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Supreme Court overturns 40-year-old "Chevron deference" doctrine

VincentEvans
266 replies
21h44m

Congress can actually legislate the right of agencies to interpret the gaps in the laws back into effect - by passing a law that explicitly gives agencies this power.

Just like congress can legislate abortion laws rather than leaving it to judicial precedence.

Fundamentally there’s nothing wrong with the position of supreme court to push the responsibility of lawmaking back on congress.

cryptonector
97 replies
21h20m

The court decided this on statutory grounds because that's what this court likes to do: base decisions on the narrowest grounds possible. But it mentioned Marbury quite prominently and it's pretty clear that the court will not sustain a law that codifies Chevron.

VincentEvans
34 replies
21h16m

Can court override the power of congress to put Chevron into law? Have there been instances where court struck down a law passed by congress before?

cryptonector
19 replies
19h56m

The court will be very zealous of its power (from 1803, in Marbury v. Madison) to decide that laws are unconstitutional, so yes, if the court things a statutory codification of Chevron is unconstitutional, they will so rule.

However it's also very unlikely that Congress will pass Chevron into law, and the text they might write might be narrow enough to pass constitutional muster, so until then this is a purely academic question.

mullingitover
18 replies
19h5m

Couldn't congress explicitly strip the courts of their authority to review the Chevron-codifying law in the text of that same law?

cryptonector
17 replies
18h59m

Congress can define the court's jurisdiction, but that's a very broad tool. By and large Congress doesn't do that. I suspect that it would be more practical to pack the court.

mullingitover
16 replies
18h49m

Why is the potentially decades-long process of packing the court easier than inserting a section in a bill that says “btw, judges can’t review this specific law because it’s specifically written to revoke your recent power grab.”

lesuorac
8 replies
17h56m

Packing the court worked the last time when they tried to get in the way of the New Deal.

rayiner
7 replies
14h30m

Which ended up destroying the American republic and the constitutional system.

mullingitover
6 replies
11h56m

I don’t recall the collapse of the republic or the constitutional system, just decades of growing prosperity and rising standards of living culminating in the 1950s, the era everyone is desperate to return to.

rayiner
5 replies
6h26m

For economic reasons unrelated to what was going on in the legal system. But the mid-20th century also saw a gutting of the constitutional system the founders had created, and replacement thereof with an unelected administrative state.

You might want to read the room. Not just in the US, but across Europe as well, people are angry about their democracy having been stripped from them, and rule by unelected, unaccountable experts.

mullingitover
4 replies
5h16m

Anti-intellectualism is nothing new, we’ve always dealt with spasms of it and the current one will pass. When you say unelected experts what you’re referring to are non-crony public servants who aren’t subject to the spoils system of party politics. No modern democracy could function without them. Extremists hate them because they offer a competent buffer against the chaos they hope to unleash.

rayiner
3 replies
4h31m

It's not about "anti-intellectualism." I think cognitive elites, of which expert bureaucrats are a part, are critical to running society. But they have a moral obligation to stay in their lane. Elites must use their capabilities to do what the public wants them to do. Both in the U.S. and Europe, they have not been doing that, but instead have been abusing their authority to impose their own ideologies.

Consider the 2016 "Resistance" by federal employees to the election of Donald Trump. The public had clearly voted against immigration and free trade. At that point, the job of the federal bureaucracy was to put aside their own views about whether immigration and free trade were good things, and use their skills to implement the agenda of their duly elected new boss. Instead, they publicly and vocally declared their insubordination, both to the President and the public who elected him. Likewise, during the 2020 George Floyd riots, you saw public health experts allow their moral ideology to affect their expert recommendations--treating religious gatherings as somehow being different from social justice gatherings.

My belief is that these things directly led to the debacle of the pandemic, when people refused to trust experts on vaccination--despite Trump telling them to take the vaccine. My dad spent his life working as a public health expert in the third world, and what happened was, while disappointing, not a surprise to him. A huge part of public health work is getting people to trust you. And you must earn that trust by putting the job first. If you go into a village in Bangladesh and people don't want to be treated by a woman doctor, you provide them a male doctor. You don't chastise them for their "sexism." My dad actually worked for a Planned Parenthood affiliate in Bangladesh. At least back in the 1980s, they were providing family planning services consistent with local beliefs, and not trying to impose western ideals on the public--something that would have swiftly destroyed trust.

Most people who aren't that smart understand that and are deferential to their betters. But they also have an intuitive and accurate sense of what's an exercise of expertise, and what's a moral or political judgment. And when experts step out of their lane, they destroy the trust that's critical to doing their jobs.

mullingitover
2 replies
4h11m

Elites must use their capabilities to do what the public wants them to do.

It’s of course ridiculous to expect the city bus driver to take a public opinion poll before they do their job. Public servants get their orders from their managers who are appointed by public officials. That’s their “lane.”

People have a problem with this because they expect that when they elect radicals, the entire state apparatus immediately becomes as radical as the demagogue they managed to get in office. The fact it doesn’t work this way is a feature, not a bug.

rayiner
1 replies
3h4m

It’s of course ridiculous to expect the city bus driver to take a public opinion poll before they do their job.

"Their job" is to shut up and drive the bus, according to the routes selected by the duly elected government. They don't get to use their position to push back on the government because they think they should be driving somewhere else. And they should be fired if they do so.

People have a problem with this because they expect that when they elect radicals, the entire state apparatus immediately becomes as radical as the demagogue they managed to get in office. The fact it doesn’t work this way is a feature, not a bug.

That is exactly what it should mean. If the people elect someone who promises radical change, a functioning democracy should be responsive to that! Resisting the policy agenda of the elected government is not a legitimate function of the bureaucracy. And it's absolutely a "bug," not a "feature." I can't think of any constitutional system that envisions the bureaucracy serving as a check on the policy choices of the elected branches of government. Certainly, there is no such concept in the U.S. Constitution, which lays out a comprehensive system of checks-and-balances.

What you're saying is exactly the anti-democratic power grab I'm talking about. It's experts thinking that their education somehow validates their policy preferences, and that the point of elections is simply to provide some sort of signal to the permanent bureaucracy to evaluate according to their independent judgment and discretion.

ClumsyPilot
0 replies
1h20m

"Their job" is to shut up and drive the bus, according to the routes selected by the duly elected government.

Ye… You have never seen an incompetent manager that will draw a route of a bus through a brick wall, and yell over the phone ‘why haven’t you driven through it?’

More broadly, do you hate the idea of employees having opinions and their own initiative? Is your boss tells you to set the company building on fire, will you do it? If you are told to drive over a child, will you do it?

I feel like you are being an ideologue and you like how things work in your head, without realising that if everyone did exactly what their boss tells them, society would collapse within a week

bartc
5 replies
17h44m

That sounds equivalent to writing an unconstitutional law and tacking on “btw, you can’t rule that this law is unconstitutional”.

Which is actually possible to do by amending the US Constitution, but good luck with that.

mullingitover
4 replies
15h53m

Marbury itself has no basis in the constitution. Congress can gut the powers the courts have carved out any time, what I’m suggesting is that it can be done with a surgical strike rather than going nuclear.

cryptonector
1 replies
12h44m

Yet everyone has accepted Marbury. No one questions it. The reason is that it makes sense in the context of the constitution.

mullingitover
0 replies
12h5m

This court has gone a long way to say that vibes aren’t a sufficient level of clarity anymore, so it’s only fair that this can work against the court’s allocation of power as much as it has worked for it.

rayiner
0 replies
14h28m

This is a brave comment given that we are about to get 4 more years of Trump and probably a Republican house and senate.

cryptonector
0 replies
12h45m

Ironically Marbury was about Congress gutting the courts. Jefferson's Congress canceled 18 federal courts, leaving 18 judges (appointed by Adams at the end of his term, and who had not yet been seated) with no court to sit in! The case was a suit to force Jefferson's Secretary of State (Madison!) to give those new judges their commission. Marbury is a fairly complex case.

Anyways, Adams' 18 judges were not sat. This could happen again: just close out a bunch of judges' courts -- they'll still be judges for life, but judges without a court.

cryptonector
0 replies
12h50m

Because the court can say that's not how you define its jurisdiction. I don't really know, to be sure.

kelnos
7 replies
20h42m

If they believe Chevron is unconstitutional, sure. And there's certainly an argument for it on separation-of-powers grounds.

colde
6 replies
16h40m

They don't believe it's unconstitutional. They believe it conflicts with the Administrative Procedure Act from 1946. Something that they apparently believe the unanimous decision in Chevron from 1984 got wrong.

jimnotgym
5 replies
15h57m

I know little about US law, but I thought one of the priciples of common law is that once a precedent is set then it is set forever unless changed by statute? Allowing a court to change precedents undermines the whole concept of common law doesn't it?

SllX
2 replies
15h43m

This is stare (“starry”) decisis, and while it is absolute vertically, it is less so horizontally. Basically the court can decide that it got it wrong before, but the 9th Circuit is bound by a higher court’s precedents (SCOTUS in this case): https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/stare_decisis

cryptonector
1 replies
12h43m

With the caveat that the appeals courts set lots of precedents where the cases never reach the Supreme Court, in which cases the appeals courts are as bound by their precedents as the SCOTUS is by its precedents (i.e., not really).

SllX
0 replies
8h35m

Yep! And District Courts are bound by the Appellate Circuit Courts above them.

nativeit
0 replies
11h51m

Yep.

GeneralMayhem
0 replies
14h2m

Technically, SCOTUS, as the highest court, isn't beholden to anyone's precedent. This year's SCOTUS is just as legitimate as last year's, so they always have the power to overturn past decisions. Lower courts have to follow what higher courts decide, but SCOTUS has no higher authority. And sometimes, like in Brown vs. Board of Ed (which ended legal segregation), it's a very good thing for the Court to overturn its past decisions.

But in practice, to non-lunatics, stare decisis (the legal principle that says not to overturn, or even consider, topics that have already been decided in the past without an extremely good reason) is an incredibly important prior to bring into any discussion. If the court actually uses its power to completely rewrite the rules of how government works on a whim - and let's be clear, that's what this decision does - then there's no way for anyone to ever make a plan. Nothing is stable.

Unfortunately, at least 5/9 of the current Supreme Court are either lunatics or blatantly corrupt. Chevron was decided unanimously for a reason. There is no way to administer a modern state without that concept - which is why right-wing extremists are so happy to see it gone, because they don't want the state administered.

chasd00
5 replies
21h13m

i don't remember my government class exactly but i think the purpose of the us supreme court is to determine if a law is constitutional or not. I'm not sure if it can explicitly strike down a law but declaring it unconstitutional would be effectively the same.

bumby
3 replies
21h4m

i think the purpose of the us supreme court is to determine if a law is constitutional or not.

Interestingly, the ability to declare a law un/constitutional is not an enumerated power given to the court by the Constitution. The Supreme Court declared that power for itself in Marbury v. Madison and people have just went with it ever since.

goodluckchuck
2 replies
19h38m

It’s not really a separate power. Courts express their understanding of the law. Some laws are statutes, some are the constitution itself. If there are conflicts then the court will express its opinion on which is authoritative. What the Executive and Legislative branches choose to do after the fact are things those branches may do.

bumby
1 replies
18h30m

It becomes a somewhat circular argument. Through their ruling of Marbury v. Madison, the court declared the Constitution as law. Article 3 of the Constitution gives the court judicial power to interpret law. Therefore, by their own ruling they gave themselves the power to decide what is (or isn’t) constitutional.

brewdad
0 replies
17h21m

Which seems like an enormous power grab on the one hand but I can’t really see any other way for them to be a check on the other branches without that power. There needs to be some legal basis to declare a law invalid. The Constitution (with all of its vagueness at times) seems like the better way than simply vibes.

JumpCrisscross
0 replies
20h54m

the purpose of the us supreme court is to determine if a law is constitutional or not

No, it’s to decide cases and controversies [1]. Deciding on constitutionality flows from that.

This case, for example, was decided more on the Administrative Procdures Act than on the Constitution.

