Pacific Legal Foundation Launches Nondelegation Project

By

| September 9, 2025

ChatGPT AI chatbot writing answers with a pen on paper, symbolizing the integration of artificial intelligence in communication, content creation, and problem-solving, digital illustration

The Pacific Legal Foundation launched a new tool that “uses artificial intelligence to trace every federal regulation back to the law that supposedly authorizes it.”

The tool—which was developed by Patrick McLaughlin, a visiting research fellow at PLF—reveals whether Congress granted agencies broad, open-ended powers or gave them narrow, specific instructions. That distinction is crucial in the wake of the Supreme Court’s recent decisions in West Virginia v. EPA, which developed the major questions doctrine, and Loper Bright, which restored meaningful judicial review of agency power. By mapping the legal foundation of each rule, the Nondelegation Project highlights which regulations may now be vulnerable to challenge.

An accompanying explainer on the Nondelegation Project identifies the agencies with the highest number of general delegations:

  1. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (3,309)
  2. Environmental Protection Agency (2,752)
  3. Agricultural Marketing Service (1,284)
  4. Food and Drug Administration (1,155)
  5. Department of Justice (661); Food Safety and Inspection Service (661)