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In a recent post for the Yale Journal on Regulation’s “Notice & Comment” blog, law professor Daniel Deacon has previewed a draft report prepared for the Administrative Conference of the United States entitled “Drafting Regulatory Preambles.” Described as an exploration of “best practices for drafting regulatory preambles in light of recent developments in judicial review of agency action,” the paper proposes to provide insight into how the Supreme Court’s overruling of Chevron deference in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo has impacted behavior among lawyers and policy experts in the federal bureaucracy.
(more…)Americans for Prosperity (“AFP”) has published an article by AFP Foundation Senior Policy Counsel Ryan Mulvey that re-tells the story of Loper Bright with a focus on the plaintiff-fishermen, who stood up to what they took to be an egregious instance of government overreach. The article is part of AFP’s “One Small Step” series, which is marking America’s semiquincentennial by exploring how the country’s founding principles apply to policy change movements.
(more…)Updates to the federal government’s official guide to interpretations of the Constitution—maintained by the Librarian of Congress and popularly known as “Constitution Annotated”—were published earlier this week to reflect the impact of the Supreme Court’s decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo on the proper understanding of the Vesting Clause in Article I. The changes can be found in articles concerning agency discretion and judicial deference, as well as the Major Questions Doctrine and other canons of statutory construction.
The guide’s explanation of the limits of agency discretion emphasized that, in the absence of Congress’s express delegation of interpretative power, courts should no longer defer to an administrative agency’s interpretation of a statute so long as it is “reasonable.” Judges must instead provide authoritative constructions of alleged textual ambiguities.
(more…)On Wednesday, the Supreme Court issued a unanimous decision authored by Justice Jackson in Urias-Orellana v. Bondi, a dispute over the standard of review Courts of Appeals should apply to Board of Immigration decisions on whether a set of undisputed facts rises to the level of “persecution” under the Immigration and Nationality Act in the asylum-eligibility context. Lurking in the background, this case potentially provided a window for the Court to elucidate how Loper Bright’s overruling of Chevron deference might impact how “mixed” questions of law and fact are reviewed generally and whether de novo review applies. After oral argument, it seemed unlikely the Court would take up that broader question, instead focusing on the particular statutory provision at issue. The Court did not take that path, so that Loper Bright question will have to wait for another day.
(more…)The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has affirmed a lower court decision striking down a Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) regulation that interpreted the phrase “prior express consent” in the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”) to mean “written” consent, at least when it comes to so-called “telemarketing” calls. That decision, in a case called Bradford v. Sovereign Pest Control, relied on Loper Bright’s straightforward proposition that “[c]ourts interpret statutes, no matter the context, based on the traditional tools of statutory construction,” and without deference to an agency’s reading of the law.
(more…)Advisory Opinions host Sarah Isgur has an essay at The Atlantic where she discusses the Supreme Court’s project “to shrink the presidency back to size and force 535 people to figure out a lasting solution to our problems, one that everyone can live with.” Although the Court’s recent decision striking down President Trump’s IEEPA tariffs was the impetus for the article, Isgur includes Loper Bright‘s impact. She wrote:
The 2024 Loper Bright decision, which held that executive-branch agencies no longer get to define the scope of their own authority, also stripped power from the executive branch. So did the vaccine-mandate case (Biden) in 2022 and the tax-records case (Trump) in 2020. This is a through line across administrations.
At the same time, the Court is putting the president more fully in charge of his branch of government. In that sense, Trump is winning. In Trump v. Slaughter, which involves the question of whether presidents can fire members of so-called independent agencies, the Court appears poised to let him have more direct control over those agencies and their personnel to execute his preferred policies. But that’s only after the justices, in Loper Bright, took power away from those agencies and handed it back to Congress, where it belonged. Trump will be a more powerful president over a weaker presidency.
Americans for Prosperity Foundation applauds the Trump EPA’s decision to repeal the agency’s 2009 Endangerment Finding—a document the agency has used as a springboard to claim sweeping power under the Clean Air Act to unilaterally set national transportation and energy policy by administrative edict without Congress’s permission. The Endangerment Finding has underpinned a host of burdensome and expensive EPA regulations impacting the entire national economy and the daily lives of Americans, including the price we pay for basic consumer goods. By repealing it, President Trump, Administrator Zeldin, and EPA have taken yet another bold step to unleash prosperity, restore American energy dominance, and lower costs. As the Washington Post Editorial Board said, supporting the decision, “It’s about time.” This historic deregulatory action will make buying a new car more affordable and save over a trillion dollars in costs.
(more…)The New Civil Liberties Alliance’s podcast, “Unwritten Law,” has released a new episode that explores the arguments presented in seven amicus briefs recently filed at the First Circuit in Relentless v. Department of Commerce, the companion case to Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo. American for Prosperity Foundation’s brief is one of the seven discussed.
From NCLA:
In this episode of Unwritten Law, NCLA Senior Litigation Counsel John Vecchione and NCLA President Mark Chenoweth discuss a major development in NCLA’s challenge to a federal rule requiring fishermen to pay for government monitors placed on their boats—despite no clear statutory authorization.
After a district court upheld the rule using a theory that conflicts with the Supreme Court’s decision in Loper Bright, NCLA appealed to the First Circuit. Now, seven separate amicus briefs—from across the legal and ideological spectrum—have weighed in, each highlighting a different flaw in the district court’s analysis.
John and Mark walk through the most compelling arguments from the amici, including post-Loper Bright de novo review, the misuse of “necessary and appropriate” authority, clear-statement rules, the Major Questions Doctrine, constitutional limits on agency power, and why reviving Chevron-era reasoning under new labels is not permissible.
Listen to the episode here, or watch it on YouTube:
An interesting question after Loper Bright is how the demise of Chevron deference intersects with other deference doctrines that are still on the books, albeit perhaps on life support, such as Auer deference (which allows courts to defer to agency interpretations of their own regulations) and Stinson deference (which teaches that courts should defer to Sentencing Commission commentary on federal sentencing guidelines).
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AFP Foundation Files Amicus Brief in Relentless v. Department of Commerce
Americans for Prosperity Foundation (“AFPF”) has filed an amicus brief in Relentless v. Department of Commerce—the companion case to the historic Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo. With Loper Bright held in abeyance on remand, the outcome in Relentless may have significant implications for proper implementation of the Magnuson-Stevens Act (“MSA”), as well as the understanding of de novo review in the post-Chevron administrative‑law landscape.
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