[1] https://constitution.congress.gov/constitution/article-3/

anon373839
25 replies
19h15m

I suppose Congress could use its power under Article III’s Exceptions Clause to strip the federal courts (including the Supreme Court) of jurisdiction to hear cases challenging an agency’s adherence to its enabling statute. Courts would still always be able to hear constitutional challenges, of course.

freejazz
21 replies
19h7m

And wouldn't this court still take this kind of challenge on constitutional grounds? That congress has no power to give legislative authority to an executive agency?

jtbayly
19 replies
17h53m

I assume so, as they should, since the constitution forbids it. This was the whole point of the separation of powers.

If Congress thinks they shouldn’t have to do the work of legislation, then they can all quit and we can elect people who are willing to do the job we elect them to do.

philipov
10 replies
17h15m

You know, maybe it's time to overturn Marbury v. Madison. An originalist like Alito should have no problem admitting that the constitution never granted the court these powers in the first place.

What's that I hear you say, he won't do it because it would hamper him personally? Well, bless his heart!

throwup238
5 replies
15h42m

Alito is as much an originalist as he is a vampire squid.

philipov
4 replies
14h43m

I am likely to believe he is one of those. Guess which one.

throwup238
3 replies
14h23m

Definitely the vampire squid.

SCOTUS hasn't had a real originalist in like 200 years.

dudeinjapan
1 replies
12h55m

…the Constitution doesn't say… that you should only interpret the Constitution based on what it says.

So we should interpret it based on the things it doesn’t say?

philipov
0 replies
5h4m

The problem with interpreting the Constitution is that a lot of things are left unsaid or undefined. There is a wealth of writing outside the Constitution that helps clarify what was intended when the text of the Constitution is ambiguous, such as the Federalist Papers.

Alito's originalist position is that he can reject using such contemporary sources, that he can reject all precedent, and interpret the ambiguous portions of the Constitution however he wants.

---

Incidentally, one of the clear intentions of the framers of the Constitution was that the future should not be chained to the tyranny of the past. This sentiment was pervasive in the Revolutionary era. It was intended that future generations would need to make the document work for their own times, and not constantly be second guessing what the deific Founders said. Check out the writings of Madison or Adams or Jefferson or Franklin sometime. They did not want to be deified.

philipov
0 replies
13h19m

You know something the Constitution doesn't say? It doesn't say that you should only interpret the Constitution based on what it says. Therefore, the originalist position is self-contradictory, because it's not contained in the Constitution.

spurgu
0 replies
5h30m

Who would then make sure that laws are constitutional?

giardini
0 replies
13h56m

"You know, maybe it's time to overturn Marbury v. Madison."<

"Why, the very idea..."

cryptonector
0 replies
12h56m

Under this court's approach the interpretations of the constitution from around the time of adoption of it count as strong evidence for its meaning today. So this approach would not work for you.

cryptonector
0 replies
12h54m

The Iron Law of Bureaucracy says that the court would never reverse Marbury.

Plus Marbury is too inside baseball for it to get reversed via constitutional amendment.

underlipton
3 replies
17h24m

And I suppose that soldiers who are in the middle of combat shouldn't be able to choose where to point their rifles without congressional approval? Do we need a bill for each new weapons system, since their procurement and use won't have been specifically called for in statute? Etc.

jtbayly
2 replies
17h8m

Congress already decides how much to spend and on what weapons systems for the various branches of the military.

Meanwhile, you need to brush up on your civics knowledge. The authority to command the armed forces is directly under the executive, which is why the President is the “Commander in Chief.”

In other words, these are not problems, either in the real world way things work (like the EPA has problems now after this decision) or in a constitutional sense.

jordanb
1 replies
15h0m

Congress already decides how much to spend and on what weapons systems for the various branches of the military.

Congress directs some times and defers other times. Congress absolutely does not direct every pentagon spending program.

The authority to command the armed forces is directly under the executive

The EPA is an "executive department" as described by article two of the constitution the same as the department of defense. If the founders expected congress alone to execute executive authority (except in the special case of the military) then the constitution would have been written that way and the EPA would have been created as a body that reports to congress. Congress was obeying the constitution when they created the EPA under the president, just as they were when they created every other executive department.

jtbayly
0 replies
6h38m

My argument is that we have been lax with the separation of powers. Congress is required to declare war before the President can direct the armed forces into combat, for example. This has failed recently. Congress also must not declare a permanent generic war, and then leave it up the the executive branch free to do whatever it wants with the military. Or, if they declare war on French Guiana, that doesn’t give the president freedom to attack Georgia.

The argument is not that the EPA should report to Congress instead of the President. The argument is that the EPA should be limited to doing what the laws Congress passed actually says. It is the executive branch’s responsibility to implement the law, not create, implement, and judge cases like they have been doing.

SubiculumCode
1 replies
14h26m

Unless the world turns to 1s and 0's, execution of a law will always in part depend on interpretation of the law by the executor. To pretend otherwise is to mistake ideals for reality.

jtbayly
0 replies
6h49m

Who is pretending otherwise?

Also, when those executors of the law are determined to be the sole arbiters of what the law means without any appeal or restraint, then the “they are experts” ideal has been mistaken for reality.

Imagine if the courts deferred to the police way more, because they are experts on what “crime” really is and know what the written law should be interpreted to mean. Oh, and let the police be the judges and run their own courts, too.

Gibbon1
1 replies
14h13m

If congress doesn't like how federal agencies implement the law they are free to pass laws to clarify their intent. They don't need unelected and unaccountable Justices to do that for them.

jtbayly
0 replies
6h55m

The whole point of courts is to be the place of judgment as to whether a law is actually being violated or not.

Let’s try it like this: “If Congress doesn’t like how police implement the law they are free to pass laws to clarify their intent. They don't need unelected and unaccountable Justices to do that for them.“

The whole problem is that without that branch of separated power, the police/federal agencies can do whatever they want, regardless of what the law says. Congress could pass new laws every year that say things like “No, we really meant it, police can’t randomly arrest people and keep them in jail forever.” But there wouldn’t be any way to judge whether they are doing that.

anon373839
0 replies
13h49m

You're completely right; my thought experiment was half-baked. A challenge to an agency's use of delegated power is necessarily a constitutional challenge. So, unless Marbury were overturned, this wouldn't fly.

rayiner
1 replies
14h37m

Congress could do that. But I don’t think democrats would like what the next Republican administration would do with that precedent.

cchance
0 replies
4h23m

You do realize the dems doing something and the reps following up with the same thing, doesn't somehow stop the republicans for just doing it themselves lol,

I'll never understand this bullshit stance "democrats cant do it because then maybe republicans will do it later" ... i mean how does not doing it ever stop republicans from doing it anyway later lol... this stance is what has fucked democrats for decades, this obliviousness that republicans have no issue jumping directly to extremes, like saying ROE was settled law and then overturning it in a fucking massive partisan ruling.

anticensor
0 replies
29m

Or go the European way and require regulations to explicitly list which act(s) of Congress they are based on.

pas
23 replies
20h57m

sorry, can someone explain this to someone who gave up on the article at the first bullet point, nor had enough sleep (and so is too lazy to look up everything)

thanks!

kelnos
22 replies
20h46m

Long ago Congress passed laws delegating a lot of rulemaking authority to the executive branch, the idea being that Congresspersons and their staff aren't deep-knowledge experts in most fields, and a lot of detailed rulemaking is best left to non-partisan career government employees (which, however, are usually guided by partisan political appointees, unfortunately). This is potentially dicey where the constitution is concerned: one of the foundational principles of the US constitution is separation of powers, and giving the executive branch what is essentially legislative power is maybe not in line with that.

But Congress did it anyway, and the SCOTUS has over the years upheld it. There was a landmark court case involving Chevron (the oil company). SCOTUS ruled there saying that the executive branch agencies responsible for rulemaking are experts in their fields, and we should mostly defer to them when their position seems reasonable, and when Congress hasn't passed a law that contradicts what they want to do.

Marbury is a much older case, that made precedent the idea that courts have the ability to strike down laws that they believe violate the constitution.

The current conservative-leaning SCOTUS is skeptical of what conservatives call the "administrative state" (basically: rulemaking done by the executive branch). They seem to not be a big fan of "Chevron deference", and are fully willing to exercise their Marbury-affirmed power to strike down executive actions that they don't believe are constitutional, or don't believe directly stem from laws Congress has passed.

wahern
18 replies
19h52m

I think this misses an important distinction. The issue here isn't the extent to which Congress can delegate rule-making authority to executive agencies. Those bounds haven't been moved. The issue is how how much deference courts are to give agencies when deciding when an agency-made rule reasonably adheres to the purpose and function of a statute. In theory the degree of deference shouldn't matter--agencies' retain the same rule-making authority and flexibility as before--but as a matter of process it absolutely does.

SCOTUS invented the Chevron doctrine because it believed at the time courts were too quick to second-guess the logic behind agency rule making, and in doing so unnecessarily and improperly inserting themselves into technical debates as well as broader political debates. IOW, the court was primarily concerned with people using the courts to subvert executive prerogatives and electoral politics. The concern now, apparently, is that administrations are using agency flexibility to subvert electoral politics.

Then and now, by moving the threshold for when courts can second-guess federal agencies, it's effectively altering the rights and responsibilities between Congress and the President, as well as between those two institutions and the electorate more broadly.

autoexec
14 replies
19h17m

The concern now, apparently, is that administrations are using agency flexibility to subvert electoral politics.

That's very charitable. A less charitable view might be that their concern is that regulatory bodies and other executive agencies are standing in the way of personal and corporate profits, and that overturning Chevron means that the courts can now cripple the ability for federal agencies to function by overruling the reasonable interpretations of statute those agencies have been operating under all this time and instead limit them to only the most narrow interpretation of the law. Law that has, for decades now, been being written under the assumption that Chevron exists, and not with the expectation that an adversarial judge will try to undermine the intention of the laws being passed.

tpmoney
10 replies
17h57m

I feel like if instead of deferring to the EPA, the Chevron case was deferring to police departments interpretations of the law when the law was ambiguous, we would be cheering this decision as a return to sanity. I wouldn't want the default assumption of the courts to be that when the law is unclear, whatever the sheriff or the highway patrol decides is illegal this month is, and next month or next election it could be something else entirely. In such cases I would absolutely want the courts to evaluate that ambiguity by treating both sides of the argument equally and weighing the law as it stands. So it seems like it should be the same when it comes to regulatory rule making as well. If the law is unclear, deferring to the enforcers of that law seems no different than deferring to the cops. The court system and the government as a whole is already institutionally biased towards the government, without any need for an explicit policy to prefer the government's side.

autoexec
5 replies
17h46m

I feel like if instead of deferring to the EPA, the Chevron case was deferring to police departments interpretations of the law when the law was ambiguous, we would be cheering this decision as a return to sanity.

I doubt it. I think most people have some federal agency they aren't a huge fan of. Sure, the fact that Chevron helped to allow the EPA keep your air and water from being poisoned by greedy corporations who would do it in a second if it would make them more money helps to make it a more sympathetic cause, but it's not as if people aren't aware that the defense applied to every other agency too.

I wouldn't want the default assumption of the courts to be that when the law is unclear, whatever the sheriff or the highway patrol decides is illegal this month is

That isn't a fair characterization of the situation. Even forgiving that the police aren't a federal agency, first a question around the legality of what the police were doing would have to reach the court in the first place, then the court would have to determine that an ambiguity in the law existed, and then the court would have to decide if the interpretation of the law that the police has been using is reasonable and only if it wasn't would the court impose its own interpretation. That seems pretty fair even in the case of the police.

It's not about deferring to the enforcers of that law. It's about deferring to the law first, and only imposing a narrower interpretation if the enforcers of that law were already out of line. It just means that agencies aren't limited to the most narrow interpretation of the law as written.

tpmoney
4 replies
16h59m

That isn't a fair characterization of the situation. Even forgiving that the police aren't a federal agency, first a question around the legality of what the police were doing would have to reach the court in the first place, then the court would have to determine that an ambiguity in the law existed, and then the court would have to decide if the interpretation of the law that the police has been using is reasonable and only if it wasn't would the court impose its own interpretation. That seems pretty fair even in the case of the police.

