world discovery.

Read the full piece in the Wall Street Journal here.

A Healthy Constitutional Squabble

Jun 24, 2026

Law & Liberty published an essay by AFPF’s James Valvo & Ryan Mulvey on how a recent dustup over the constitutionality of the Presidential Records Act provides an opportunity to strengthen antifragile government. The essay opens:

The Presidential Records Act (PRA) has lately been a source of controversy. The Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) published an opinion at the beginning of April that concluded the PRA is unconstitutional because it “exceeds Congress’s enumerated and implied powers” and “aggrandizes the Legislative Branch at the expense of the constitutional independence and autonomy of the Executive.”

OLC’s opinion has raised eyebrows. It may even be wrong on the law. Nevertheless, it is good to see the political branches jockeying for position over the constitutionality of one another’s actions. A healthy, antifragile government requires occasional interbranch battles over the structure of our government. A separation of powers that is never tested risks atrophy. But for several decades, the executive branch has been on a winning streak; the OLC opinion presents a fresh opportunity for Congress to reassert itself.

Read the full essay on Law & Liberty’s website.

EPA Administrator Zeldin Discusses Governing by Loper Bright’s “Single Best Reading” 

Jun 18, 2026

In a recent Politico interview, when asked about a “fundamental shift” in the focus of the Environmental Protection Agency under his tenure, Administrator Lee Zeldin highlighted how the Supreme Court’s decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo is paramount to his decision-making.  

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SCOTUS’s GVR in American Gas: Fact-Bound Deference After Loper Bright 

Jun 12, 2026

Earlier this week, the Supreme Court granted the petition for writ of certiorari in American Gas Association v. Department of Energy, vacated the D.C. Circuit’s judgment below, and remanded for reconsideration “in light of the position asserted by the Solicitor General” in the government’s response brief.  This move revives the fight over the validity of the Department of Energy’s (“DOE”)  efficiency standards for residential furnaces and commercial water heaters.  More importantly, the GVR puts front and center on remand a question that courts are already grappling with:  can Loper Bright be sidestepped by recasting legal interpretation as an exercise of fact-bound expertise? 

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C. Boyden Grey Center Podcast on Judging After Loper Bright

Jun 10, 2026

In this final panel from the Gray Center’s October conference, moderator Aaron Nielsen (UT Austin) speaks with Judge Naomi Rao (D.C. Circuit) and Judge Steven Menashi (Second Circuit) about their role as judges after Loper Bright ended Chevron deference.

Loper Bright Surfaces in the Supreme Court’s Opinion in Rutherford v. United States   

Jun 1, 2026

Last week, in Rutherford v. United States, the Court held 6-3 that certain nonretroactive changes to federal mandatory minimum sentences effectuated by the First Step Act (FSA) do not qualify as an “extraordinary and compelling reason” that can justify a reduced sentence under the “compassionate release” exception to the general rule against district courts modifying imposed sentences. In plain English: the Court’s ruling means the FSA’s sentencing reforms cannot be used to justify reduced sentences and early release for prisoners already convicted of those same offenses, even though they may have been punished more harshly under the old sentencing regime.  It does not matter how extreme the difference in penalties may be or how unfair that result is as a policy matter. More theoretically, this decision may provide some insight into how the Court goes about identifying and construing statutes that delegate discretion to agencies, as well as police statutory boundaries on that discretion, in the wake of Loper Bright. In fact, the Rutherford decision is the first this Term in which the Court has meaningfully discussed how delegations of discretion to agencies should be analyzed and addressed.

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Commentators Point to Loper Bright in Coming Fight Over FCC, FTC  

May 20, 2026

Several commentators have noted the potential relevance of the Supreme Court’s consequential decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo to coming fights over the authority of the Federal Communications Commission and Federal Trade Commission.  

Ed Whelan in National Review recently suggested the FCC’s attempts to “thwart[] judicial review of the legality of . . . license transfers,” which will soon be considered by the D.C. Circuit, could test Loper Bright’s “promise” of “a new era of bureaucratic accountability.” 

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SEC Suddenly Abandons Gag Rule After Decades of Silencing Respondents

May 19, 2026

The Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has rescinded its long-standing Rule 202.5(3) that requires respondents settling allegations with the agency to agree to never “publicly deny the allegations in the complaint or administrative order” or risk having their settled charges reopened.

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Professor Aaron Nielson on the Dangers of a Post-Chevron “Science Charade”

May 15, 2026

Professor Aaron Nielson has published some fascinating commentary over at Civitas Outlook in which he explores the dangers of agencies misusing science—or what they claim to be science—to avoid the impacts of Loper Bright and the end of Chevron deference.

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