There are of course federal policing agencies, such as the DEA, ATF and FBI, but it doesn't matter because the point wasn't about federal agencies as such. It was about deferring to the enforcers of a law about what the limits of their powers are, which just seems like a terrible idea at all levels of government.

Was the FBI spying (and more) on civil rights leaders part of their powers as federal law enforcement officers executing their duties? I have no doubt they would say so, and absent a specific law from congress telling them they couldn't, who is to argue that they were unreasonable? Surely we should defer to them as they're the experts in their field right?

If the secret service started shutting down cell towers within a 10 mile radius of presidential rallies, well that's just common sense protection against remote explosives and well within their directive to protect the president right? They are the experts on this after all and have wide latitude to do what's necessary. No need for the courts to review that action or the laws surrounding it.

autoexec
2 replies
16h34m

Was the FBI spying (and more) on civil rights leaders part of their powers as federal law enforcement officers executing their duties?....Surely we should defer to them as they're the experts in their field right?

It's a fantasy to think that this will mean state spying powers will be reduced.

absent a specific law from congress telling them they couldn't, who is to argue that they were unreasonable?

The courts are! They always have been, even under Chevron. If at any point a judge thought that the FBI, ATF, DEA, NSA, or <insert three letter agency here> interpreted the law unreasonably, or extended their authority beyond what was allowed that judge had the power under Chevron to impose the court's own interpretation of the law on that agency.

The Chevron defense said that if the court agreed that an agency had an interpretation of an ambiguous law which was reasonable and permissible the court couldn't impose a more narrow standard on them. Because it's been overturned it now doesn't matter if the court thinks that what the agency was doing was reasonable and permissible, the court can inject it's own interpretation anyway.

Chevron prevented the court from forcing the most narrow interpretation of the law on a federal agency in cases where the court couldn't justify doing it. That's it. Now that protection is gone and I promise that it's not going to make you more free or better off. It means that any and all of the rights and protections you have today thanks to federal agencies are at risk of going away as soon as a case goes in front of an activist judge

tpmoney
1 replies
15h11m

It's a fantasy to think that this will mean state spying powers will be reduced.

Never said that it would, I said allowing enforcers to set the extent of their own powers is a bad idea.

Chevron prevented the court from forcing the most narrow interpretation of the law on a federal agency in cases where the court couldn't justify doing it.

Federal agencies (indeed any government agency) should always be subject to narrow interpretations of the law when the extent of their authority and powers are in question. If that interpretation is too narrow for Congress, then Congress needs to be more explicit about their intent. The law needs to be as clear as possible. Ambiguity is a flaw not a feature and the fact that ambiguities can lead to problems means we should make better law, not throw our hands in the air and let whoever's in charge this week decide what the policy is. If we want a massive federal agency to oversee something then the extent to which that agency is empowered and what that agency is empowered to do had better be explicitly spelled out.

intended
0 replies
11h42m

To support what Autoexc is saying - this is effectively an argument about the theory on one side, and the practical reality of intentionally skewed judiciaries, a grid locked and obtuse congress - which in turn is driven by groups with a common cause.

The law, in most cases, is about the practical application of an ideal (the law) to reality (the case).

If things weren’t so lopsided and blatantly partisan, then yes, the theory would matter. It would probably be a prosaic and boring decision.

This court is not only engineered to lean heavily in one direction, it is also being fed cases based on that common agenda.

In addition - we cannot avoid ambiguities unless we have powers of foresight that make the entire governing edifice irrelevant.

No one could predict the capabilities or failures of this generation of LLMs for example. There is no better “law”, unless it is an act that gets updated on a near monthly or quarterly basis.

This is a timeline that a congress is not suited to manage. This is definitely something that an agency of some sort would.

Finally - Saying that bureaucrats and experts are biased, but to leave out the bias of the courts feels unfair.

philwelch
0 replies
13h8m

There are of course federal policing agencies, such as the DEA, ATF and FBI, but it doesn't matter because the point wasn't about federal agencies as such. It was about deferring to the enforcers of a law about what the limits of their powers are, which just seems like a terrible idea at all levels of government.

What’s more, these agencies—particularly the ATF—love to make up, out of whole cloth, completely new rules that are contrary to their own previously-expressed rules that have the effect of retroactively turning millions of law-abiding people into felons overnight.

ymck
0 replies
11h46m

I'd just love to see them keep this same energy when dealing with the actual police and end qualified immunity. They won't. But it would be the right thing to do.

skissane
0 replies
14h2m

I feel like if instead of deferring to the EPA, the Chevron case was deferring to police departments interpretations of the law when the law was ambiguous, we would be cheering this decision as a return to sanity.

In the original context of the 1984 Chevron case, environmentalists were arguing that the EPA had redefined "source" in an overly narrow way, much narrower than Congress had originally intended in passing the Clean Air Act, thereby enabling companies to emit more air pollution. The Chevron decision was seen at the time as a loss for environmentalists and win for the corporate sector and conservatives.

It's funny how the tables have turned – a decision which was originally praised by conservatives and condemned by liberals and environmentalists, eventually ends being condemned and overturned by conservatives, while being defended by liberals and environmentalists. Both the 1984 case and the 2024 case had a conservative majority, and were perceived at the time as furthering conservative political objectives.

I think what's really happened: in 1984, the federal judiciary was widely perceived as liberal-dominated, while the federal bureaucracy was seen as relatively more conservative, so liberals wanted the judiciary to be more powerful than the bureaucracy, conservatives wanted the opposite. In 2024, the situation is reversed: now the federal judiciary is perceived as being increasingly dominated by conservatives, while the federal bureaucracy is viewed as being more liberal, so now liberals want to defend the bureaucracy's power against judicial encroachment.

It looks to me like the only thing that's constant here – on both sides – is "the ends justify the means".

rayiner
0 replies
14h32m

That’s a good example, but it goes even deeper than that. Chevron itself was a case that reversed a judgment in favor of an environmental organization written by Ruth Bader Ginsberg (when she was a D.C. Circuit judge), and siding with the Reagan EPA.

EasyMark
0 replies
14h20m

I don't think people will appreciate it when they have to buy bottled water because all the aquifers and lakes are full of heavy metals from manufacturing upstream. It really is part of Project 2025 and has been in the works for a while now. If they don't like the bureaucracy, Congress has full powers to remove it there was no reason to gut all regulation so they can be tied up indefinitely in court and our courts are overwhelmed by challenges so that every decision takes 15 years to work its way through court.

kolbe
2 replies
18h15m

That's very charitable. A less charitable view might be that corrupt, know-nothing political friends use their ability to "interpret a gap" to make sweeping legislation with no accountability and in-house courts to adjudicate on their behalf, then use selective enforcement for de facto bribery in a revolving door of public-private scheme to extort the productive sector of our country, and give to the useless rent seeking politicians and their cronies.

ffgjgf1
1 replies
10h2m

Wouldn’t a system where you need bribe a large number of bureaucrats (who might have differing opinions and priorities) still be more robust than one where you just need to bribe a couple of corrupt Supreme Court justices like now?

the useless rent seeking politicians and their cronies.

Courts are largely politically appointed. Why are judges necessarily more trustworthy in your opinion?

kolbe
0 replies
3h34m

I was just bootlicking the Fox news narrative as hard as you are bootlicking the NYT. It was parody.

My real opinion is that no one is more trustworthy than the other. They're all people. But there are constitutionally delegated duties given to each branch that we've gradually eased over the past century, and between Jarkesy disallowing in-house courts for certain types of crime, the resurgence of the non-delegation doctrine and now the overruling of Chevron, SCOTUS thinks this delegation is not optional. I personally agree with them hesitantly, but predicting the future is hard, and there are some actions they take where I think the consequences are obvious, but this is not one of them, and I would have slept no more or less soundly if this case had come out the other way.

surfaceofthesun
2 replies
19h31m

It seems that congress is much quicker and more willing to correct overreach by the executive branch through legislation compared to overreach by the judiciary — especially at the Supreme Court level.

kergonath
1 replies
18h43m

LOL. Have you seen the state of congress in the last decade? A rotten dead fish would be quicker to correct about any overreach than the US congress.

surfaceofthesun
0 replies
18h22m

Yes. I simply meant a relative comparison between the two. Agreed otherwise

bonzini
1 replies
19h46m

It's worth noting is that at the time the EPA's position was _in favor_ of Chevron, while the agencies right now tend to be a lot less corporation-friendly (hence the need to overturn the precedent, some say).

Also worth noting is that the head of the EPA at the time was Anne Gorsuch, mother of Justice Neil Gorsuch.

cryptonector
0 replies
19h23m

And Neil Gorsuch concurred in the court's majority opinion!

throw0101c
0 replies
15h20m

Long ago Congress passed laws delegating a lot of rulemaking authority to the executive branch […]

By "long ago" the delegation was first mentioned (AFAICT) in 1825:

It will not be contended that Congress can delegate to the Courts, or to any other tribunals, powers which are strictly and exclusively legislative. [23 U.S. 1, 43] But Congress may certainly delegate to others, powers which the legislature may rightfully exercise itself.

* https://caselaw.findlaw.com/court/us-supreme-court/23/1.html

babyshake
7 replies
18h58m

Isn't the only reason the Supreme Court would not sustain a law is because it is unconstitutional? And otherwise their only role is to interpret laws? At least that's the way it is supposed to be AFAIK.

pclmulqdq
2 replies
17h39m

No, the court can also say that two laws are inconsistent. In this case, there is a judicial ruling (Chevron) that has stood for a while, that they are saying is inconsistent with a law (the APA). The constitution is not in this ruling at all. Generally, laws override judicial rulings unless the constitution is in question.

SubiculumCode
1 replies
14h24m

Can the Supreme Court ever declare two Constitutional clauses to be inconsistent?

pclmulqdq
0 replies
13h55m

I doubt it, but I'm sure they can "interpret" them to consistency.

kergonath
2 replies
18h47m

But that’s not really how it works, is it? The court is more interested in pushing an agenda than playing its role in balancing the other branches of government. It’s obvious in the way they defer to precedent when it suits them and throw it aside when it does not.

jtbayly
1 replies
17h52m

Nevertheless, the constitution does forbid this, and the decision is correct.

throwup238
0 replies
15h40m

Where exactly does the constitution forbid “this”?

cryptonector
0 replies
17h32m

Sometimes they get it wrong.

NotYourLawyer
1 replies
17h8m

That seems unlikely to me. Why do you think so?

There hasn’t been a successful nondelegatiom challenge in like a hundred years.

cryptonector
0 replies
12h41m

I gave my reason in the comment you're replying to.

skissane
0 replies
13h48m

The court decided this on statutory grounds because that's what this court likes to do: base decisions on the narrowest grounds possible. But it mentioned Marbury quite prominently and it's pretty clear that the court will not sustain a law that codifies Chevron.

I'm not convinced you are right. If you look at the conservatives on the current SCOTUS, they aren't monolithic. Thomas and Alito are hard conservatives (with Thomas the hardest), [0] and I'd expect they'd likely do as you suggest and strike down any statutory attempt to reintroduce Chevron as unconstitutional.

But I'm not sure Roberts would be willing to go along with that. As the most moderate of the conservative justices, he was comfortable striking down Chevron on statutory interpretation grounds, repeating that on constitutional grounds might be going too far for him. And he only has to convince one other conservative to go along with him, and with the support of the liberals he'd have a majority. Kavanaugh is only modestly more conservative than Roberts, so he'd be the most likely candidate. I think, if Roberts was to overturn on constitutional grounds a statutory attempt to reinstate Chevron, he'd prefer to do it in the narrowest way he could – striking down that particular attempt, but leaving open the possibility that Congress could have another go at it.

The other thing you have to keep in mind, is ultimately the justices are individuals with their own idiosyncrasies, and they don't always vote the way you'd predict if ideological leanings were the only factor driving their decisions. A good example of that was the Fischer v United States case [1] from the other day, in which SCOTUS sided with January 6 defendants: Jackson joined the conservatives in that, whereas Barrett joined the liberals in dissenting.

I suppose Jackson siding with the conservatives was not entirely surprising; as the most moderate of the liberal justices, she is the most likely to join the conservatives in any case. Barrett's dissent was somewhat more surprising, given she's not the most moderate conservative, with Roberts and Kavanaugh siding with the liberals more often than she does.

[0] https://www.axios.com/2019/06/01/supreme-court-justices-ideo...

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fischer_v._United_States

camgunz
0 replies
8h47m

It's so narrow that it's out of context. The APA does say "all matters of law" but it's in a longer sentence that makes it clear they mean a legal dispute. Roberts et al cram a huge shift of plenary powers through that pinhole. Regardless of what you think about the administrative state, no one can say with a straight face courts will do a good job of this. We don't even have enough judges to manage immigration and family law cases, and now we need people who are legal experts _and_ subject matter experts in all regulatory cases that come before them? I mean, we'll see what courts think after environmental rights groups file thousands of suits (as the majority seems to think they should be doing) after this.

Or I mean, a different outcome is that we get EPA court. Article III is very short and doesn't design the federal judiciary. Biden could pretty easily just make the EPA a court with lifetime appointments. What an own goal that would be haha.

autoexec
56 replies
21h36m

Congress can actually legislate the right of agencies to interpret the gaps in the laws back into effect - by passing a law that explicitly gives agencies this power.

Congress can't actually legislate anything while it's held hostage by obstructionists and there's effectively zero chance that a bunch of republicans who want to dismantle the already inadequate regulations that keep entire communities from being poisoned will vote to remove their power to do exactly that through the supreme court.

oceanplexian
31 replies
20h2m

Congress can't actually legislate anything while it's held hostage by obstructionists

That’s a feature, not a bug.

autoexec
23 replies
18h59m

I don't think there are many Americans who prefer a deadlocked and dysfunctional congress that is incapable of doing their jobs. We have a lot of things that need doing in this country which can't get done when obstructionists stand in the way.

There will always be some number of petty people who don't care what the costs are as long as "their team" isn't allowing the "other team" a win, and those who don't want the federal government doing anything other than war, but when our government shuts down most American's aren't very happy about it. Most have a list of things they'd like their representatives in Washington to be doing for them, and they don't view the obstructionists acting like toddlers preventing those things from happening very favorably.

In the end, a partisan pissing match doesn't actually help the American people and our government should be working for us, not sitting on their hands doing nothing while the American people suffer and backslide. As long as election results are entirely divorced from approval ratings congress has zero incentive to work for the people though and they can get away with preventing the government from being functional/useful for anyone but themselves and the people stuffing their pockets.

pclmulqdq
11 replies
17h36m

I don't there are many Americans who prefer a deadlocked and dysfunctional congress that is incapable of doing their jobs. We have a lot of things that need doing in this country which can't get done when obstructionists stand in the way.

I know a lot of them. And it's how the system was designed, by the way. Congress was supposed to generally be weak and deadlocked unless an overwhelming majority of people wanted something.

brewdad
6 replies
17h17m

The overwhelming majority of people do want a lot of things. Gerrymandering in the House and the fact that the Senate gives Wyoming and Vermont the same power as California and Texas prevents that.

throwaway333444
4 replies
16h18m

> Congress was supposed to generally be weak and deadlocked unless an overwhelming majority of people wanted something.

The overwhelming majority of people do want a lot of things.

While the language is close these aren’t the same. Specifically the parent is saying that people need to want the same thing. Claiming that people want lots of things with no consideration of what they are or even how the things are done falls far short of the goal.

the fact that the Senate gives Wyoming and Vermont the same power as California and Texas prevents that.

Have you considered that our founding documents/government was structured this way on purpose? It was a major incentive for encouraging small states such as Wyoming to join the union. Without this mechanism for giving smaller states an equal influence relative to other states many would not have joined the union.

paulryanrogers
1 replies
15h46m

We might do well to consolidate some of the smaller and sparse states from time to time. Otherwise they may sell their souls for any kind of edge over the more populous ones.

Red_Leaves_Flyy
0 replies
15h13m

I vote to join Hawaii and Alaska, and Puerto Rico with Montana.

jordanb
1 replies
15h37m

Have you considered that our founding documents/government was structured this way on purpose?

The senate was modeled on the house of lords and the expectation was that the country would be mostly ruled by the representatives in the lower house, with the senate handling special things like impeachment.

The senate disproportionately representing smaller states was a compromise necessary to get smaller states to ratify the constitution. Wyoming and Texas didn't exist. Senate rules that turn it into the place were legislation goes to die (like the filibuster) are rules created by the senate to give itself more power.

pclmulqdq
0 replies
13h49m

The Senate was always supposed to be part of passing laws. I'm not sure where you got the idea that the Senate would only handle special things. That's what the House of Lords does, but the roles are not supposed to be the same.

nradov
0 replies
16h3m

If people in California and Texas want certain things then they still have a great deal of freedom to enact those laws at the state level. The federal government has only preempted state legislation in limited areas. For example, if Texas wanted to implement a single payer healthcare system within their state then they could just do it (at least for residents not covered by federal health plans). There's no need for federal laws covering every issue.

thfuran
1 replies
14h53m

Congress was supposed to be composed of a bunch of people representing their constituents, not partisan hacks serving the interests of political parties.

pclmulqdq
0 replies
13h51m

I have spoken to my congressman and both of my senators before. It turns out you probably can, too, if you have something worthwhile to say. Political parties have existed forever.

jordanb
0 replies
15h42m

Congress was supposed to generally be weak and deadlocked unless an overwhelming majority of people wanted something.

It was not. Rules that make congress "weak and deadlocked" are mostly not in the constitution. For instance, the filibuster is part of Senate rules and could be changed at any time.

Party-line votes and deadlock in the house are mostly driven by partisan politics and party discipline.

The constitution specifies a few things that require a super-majority (impeachment conviction, overturning a president's veto, and constitutional amendments). Everything else is supposed to be a majority vote of 535 independent representatives.

cocacola1
0 replies
14h15m

The hostage situation will have diffuse eventually.

zmgsabst
4 replies
18h38m

We have a lot of things that need doing in this country which can't get done when obstructionists stand in the way.

I think calling people who oppose your policy ideas “obstructionists” is a neat ad hominem, as if the only reasonable position is yours.

What you’re lamenting is that you can’t force an agenda without people agreeing — and when they refuse to agree with you, your agenda can’t happen. While you say “most Americans”, factually, you lack a majority for your agenda: you’re a minority trying to impose itself.

That’s democracy.

pharrington
1 replies
18h9m

Nope. One example from Mitch McConnell's own mouth, talking about the the Republican Congress created the debt ceiling crisis -

"I think some of our members may have thought the default issue was a hostage you might take a chance at shooting. Most of us didn’t think that. What we did learn is this - it’s a hostage that’s worth ransoming. And it focuses the Congress on something that must be done."

zmgsabst
0 replies
10h4m

So… because no faction had enough votes, they were forced to compromise to secure a coalition with enough votes? — that’s your idea of “obstruction”?

You can just say you don’t like democracy.

autoexec
1 replies
18h18m

I think calling people who oppose your policy ideas “obstructionists” is a neat ad hominem

It would be, except that I never actually said that. Plenty of people can disagree with me and not be an obstructionist. A person in congress can even vote against something I'm in favor of and not be an obstructionist. Obstructionists are something very different from just being "people I don't like"

What you’re lamenting is that you can’t force an agenda without people agreeing

No, it's certainly not about "forcing an agenda" it's about functional governance which by necessity involves compromise and a willingness to give and take. It's not even always about "agreeing". An obstructionist will vote against their own policy ideas to prevent letting their opponent get their way.

While you say “most Americans”,

I mean most Americans. Polls consistently show that the majority of Americans want congress to work and they don't like the government shutdowns obstructionists cause.

but factually, you lack a majority for your agenda

That's incorrect too. While obstructionists can stand in the way of policies that divide the American public there are also situations where a policy has majority support but is still held up or prevented by obstructionists. If we lived in a country where the approval rating of senators indicated their likelihood of getting elected you might have a point, as obstructionists being elected and re-elected would indicate that the majority of the people support them and their tactics. That's not the country we live in however. For just one example, notable obstructionist Mitch McConnell is the least popular senator in the entire country. He has no reason to stop being an obstructionist though, because how the people feel about him doesn't impact his ability to keep his job.

That's not democracy, it's just what happens after many decades of efforts to weaken democracy and erode the ability of the American people to have a meaningful influence on policy and who gets into office.

zmgsabst
0 replies
10h6m

Polls consistently show that the majority of Americans want congress to work and they don't like the government shutdowns obstructionists cause.

Those same polls show they believe their own representative is doing an adequate job - which is my point:

There’s no “obstruction” there, just frustration that your faction doesn’t have the votes to achieve your desired policy because some groups don’t agree with you.

there are also situations where a policy has majority support but is still held up or prevented by obstructionists

Policies overwhelmingly favored by the majority of Americans are generally blocked by establishment candidates — at a rate far higher than “obstructionists”.

He has no reason to stop being an obstructionist though, because how the people feel about him doesn't impact his ability to keep his job.

People he doesn’t represent can’t impact this job — correct.

And again, we’re seeing that you’re just upset by democracy itself: that you can’t force representatives on people and accordingly, can’t achieve what you want without their support.

Your entire post was nothing but deranged bashing of political rivals when you can’t achieve you policy objectives due to their opposition.

anamax
2 replies
12h26m

I don't think there are many Americans who prefer a deadlocked and dysfunctional congress that is incapable of doing their jobs.

You're assuming a lot more agreement WRT "doing their jobs" than actually exists.

I want X, you want not X. We both want Congress to "do its job", but what, exactly is that job?

Deadlock is when I don't get my way.

mise_en_place
0 replies
10h50m

The European Parliament was able to pass GDPR. Keep in mind the member states were blood enemies for centuries. If they can put aside their centuries long blood feuds to get sh*t done, Congress has no excuse.

autoexec
0 replies
9h4m

I want X, you want not X. We both want Congress to "do its job", but what, exactly is that job?

To govern. That means compromise. Maybe we disagree on X and our representatives decide to do Y instead which doesn't full satisfy either of us. Maybe they pass X which I want while you don't, and in return they pass Z which you want while I don't.

It's not as if the idea of a congress that can work together is an impossible dream. The situation today is the exception and not the rule. For all the problems congress has had we're seeing historic levels of dysfunction and that shows in the total lack of productivity https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/118th-congress-track-become-...

polski-g
1 replies
17h39m

We have a lot of things that need doing in this country which can't get done when obstructionists stand in the way.

California has spent over $100bn to build 1600 ft of high speed rail over a decade. And it wasn't Republican obstructionists who caused that.

There are too many regulations.

autoexec
0 replies
17h17m

California has spent over $100bn to build 1600 ft of high speed rail over a decade. And it wasn't Republican obstructionists who caused that.

I'm not familiar with that specific situation. Was it taken to the federal courts and only allowed to happen because of Chevron?

There are too many regulations.

I think many people cheering this ruling are just anti-regulation and they care a lot about that without thinking much about how this ruling will negatively impact their lives and the lives of their families.

I agree with you though. There really are too may regulations. That will probably always be true. As long as industry and corporations can write self-serving legislation and bribe people in congress to pass it, there will be regulations on the books that shouldn't be there. That said, regulation is the only reason you have safe electricity, clean air, and safe water (assuming you aren't one of the several millions of American's who currently don't have safe drinking water).

Regulations, like all laws, are just tools and they can be used to help improve our lives, preserve our health, promote the safety of the American people, and increase our freedoms or they can be used to stifle competition, funnel tax money into the pockets of private corporations, or restrict our freedoms. Like laws themselves (which there are also too many of) it would be foolish to abolish all of them because some of them are bad.

We should be paying attention to who is writing and passing regulations and who those regulations serve, then hold people accountable when they don't represent our interests. That's hard to do in our current system where people's votes don't mean much, so we might want to try fixing that situation first but being "anti-regulation" makes about as much sense as being "anti-laws". Laws are a good thing. Regulations are a good thing. Let's just try to make sure they are both serving the public good.

dwighttk
0 replies
7h21m

Everyone likes deadlock when it is stopping laws they don’t like

Dalewyn
5 replies
19h43m

This. When the electorate is sufficiently divided or otherwise in the process of debate that there is no consensus, it is proper that the legislative bodies representing the electorate also likewise have no consensus with which to pass new legislation.

Also, this feature also works the other way: If Congress were to pass, say, abortion guarantees or Chevron Deference into law, then good luck trying to get them repealed. See also Obamacare, which hasn't been repealed after it was passed despite hell being raised.

autoexec
2 replies
18h51m

. See also Obamacare, which hasn't been repealed after it was passed despite hell being raised.

Let's see how long that lasts now. Overturning Chevron was a step to that very end. It puts the Department of Health & Human Services on the chopping block.

Dalewyn
1 replies
17h16m

Repealing and overturning are two completely different things done by two completely different branches of government.

autoexec
0 replies
16h59m

The overturning of chevron now allows the federal courts to prevent the HHS and CMS from doing their jobs which can prevent the Affordable Care Act from being carried out effectively. Once it's no longer functioning the republicans will have a much easier time overturning it without massive backlash from the American public who overwhelmingly support it (most importantly without pissing off the independent vote).

hn_throwaway_99
1 replies
19h34m

Hard disagree. First, I'd say our system is more the exception that the rule. For example, most parliamentary systems don't take the "gridlock" approach, i.e. where you say "it is proper that the legislative bodies representing the electorate also likewise have no consensus with which to pass new legislation."

Instead, they basically give the side that controls parliament the ability to pass legislation, and if they fuck it up, they can get thrown out and another party has their turn - this is essentially exactly what is happening in the UK with the Conservatives getting kicked out of power.

The problem with this "eternal gridlock" is that, since Congress can't pass anything, basically the executive branch and the Supreme Court take over legislative roles, which I'd argue is worse. I.e. the executive branch makes a ton of executive orders, which if challenged get decided by the Supreme Court, basically leaving Congress out of it nearly entirely because that legislative body is so feckless.

nradov
0 replies
15h9m

By objective results, parliamentary systems haven't necessarily produced better outcomes. And there's no need for the federal government to assume so much authority anyway; the states can take care of most issues on their own.

ksenzee
0 replies
19h12m

I used to think this. I have come to believe the opposite. We can’t _never_ update _any_ laws. It’s chaos.

Mountain_Skies
18 replies
21h34m

How did the obstructionists grant themselves that power?

cryptonector
14 replies
21h13m

Gerrymandering is self-limiting. You can gerrymander to increase your party's number of House seats from your state, or you can gerrymander to make your seats more secure, but you can't do both! You can make some seats more secure while others weaker so as to strike a balance between these two goals, but you won't get as many seats as if you optimized for seat count and you won't get as many safe seats as if you optimized for seat safety.

If you optimize for seat count then a wave election can easily turn many of those seats over to the other party, and with them control of the House.

If you optimize for seat safety then a wave election need only turn over a few of your seats to switch control of the House.

We have had lots of wave elections in the past 100 years: 1920, 1932, 1994, 2006, 2008, 2010. Three of those are in the past 20 years. Four in the past 30 years.

Gerrymandering isn't all it's cracked up to be. It cannot make any party impervious to wave elections.

This, anyways, only as long as all House districts in each state have roughly the same population.

cyberax
8 replies
20h59m

Gerrymandering is self-limiting.

It really isn't. It's self-perpetuating. A gerrymandered state might _eventually_ switch sides, but far more likely it'll become more red (and yes, gerrymandering is predominantly a Republican tactic).

cryptonector
4 replies
19h59m

Between 1933 and 1995 we had sixty two years of Democrat party majorities in the U.S. Congress. That was before the Internet and back when the U.S. was less polarized than today. And the Great Depression and the New Deal left the Democrats very popular for decades. Today I don't see how gerrymandering could defeat wave elections. Democrat gerrymandering did not prevent 1994, and Republican gerrymandering did not prevent 2006 and 2008.

cyberax
3 replies
19h50m

That's because historical gerrymandering was not as severe as now. Modern gerrymandering uses computer modeling to slice minorities as thinly as possible, creating insurmountable barriers.

Here's a nice overview: https://medium.com/rantt/the-top-10-most-gerrymandered-state...

cryptonector
2 replies
19h30m

Gerrymandering is a word that comes to us from the early 19th century. Massachusetts has been famously gerrymandered for decades and decades.

vel0city
0 replies
17h35m

Sure it's something that's been happening for a long time. But it's like comparing hand painting a picture to a modern graphics card rendering a scene 240 times a second and suggesting it's the same thing.

Jensson
0 replies
17h35m

Back then you had to be smart to figure out how to slice it, not today.

mistrial9
2 replies
20h50m

maybe that was true a while ago, but no, it is vigorously practiced by both US Democrats and Republicans in the modern age .. source: quantitative Census demography for urban planning

cyberax
0 replies
19h48m

That's 100% opposite of the current state. Historically Democrats and Republicans used the classic gerrymandering.

However, now it's pretty much only Republicans who rely on computer-aided models to gerrymander the districts.

There _are_ Democratic examples, and the worst ones are in Maryland and Illinois. But they pale before the Republican gerrymandering.

autoexec
0 replies
19h39m

It's true that both parties take part in it, however Democrats feel forced into it and would rather not. Democrats have repeatedly put forth efforts to end the practice. They have little choice but to play by the rules as they are until they manage to finally put a stop to it.

kelnos
4 replies
20h36m

Gerrymandering isn't all it's cracked up to be. It cannot make any party impervious to wave elections.

I think the last 15 years of elections would seem to contradict you.

My guess is that if gerrymandering were completely outlawed, Democrats would easily maintain control of the House, with a healthy margin, more or less permanently.

Wave elections are a thing, but as we've seen, they don't give a the waved party a massive margin.

We have had lots of wave elections in the past 100 years: 1920, 1932, 1994, 2006, 2008, 2010

2010 is a bit of a magic number, because that was the point when Republicans started their concerted, coordinated, country-wide gerrymandering campaign. So I don't think elections prior to then can support or refute any points about gerrymandering.

cryptonector
1 replies
20h2m

2010 is a bit of a magic number, because that was the point when Republicans started their concerted, coordinated, country-wide gerrymandering campaign. So I don't think elections prior to then can support or refute any points about gerrymandering.

They already had done that, and they lost two big wave elections. (E.g., Texas redistricted in 2004.)

vel0city
0 replies
17h40m

They really started gerrymandering hard in 2010 with REDMAP. There's really an extreme delineation in technology used to abuse the system at this point.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/REDMAP

roenxi
0 replies
16h15m

My guess is that if gerrymandering were completely outlawed, Democrats would easily maintain control of the House, with a healthy margin, more or less permanently.

It'd be better if the electoral boundaries were drawn with a polling-naive algorithm, but that isn't how it works in practice - you've probably noticed that every election is knife edge and there are regular upsets. This is because if one party is guaranteed to lose it will change its policies just enough to attract marginal voters from the other party.

For example, there were confident predictions of a similar nature that the Republicans would be unable to win elections because of the shrinking white demographic. We can see in the polling that what actually starts to happen is Trump still on the ballot but they've been in a long strategic process of picking voters from non-white demographics. The elections themselves are still knife-edge.

There'd be a different policy mix, but one thing we can predict about the future anyway is that there will be different policy mixes. Gerrymandering just privileges minority incumbent policies.

jordanb
0 replies
15h30m

My guess is that if gerrymandering were completely outlawed, Democrats would easily maintain control of the House, with a healthy margin, more or less permanently.

The republicans would then find it necessary to change the constituencies to which they appeal. Anyhow, a few states are horribly gerrymandered by the democrats. The problem is that democrats did so horribly during the Obama years midterms that most states ended up in control of republicans for the 2010 and 2020 census.

winter_blue
0 replies
19h28m

It’s partly (1) due to the structure (or rather, flaws) of the US constitution, (2) a ridiculous senate rule, and (3) gerrymandering as others have mentioned.

On (1): needing the approval of the senate, house, and president makes it very hard to pass laws.

On (2): the senate rule requiring 60% approval has already been repealed for appointments and for budgetary legislation, but it really needs to thrown out. The first two years of Biden’s presidency were mostly lost to obstructionism because of this rule.

On (3): this will most likely be banned if democrats get a trifecta federal control, and repeal (2), since gerrymandering primarily just benefits republicans.

JumpCrisscross
3 replies
20h52m

Congress can't actually legislate anything

Did you miss the hundreds of billions of dollars of legislating the Congress did this year?

eigen
1 replies
16h56m

seems they are legislating less and less by the Congress.

The list of acts of the 115th United States Congress includes all Acts of Congress and ratified treaties by the 115th United States Congress, which began on January 3, 2017, and ended on January 3, 2019. The 115th Congress enacted 442 statutes and ratified 6 treaties.

The 116th United States Congress, which began on January 3, 2019, and ended on January 3, 2021, enacted 344 public laws and zero private laws

The 117th United States Congress, which began on January 3, 2021, and ended on January 3, 2023, enacted 362 public laws and 3 private laws.

The 118th United States Congress, which began on January 3, 2023, and will end on January 3, 2025, has enacted 65 public laws and zero private laws

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_acts_of_the_115th_Unit...

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_acts_of_the_116th_Unit...

[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_acts_of_the_117th_Unit...

[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_acts_of_the_118th_Unit...

nradov
0 replies
15h3m

Is volume of legislation the correct measure? That seems analogous to clueless managers trying to measure the productivity of software developers by lines of code written.

autoexec
0 replies
19h52m

Did you miss the part where I said " while it's held hostage by obstructionists"?

When everyone is in agreement, congress is not being held hostage by obstructionists and some things can pass. When obstructionists are in disagreement, they can prevent anything from passing.

indigo0086
0 replies
21h30m

Welcome to democracy, is it your first time?

granzymes
21 replies
21h10m

I liked this section of Justice Gorsuch's concurrence:

How bad is the problem? Take just one example. Brand X concerned a law regulating broadband internet services. There, the Court upheld an agency rule adopted by the administration of President George W. Bush because it was premised on a “reasonable” interpretation of the statute. Later, President Barack Obama’s administration rescinded the rule and replaced it with another. Later still, during President Donald J. Trump’s administration, officials replaced that rule with a different one, all before President Joseph R. Biden, Jr.’s administration declared its intention to reverse course for yet a fourth time. Each time, the government claimed its new rule was just as “reasonable” as the last. Rather than promoting reliance by fixing the meaning of the law, Chevron deference engenders constant uncertainty and convulsive change even when the statute at issue itself remains unchanged.
wwweston
13 replies
20h26m

If his complaint is the back-and-forth, this is certainly a look-in-the-mirror moment for Gorsuch and the present court, who've sure made their own notable contributions to whipsaw governance dynamics lately.

If his complaint is that there's an executive discretion in executing the law or the expectation should be that congressional force only goes as far as its ability to write micromanagement into statute then it's hard to restrain from making "do you even constitution bro" or "who are you and why are you wearing that robe" remarks.

(Of course, in representative government, not only elections but agency and judicial appointments have consequences, so while it it may be inconsistent for justices to exercise that privilege for themselves while arguing away the right of another branch to do the same, it is not that big of a surprise, and it is entirely consistent with a philosophy based in elitist privilege for some that is likely behind much of today's ruling among others.)

kolbe
8 replies
17h15m

This is so incredibly ignorant, which is fine. We're on a startup forum after all--not a conlaw round table. We aren't supposed to be experts. But to think you have some superior intellectual standing on this issue compared to any of the SCOTUS justices to too much Dunning-Kruger for me to just let slide.

underlipton
3 replies
16h55m

The most recent two have no business being on the bench in the first place, so maybe not so much.

kolbe
2 replies
16h22m

ACB and Jackson? I am about as well-versed in the law as any non-lawyer, and I have 10% at best of the legal knowledge of either of them. The hubris on legal matters of some of the people here is laughable. It's the equivalent of some random law student criticizing John Carmack.

arwineap
1 replies
12h26m

I assume that they were not talking about Jackson.

McConnell blocked the nomination of Merrick Garland for 293 days arguing that there was not enough time before the election.

Then, somehow, they turned around and passed through Amy Coney Barrett in 35 days, instead of following the same precedent of waiting for the election.

The hypocrisy is blatant and disgusting.

kolbe
0 replies
5h58m

The fact that you think this is hypocrisy, and are willing to voice that "opinion" (i.e. regurgitating what some news outlet told you) with such assuredness within this community using such passionate and extreme language is why I find some of the pretentiousness on here to be so bad that I just have to laugh at it.

If you are actually a programmer, figuring you why Garland wasn't a precedent for ACB wouldn't be hard. You just conveniently left out an 'if' statement in your analysis

wwweston
1 replies
15h26m

While argument from authority does make sense in a social/political context which functionally defines correctness in terms of authority of appointed office, I'm sure it wouldn't be lost on any seasoned lawyer that it still constitutes a fallacy when it comes to the merits of the argument alone. Similarly no one would know better than a lawyer the distinction between the authority of an opinion and its merits -- or to get less meta and back closer to the specifics of the opinion and surrounding arguments, the fact that multiple arguments can be reasonable and multiple policies might well be not only a side effect but the expected and even perhaps desired outcome of public processes from court decisions (this one obviously different from the one it overturns) to elections.

And part of the point of institutions like courts is that the reasoning is subject to public review and discourse, both institutional and social.

I'm making a specific response to shortcomings apparent in the argument -- the opinion seems to treat the fact of differing interpretation of law or differing policy goals between different executive administrations to be some kind of bug or worse a surprise, when it seems entirely reasonable to expect it as a feature, one that certainly shouldn't be surprising to someone whose whole career (and indeed, features of this very decision) turns on the interpretive range often present within the law.

If you have specific commentary indicating how experts from a conlaw round table might engage this response, by all means, don't "just let slide", enlighten all of us in the course of doing the work that people genuinely combating Dunning-Kruger might do by elaborating on what, specifically, is overlooked in the response or missing from its counterargument.

kolbe
0 replies
5h37m

Insofar as you think you were responding to what you identified (and then conveniently changed to fit your narrative) to be his arguments, I would say it's not hard to see the difference between a law changing every 4-8 years versus once every 40+ years (combined with about 5 years of foreshadowing the changes). You also conveniently run with the "fill in the gaps" narrative, by belittling the scope and impact of these gaps. Trillions have been spent in these gaps. Thousands if not millions of lives have ended due to choices in these gaps. Families torn apart. Suicides. Bankruptcies.

So, for "specific commentary", me, a regular dude, can see straight through them. If you wanted a real, deep Roberts-quality response, you're in the wrong place. None of what you said was even presented in oral arguments, because two of the finest lawyers in the world could also see through that pretentious fallacy filled drivel, and knew that the 9 justices, all of whom are also leagues ahead of you or I in legal knowledge and skill, would equally scoff.

paulryanrogers
1 replies
15h41m

Appeal to authority?

kolbe
0 replies
5h33m

Yes. We do it all the time. And at the margins, sure, it's unfair. But when a random poster using sophomoric logic is going on some pretentious rant about knowing more than Neil Gorsuch, all you need to do is note that one person has spent tens of thousands of hours being aided by the finest educational paths to the job of SCOTUS justice, and one is a professional spamer

fallingknife
3 replies
15h23m

This is disingenuous. The claim of Chevron supporters is that we need to defer to the agencies because they can make decisions based on technical expertise that the political branches don't have. But the example proves that is not what is happening. The fact that the rules changed every time the administration changed proves that these are, in fact, political decisions being made under the guise of technical expertise. What is really happening is legislation by the executive branch which is blatantly unconstitutional.

wwweston
1 replies
15h0m

If different rulings by different people prove that expertise wasn't applied, it's equally credible to claim that expertise wasn't applied in the creation of this decision, since it's certainly a change.

Additionally, it's far from clear the examples reviewed were representative vs written to support the conclusion, so in addition to the problem of how variance is framed as a bug rather than a feature, it's not even really clear how much is actually occurring.

"Elections have consequences" is a well-known phenomena, and the idea that a branch other than the legislature might have influence over how the law is interpreted or executed shouldn't be news to anybody, least of all a member of the judiciary, many of whom will in fact be no doubt less qualified to make judgments vs agencies with specific technical and legal expertise.

fallingknife
0 replies
3h0m

Take the example from this decision itself. The Department of Commerce issued a rule requiring certain fishermen to have federal observers on their boats and pay a fee. This decision was not made with any expertise and is not even the type of decision that can be made scientifically. It is purely a political decision that has nothing to do with any technical expertise. Yet the agency still argued it was unreviewable under Chevron.

It doesn't matter if the example is representative. It doesn't matter if it is 1%, 10%, or 50%. If agencies are able to act as a political branch and use Chevron as a cover to make these political decisions immune to judicial review, then the system is broken and needs to be fixed.

This is like defending qualified immunity for police by saying "well the arrests you presented where the police used the QI defense to cover over egregious rights violations are not a representative sample of all arrests made by the police."

thfuran
0 replies
14h39m

It's not unconstitutional for Congress to pass legislation delegating authority over certain areas to executive agencies.

kelnos
3 replies
20h34m

I agree with Gorsuch's overall point, but he's also writing it knowing full well that today's Congress is not equipped to do all that rulemaking, and not equipped to agree on and pass the huge volume of legislation that would be necessary to duplicate all that rulemaking within the legislative branch.

And he's ok with this, because his political ideology is such that fewer regulations and less rulemaking is a good thing.

Ultimately Congress cannot take on all of the executive branch's current rulemaking authority without some huge changes to how the body works. Those changes will not happen, because conservatives don't want these rules.

yaksha
1 replies
18h26m

Are those rules necessary? Do those rules have to be implemented at the federal level? Can the states take responsibility for some of the items instead?

trzy
0 replies
16h48m

Not possible. The US is on the fast track to be humbled and humiliated by its geopolitical rival, China.

cryptonector
0 replies
12h35m

Reversing Chevron doesn't mean that Congress has to do all the work. It means that the courts will interpret what the statutory language allows when the agencies do their rulemaking. It's really that simple, and it's not a big deal.

fzeroracer
2 replies
20h50m

But fundamentally, how is this different than what the Supreme Court does? The Supreme Court interprets the constitution and its meaning as it relates to whether or not a law is constitutional. The overturning of Roe v Wade is the direct result of the current court saying 'actually, the way we previously interpreted the constitution was wrong'.

We've gone through significant uncertainty and convulsive change as a result of the Supreme Court throwing out decades of precedence. This isn't to say this is always a bad thing, but the reasons for their past few decisions do not pass muster.

tpmoney
0 replies
17h34m

But fundamentally, how is this different than what the Supreme Court does? The Supreme Court interprets the constitution and its meaning as it relates to whether or not a law is constitutional. The overturning of Roe v Wade is the direct result of the current court saying 'actually, the way we previously interpreted the constitution was wrong'.

That's sort of the point, because congress has abdicated their responsibility for so long, many of the "laws" and "rights" that exist in our legal framework are mere shadows of actual legislation. They're executive whims or judicial policies, both of which are inherently fragile and subject to sudden change. Roe v. Wade was the "law of the land" only to the extent that the courts continued to interpret an ambiguity in the law the same way as they always had. Congress had decades to shore up a case that even the jurist who were part of it said was extremely weak. Everyone knew it was fragile and the DNC cashed in on that fragility every election.

Or consider medical marijuana, which is currently only un-prosecuted at the federal level because the president told the DEA to chill out for a bit. The fact that in November the next president could change their mind and conduct federal raids of dispensaries across the country is not a good thing. You might argue that they couldn't do that because the medical marijuana industries and laws are crafted to avoid crossing state lines, but that depends on A) ignoring decades of Wickard (which admittedly the current SCOTUS might be willing to do, but boy if you think this decision or Roe was controversial, that would be a doozy) and B) ignore the very obvious fact that some of that legal supply is leaking across state lines illegally.

The fact that Net Neutrality is on again/off-again is another example of this. Major legal decisions are being left to the whims of two octogenarians who it's a miracle manage to get through the day without shitting their pants, and a judicial system that is inconsistent at the best of times. The courts have always been political, but if they are uniquely so at this time, it's because the folks interested in politics have figured out its easier to get what they want via executive fiat and judicial wrangling, and congress has learned their jobs and income are more secure when they don't have to take the blame for those things.

anigbrowl
0 replies
19h56m

It's not. I think this actually flips a lot of power back to the judicial branch in the short term, which is significant because federal judges enjoy lifetime appointments. Of course, Congress has the power to look at unexpected or perverse-seeming judicial outcomes and legislate accordingly, but the legislative process is typically slow and subject to various sorts of bargaining; a rather corruptible process.

s1k3s
19 replies
21h5m

Where I'm from, our "supreme court" can overthrow congress legislation for not following the constitution. Is this the case here AND is this the case in the US (generally speaking)?

CapitalistCartr
18 replies
21h1m

Yes, that's exactly how it works. The US Supreme Court can rule a law unconstitutional, and that's that.

r00fus
10 replies
20h59m

Little known fact: Congress can actually legislate around that by removing the possibility of judicial review from the law itself.

Gormo
8 replies
20h51m

Little known, I suspect, on account of being entirely false.

JumpCrisscross
7 replies
20h47m

on account of being entirely false

Congress can absolutely limit judicial review by statute. (It can’t remove it entirely.)

westurner
5 replies
20h5m

Shouldn't that require a Constitutional Amendment?

Such a law would bypass Constitutional Separation of Powers (with limited privileges and immunities) i.e. checks and balances.

Why isn't the investigative/prosecutorial branch distinct from the executive and judicial branches though?

JumpCrisscross
4 replies
19h41m

Shouldn't that require a Constitutional Amendment?

No, Article III § 1 explicitly vests judicial power “in one supreme Court, and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish” [1].

Why isn't the investigative/prosecutorial branch distinct from the executive and judicial branches though?

What do you think executing laws means?

[1] https://constitution.congress.gov/constitution/article-3/#ar...

westurner
3 replies
17h57m

No, to change the separation of powers they need a constitutional amendment because that's a change to the Constitution, and amendments are the process for changing the Constitution.

To interpret what was meant by Liberty and Equality as values, as a strict constructionist.

JumpCrisscross
2 replies
13h35m

to change the separation of powers they need a constitutional amendment because that's a change to the Constitution

The Constitution literally says the Congress has the power to establish inferior courts. Congress setting what is justifiable is highly precedented.

The words “separation of powers” never appear in the Constitution. It’s a phrase used to describe the system that document establishes.

westurner
1 replies
12h3m

Can Congress grant rights? No, because persons have natural rights, inalienable rights; and such enumeration of the rights of persons occurs only in the Declaration, which - along with the Articles of Confederation - frames the intent, spirit, and letter of the Constitution ; which itself very specifically limits the powers of the government and affords a process of amendment wit quorum for changes to such limits of the government in law.

Congress may not delegate right-granting privileges because the legislature hasn't right-granting privileges itself.

The Constitution is very clear that there are to be separate branches; each with limited privileges and immunities, and none with the total immunity of a Tyrant king.

A system of courts to hear offenses per the law determined by the federal and state legislatures with a Federal Constitutional Supremacy Clause, a small federal government, a federal minarchy, and a state divorce from British case law precedent but not common law or Natural Rights.

And so the Constitution limits the powers of each branch of government, and to amend the Constitution requires an amendment.

Why shouldn't we all filibuster court nominations?

Without an independent prosecutor, Can the - e.g. foreign-installed or otherwise fraudulent - executive obstruct DOJ investigations of themselves that conclude prior to the end of their term by terminating a nominated and confirmed director of an executive DOJ department, install justices with with his signature, and then pardon themselves and their associates?

The Court can or will only hear matters of law. Congress can impune and impeach but they're not trained as prosecutors either; so which competent court will hear such charges? Did any escape charges for war crimes, tortre without due process, terror and fear? Whose former counsel on the court now.

What delegations of power, duties, and immunities can occur without constitutional amendment?

Who's acting president today? Where's your birth certificate? You're not even American.

What amendments could we have?

1. You cannot pardon yourself, even as President. Presidents are not granted total immunity (as was recently claimed before the court), they are granted limited Privileges and Immunities.

2. Term limits for legislators, judges, and what about distinguished public/civil servants who pick expensive fights for the rest of us to fight and pay for? You sold us to the banks. Term limits all around.

3. Your plan must specify investment success and failure criteria. (Plan: policy, legislative bill, program, schedule,)

Can Congress just delegate privileges - for example, un-equal right-granting privileges - without an Amendment, because there is to be a system of lower courts?

alrdyobstructed
0 replies
2h57m

Additional things that the Constitution, written in the 1770s, doesn't quite get, handle, or address:

US contractors operating abroad on behalf of the US government must obey US government laws while operating abroad. This includes "torture interrogation contractors" hired by an illegally-renditioning executive.

The Federal and State governments have contracted personal defense services to a privately-owned firm. Are they best legally positioned to defend, and why are they better funded than the military?

What prevents citizens from running a debtor blackmail-able fool - who is 35 and an American citizen - for president and puppeting them remotely?

Too dangerous to gamble.

Executive security clearance polices are determined by the actual installed executive; standard procedure was: tax return, arrest record, level of foreign debt.

Would a president be immune for slaving or otherwise aggravatedly human trafficking a vengeful, resentful prisoner on release who intentionally increases expenses and cuts revenue?

Did their regional accent change after college?

Can it be proven that nobody was remoting through anybody? No, it cannot.

And what about installs ostensibly to protect children in the past being used misappropriatingly for political harassment, intimidation, and blackmail? How should the court address such a hypothetical "yesterday" capability which could be used to investigate but also to tamper with and obstruct? Why haven't such capabilities been used to defend America from all threats foreign and domestic, why are there no countermeasure programs for such for chambers of justice and lawmaking and healthcare at least.

And what about US Marshalls or other protective services with witness protection reidentification authorization saboteurially "covering" for actual Candidate-elects?

Can a president be witness protected - i.e. someone else assumes their identity and assets - one day before or one day after an election? Are Justices protected from such fraud and identity theft either?

You're not even American.

And what about when persons are assailed while reviewing private, sensitive, confidential, or classified evidence; does such assault exfiltrate evidence to otherwise not-closed-door hearings and investigations?

Which are entitled to a private hearing?

Shouldn't prosecute tortuous obstruction? Or should we weakly refuse writ; and is there thus no competent authority (if nobody prosecutes torture and other war crimes)?

Let's all pay for healthcare for one another! Let's all pay for mental healthcare in the United States. A War on Healthcare!

Are branches of government prohibited from installing into, prosecuting, or investigating other branches of government; are there any specific immunities for any officials in any branch in such regard?

Sorry, it's not your fault either.

staticman2
0 replies
20h54m

Congress cannot do that.

s1k3s
6 replies
20h56m

So basically it's the same as here, the supreme court (which is appointed, not elected) has power over elected officials?

(Because they can decide what is constitutional or not)

Edit: I have more questions but for some reason I can't reply to your replies :(

edmundsauto
2 replies
20h17m

The US Supreme Court can decide what is constitutional, and Congress can amend the constitution that is the basis for the USSC decision (with 2/3 vote).

With the current makeup of Congress, it is unlikely so the USSC holds significantly more effective power than if it had a functioning Congress.

kelnos
1 replies
20h6m

US Congress cannot amend the constitution. State legislatures must ratify constitutional amendments.

The two-thirds threshold you mention is for Congress to propose amendments.

edmundsauto
0 replies
18h33m

I fully admit that I don’t have a great civics teacher, now more than 20 years ago… but I don’t think this is true? Can anyone else weigh in here?

Edit - wow this is actually true. From white house.gov:

An amendment may be proposed by a two-thirds vote of both Houses of Congress, or, if two-thirds of the States request one, by a convention called for that purpose. The amendment must then be ratified by three-fourths of the State legislatures, or three-fourths of conventions called in each State for ratification
pbhjpbhj
0 replies
20h24m

I have more questions but [...]

There's throttling to prevent rapid back-and-forth commenting as that can devolve somewhat; might be that. Try clicking the "X minutes ago".

kelnos
0 replies
20h7m

Right. But the elected officials can vote to remove members of the supreme court (or federal judges in general), though the bar for doing so is set very high. And the supreme court can't remove elected officials. So the supreme court's power over elected officials is not absolute.

The idea in US constitutional law is one of balance: we have three branches of government, and each are granted powers that can act as a check on the powers of the others. It's far from perfect in practice, but the intent is good, I think.

JumpCrisscross
0 replies
20h53m

the supreme court (which is appointed, not elected) has power over elected officials?

In a well-designed system, both have power over each other. That is certainly true in the United States.

tw04
16 replies
16h7m

Fundamentally there’s nothing wrong with the position of supreme court to push the responsibility of lawmaking back on congress.

It would literally be impossible for congress to make a law covering every single nuance agencies are tasked with. This Supreme Court knows it. This is nothing more than deregulation on a scale not seen in modern American history. When you can’t find clean drinking water in 30 years, this will be why.

lacy_tinpot
7 replies
14h21m

It would literally be impossible for congress to make a law covering every single nuance agencies are tasked with.

What does that even mean? Supposedly these agencies already know what they're tasked with, no? If not... well I mean that's straight up irresponsible.

The other part of this I don't get is that people have been complaining about the "Revolving Door" problem in these agencies for a long time now. They're not sacred, and further we know they're not sacred because we've been complaining about their corruption. So why pretend they're sacred now? Why are there no solutions?

The problem with a lot of the called "progressives" is that they've adhered to a different kind of conservatism, where while the ideals are progressive, every single instance of actually implementing those ideals are conservative and play to old power structure.

Where are the progressive iconoclasts?

hamasho
1 replies
9h11m

What does that even mean? Supposedly these agencies already know what they're tasked with, no? If not... well I mean that's straight up irresponsible.

It's unrealistic to expect agencies to implement flawless regulations, especially when they're often underfunded. Complex situations will always have loopholes, but letting corporations exploit them freely doesn't benefit society. Sure, agency overreach can be a problem, but in this case, I think the lack of regulation is more concerning.

The problem with a lot of the called "progressives" is that they've adhered to a different kind of conservatism, where while the ideals are progressive, every single instance of actually implementing those ideals are conservative and play to old power structure.

I agree with your point about the conservative/progressive labels. People's views are nuanced - they might want to maintain the status quo on some issues, push for progressive change on others, or even revert to past practices. It's not black and white, even though we feel that way cause our society is getting more polarized.

admax88qqq
0 replies
7h30m

I don’t think OP said that agencies have to make flawless regulations. They said that congress can literally make the Chevron Doctrine law. Giving agencies the power that they had before this ruling

fredophile
1 replies
3h54m

> It would literally be impossible for congress to make a law covering every single nuance agencies are tasked with.

What does that even mean? Supposedly these agencies already know what they're tasked with, no? If not... well I mean that's straight up irresponsible.

It means the supreme court just gutted the agencies ability to make and enforce regulations. The agencies have lots of experts who know what they're supposed to be regulating they just aren't allowed to do that in many cases now. Unless congress writes things explicitly into law you can expect legal challenges to just about any regulation the agencies try to put forward.

The other part of this I don't get is that people have been complaining about the "Revolving Door" problem in these agencies for a long time now. They're not sacred, and further we know they're not sacred because we've been complaining about their corruption. So why pretend they're sacred now?

Why do you think these two issues are opposed? The answer to weak and lax regulation isn't to remove the ability to regulate.

Why are there no solutions?

What solutions are you proposing? Do you think your solutions have any chance of getting anywhere in the current political climate? Who benefits from the status quo and how much effort will they put in to block a solution?

rayiner
0 replies
15m

It’s worth pointing out the irony of this position, which is that liberals decried Chevron at the time it was decided because it required deferring to a narrow interpretation of the Clean Air Act by the Reagan EPA. Progressive organizations are always suing the EPA, because regulatory agencies are inherently centrist and resist change in either direction.

What this decision means is that Sierra Club, NRDC, etc., can now litigate in the Ninth Circuit and push for more favorable interpretations of environmental laws. And the next Republican administration can’t take that away, the way they could under Chevron, which allowed agencies to change their interpretation of the same law for no reason.

creer
1 replies
13h28m

Supposedly these agencies already know what they're tasked with, no?

I don't even see why such a law would have to name any agency. It could be a generic, "yes Supreme Court we do intend to let the executive fill in the blank in the law through regulations - that's why we call them regulations".

Even if that failed (perhaps on constitutional grounds), they could periodically accept agency regulation revisions and pass them into law.

FranzFerdiNaN
0 replies
11h14m

They could, but with a party like the GOP it won’t happen.

advael
0 replies
14h13m

Generally speaking they are considered "unelectable" and thus mostly exert influence indirectly if at all. Especially in the United States, even many "progressive" causes that have become relatively mainstream (in terms of popular support) are viewed by most people as having very little actual political representation due to the two-party system, and this has been well-understood by most people who call themselves progressives for several decades.

philwelch
2 replies
13h20m

As we all know, there was absolutely no clean drinking water in the United States before 1984.

rhinoceraptor
0 replies
11h26m

There was leaded gasoline which even at the time it was introduced was known to cause brain damage.

xray2
0 replies
14h37m

Lol it’s going to take 30 years to take effect? Delusional take.

sleight42
0 replies
15h34m

Why stop at drinking water? If it's not codified in legislation, it will now be fair game for corporate America to exploit.

Up until now, companies had to cannibalize their customers when they could no longer find legal ways to grow. This will be enshittification like we've never seen. Instead of cannibalizing their customers, corporations will be able to cannibalize and exploit everything else that isn't explicitly nailed down in legislation.

In essence, this is likely the next Citizens United: another massive power grab for corporate America, the richest, at the expense of the people who populate the country.

rayiner
0 replies
2h49m

Overruling Chevron doesn't require Congress to make laws covering every nuance. It just changes who resolves ambiguities in the laws. The irony of your comment is that federal clean-water legislation dates to 1948. The governing precedent at the time was Skidmore v. Swift, under which courts deferred to agency interpretations of statutes tot he extent the court found them persuasive. That regime functioned just fine for 40 years before Chevron changed the law.

Chevron, of course, was a case where the Reagan EPA interpreted the word "source" in the Clean Air Act to refer to an entire plant, rather than a distinct pollution source. The D.C. Circuit, in a decision written by Ruth Bader Ginsberg, disagreed with the EPA's interpretation of the law. The Supreme Court reversed, holding that the EPA was empowered to resolve such ambiguities in the text of the statutes.

drrskino
0 replies
14h27m

The people trying to downplay this being a brazen partisan ploy at deregulation are not doing a very good job.

amgreg
0 replies
2h34m

This case is about whose interpretation gets to fill in the gaps.

The statute (APA) requires courts to form an independent judgment about the gaps.

The Chevron doctrine required courts in certain cases to set this judgment aside in favor of an agency’s judgment—-basically on the basis that the agencies are closer to the problems and know better.

This setting aside may be the better outcome, however it is not explicitly specified in the statute (APA).

Ultimately, if Congress wants this to be the case, they /can/ amend the statute (APA), effectively enshrining the Chevron doctrine.

At the end of the day, the court’s decision here rests on statutory interpretation (not constitutional doctrine) so Congress could change the outcome by amending the statute (APA) to explicitly codify Chevron. This would be achieved with its ordinary legislative power (Article 1 Section 7 of the Constitution).

The court’s decision does effectively put the ball back in Congress’ court.

skywhopper
14 replies
21h34m

Likewise Congress could clearly state that agencies are not allowed to interpret the gaps. If Congress was unhappy with how the executive branch was working, it could solve the problem easily and directly. So the Court, when making this decision, was not concerned about what’s “right” or even Constitutional. It showed its hand by disrupting existing rulemaking that has been going on and explicitly allowed by the Court and implicitly granted by Congress for decades.

Changing the status quo on a fundamental de facto government structure is not good judiciating.

VincentEvans
11 replies
21h24m

I am not surprised that conservative-leaning court has put their finger on the scale of what they always described as “activism of agencies” and “legislating from the bench” by pushing the congress to act - I see it as consistent with conservative principles.

I am not saying I agree with it or condemn it - rather stating the path forward.

I too would like congress to start acting the part. They have the tools.

azemetre
9 replies
21h6m

How do you expect Congress to legislate when one side refuses to legislate?

VincentEvans
4 replies
20h20m

Congress also possesses a variety of tools to limit obstructionism if it so desires.

But a more important point - is that congress is a tool of democracy itself and is a reflection of the attitudes and desires of the populace. If populace no longer has the aptitude to apply its rights to elect the government that serves its interests - then it will experience the consequences of such negligence and learn from them, which is also its right.

Refusing it that right is something much worse - authoritarianism when an individual or a group gets to pick winners or losers.

kelnos
3 replies
19h57m

I think that's a very simplistic, idealistic view of how the US government works. In reality, the populace is very limited in what changes it can make and which people can realistically become elected. Our electoral system, entrenched two-party system, as well as the prevalence of gerrymandering, all come together to ensure that.

nradov
1 replies
14h38m

A few decades ago it didn't seem realistic that someone like Barack Obama could be elected President. And yet it happened twice. Our system has some flaws but a bit of idealism is still warranted.

intended
0 replies
11h23m

I think this accentuates the reality though.

Remember when Obama won? The Republican Party was at a morale nadir, and they rallied together under the banner “1 term president”. They fought every single thing.

Mitt Romney had to oppose his own Medicare plan, which the democrats adopted so that they could find common ground.

Obama winning was probably the last gasp of the system working as it was intended. There are plans upon plans to ensure the system can never do that. That agencies are weakened, courts are stacked, local elections won, media narratives perfected. It’s tempting to say this is to ensure the “libs” lose, but that only plays back into a narrative and camouflages the issue.

Effective, logical government is itself the problem.

I think that someone is paying attention to the details, to the org charts, to the minutiae of laws, and making a coordinated effort to move things in a single direction.

I dont think what you described counts as idealism anymore.

VincentEvans
0 replies
19h44m

Well, that’s just like, your opinion, man. (Big Lebowski, i think).

tpmoney
0 replies
17h31m

They could start by changing their rules so that one side can't refuse to legislate. Congress decides how Congress operates, and for some reason despite everyone being awful mad about it, Congress has never decided to make it harder for congress to be obstructed by Congress. They have from time to time made it easier (see filibuster-less filibustering), seems like they could undo that any time they'd like to get back to work.

polski-g
0 replies
17h36m

Compromise and deal making. How do you get your wife to agree to a 92" TV if she refuses initially?

fallingknife
0 replies
15h21m

Refuses to legislate in the way that you want them to. There is, in fact, plenty of legislation.

Amezarak
0 replies
20h13m

By winning clear majorities, either "side" can do whatever it wants, including changing all the House/Senate rules to pass laws with simple majorities.

watwut
0 replies
20h58m

They are fine with activism and activists themselves. They just want the activism to go their political opinion direction. It is not even subtle.

CivBase
1 replies
21h9m

Changing the status quo on a fundamental de facto government structure is not good judiciating.

Isn't the fundamental structure that the legislative branch writes laws, the judicial brand interprets laws, and the executive branch enacts/enforces laws? That's what I was taught in school.

I don't doubt that this is a political move to shift power from a liberal presidency to a conservative supreme court. But to me it seems like a case of the right thing done for the wrong reason.

goodluckchuck
0 replies
8h37m

You’re evidently not partisan enough, because it is the wrong thing when the other guy does it. /s

Or, if you become less partisan, you may see that it is the right thing for the right reason.

matrix87
7 replies
21h15m

Fundamentally there’s nothing wrong with the position of supreme court to push the responsibility of lawmaking back on congress.

One could argue, similarly to overturning Roe, they're diverging from a very critical precedent which is going to trigger a flurry of lawsuits over the next couple years

jkic47
6 replies
21h5m

That was actually addressed on Page 7 of the decision.

They begin with "The stare decisis considerations most relevant here—“the quality of [the precedent’s] reasoning, the workability of the rule it established,..." and proceed to find the considerations "all weigh in favor of letting Chevron go"

https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/23pdf/22-451_7m58.pdf

If you read the decision on abortion, you will find they spend significant time arguing that stare decisis underpinning Roe v Wade is not valid.

lesuorac
4 replies
17h55m

Do keep in mind Roe didn't have standing.

There's no harm from denying somebody an abortion when they're not pregnant.

jellicle
1 replies
15h49m

Roe was pregnant.

lesuorac
0 replies
15h9m

_was_ not _is_.

[2] McCorvey gave birth to a daughter at Dallas Osteopathic Hospital on June 2, 1970

At that point she lost standing similar to another Jane Doe whose case became moot because she already had the abortion [1] and the desired action (injunction against an abortion) is irrelevant because it's already happened.

[1]: https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/supreme-court-issues-dec...

[2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roe_v._Wade#History_of_abortio...

injb
1 replies
16h2m

So what though? I don't know exactly the reasoning for standing requirements, but they clearly weren't intended to prevent suits over things that affect millions of people in exactly the same way. I mean, standing would prevent man from suing to overturn a ban on women voting, but that's clearly a bug, not a feature.

lesuorac
0 replies
15h5m

My point is that you can find evidence for any outcome. The Supreme Court has a stance they like and backpedal to make the argument for it leading to inconsistent rulings.

There are a myraid of ways that roe vs wade could've turned out and in the final ruling document they'd all fit the correct format.

philips
0 replies
20h58m

Arguing stare decisis was invalid when the reasoning behind even hearing the case is ideological was necessary- it essentially is the only reasoning they could make.

sqeaky
3 replies
21h39m

Fundamentally, people are suffering because the courts are acting for political expedience instead of doing and saying what's right and correct.

Congress should get its Act together, but one group acting in responsible is not license for another group to act irresponsible.

mjfl
2 replies
21h26m

acting for political expedience? They are making heavily impactful, politically unpopular moves to correct what they believe to be long term errors buried in court precedent.

freejazz
1 replies
18h59m

It's politically expedient for their goals, your post explains exactly why: they are hugely unpopular moves, if for any reason, because of the tremendous uncertainty they create in the law at large.

goodluckchuck
0 replies
8h32m

I don’t buy the idea that this creates uncertainty. When I read a statute I have a level of certainty as to what it means. When I read executive branch rules interpreting the statute I have a better understanding of what the executive intends to do, but - as they don’t write the law - it doesn’t provide much clarity as to what the statute actually means. The executive can and should continue to provide guidance about its intentions, but saying that the law is whatever the executive intends it to be is smoke.

kolbe
3 replies
21h29m

This isn't actually clear. The duty to legislate arguably cannot be transferred... even with legislation.

VincentEvans
2 replies
21h21m

Valid point! I’d like to hear more regarding this concern. While I don’t necessarily view what I referred to as “interpreting the gaps” as synonymous with “legislate”, IANAL and would appreciate professional opinion here.

kolbe
0 replies
18h26m

Well, for example, the SEC has used a law from 80 years ago about retaining memos as justification for billions in fines against companies whose employees used whatsapp to say "the market is crazy" (or similarly benign things). All they did was "fill in a gap" to make this totally new law.

goodluckchuck
0 replies
8h11m

IMO The rule of law derives from precedent. Prior to courts there was the rule of the monarch. The common law then developed as courts resolved disputes. It was all gap. The authorities would say the accused did something wrong and should be punished, and the courts came up with things like “murder” and “negligence.” Statutes are a relatively new way of making laws. They’re crude. Rather than simply resolving a real dispute based on the facts of an actual situation (and limiting the scope to the same or similar situations), legislators twiddle their thumbs and prospectively guess at what situations might occur and which words may address a multitude of unpredictable nuances. Statutes are pretty terrible because they’re so hard to refine. If a situation bumps against the plain language of a statute, the courts are essentially compelled to absurd and unjust results. However, that’s democracy. The people say they want the power to make the law, they say they want the clarity of a statute over a law book, and their errors are better than an overthrow of the system.

rhaksw
2 replies
16h41m

Congress cannot divest its legislative power, nor can it vest interpretive power to executive-branch agencies. The judiciary interprets law— not Congress.

bastawhiz
1 replies
16h37m

There's no issue with Congress interpreting laws here. The executive branch is (was). Which they have to do because how do you enforce a law that you do not have an interpretation of? If Congress disagrees with the judiciary's interpretation they can just pass a law that makes their interpretation the literal law.

rhaksw
0 replies
16h6m

The executive does not interpret law in the sense understood by the separation of powers. Interpretation is a judiciary power.

dehrmann
2 replies
17h32m

Just like congress can legislate abortion laws

That might violate the 10th Amendment since it wasn't explicitly delegated to the federal government.

underlipton
1 replies
17h10m

A wild 14th Amendment appears (they hate that one, too).

chrisco255
0 replies
15h2m

The part where it says "No state shall deprive any person of life...without due process"?

fredophile
1 replies
4h10m

Congress can actually legislate the right of agencies to interpret the gaps in the laws back into effect - by passing a law that explicitly gives agencies this power.

What would such a law look like?

Let's pretend we're in congress and want to pass a law limiting pollution in lakes and rivers.

One option would be to have a bunch of experts tell us what we should explicitly ban and write those into the law. This option would mean we need to revisit the law every few years as the science changes and new harmful chemicals are developed or identified.

If instead we want the agency to be able to adapt to new situations, how do we word it in a way that won't be overturned? Congress is in charge of legislating. When does writing rules for what is and isn't pollution cross the line to legislating? Can congress turn any of that power over to executive branch agencies without a separation of powers argument coming up?

I have some views on this supreme court and believe they're driven by ideology and not a consistent legal framework. Even if you believe they are completely impartial how would you protect these laws against a future court that may not be?

anticensor
0 replies
14m

Easy, like we do in Europe, by amending the constitution to explicitly allow the Congress to statutorily authorise administrative regulations within the bounds as delegated by the statute.

eli
1 replies
15h31m

It’s a bit insulting to pretend that we still have a functional legislative body capable of passing such a law.

And the court could simply invent more utter nonsense to toss it out again.

goodluckchuck
0 replies
8h26m

Congressional incompetence is partially an act. They spend most of the year deflecting and complaining that they can’t get anything done, then in a burst here and there, they kick out a multitude of new laws. There’s a substantial level of political theater. Neither side wants to tell their base that they’re wrong. It’s easier to say that the other side is blocking them and golly gee I’m doing everything I can.

diebeforei485
1 replies
14h38m

Just like congress can legislate abortion laws rather than leaving it to judicial precedence.

Actually they can't. They can only pass legislation that involves interstate commerce or spending. See https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/LSB/LSB10787

cryptonector
0 replies
12h33m

And foreign trade. And navigable waters. And... Oh, and the commerce clause has been read to mean literally anything.

StarterPro
1 replies
18h13m

And we could all win the lottery, but let's not pretend half of the elected officials aren't brainwashed and the other half are so deep in pockets they use lint as a throw rug.

dadjoker
0 replies
14h41m

Aws compared to the unelected and unaccountable "expert" bureaucrats making arbitrary rules that do things like penalize you for collection rainwater on your own property?

zer0zzz
0 replies
21h2m

Except that the congress has been in a rut where it defaults to nothing of substance getting achieved

pdonis
0 replies
17h44m

> Congress can actually legislate the right of agencies to interpret the gaps in the laws back into effect - by passing a law that explicitly gives agencies this power.

They could--but in the case of the Administrative Procedures Act, which is the law relevant to this case, they didn't. Indeed, as the Court's opinion points out, they did the opposite: the Act explicitly says that the courts shall interpret the law when doing so becomes necessary to resolve a case.

Note that this actually limits the scope of this ruling in a way that does not appear to be recognized by commentators. The Court here is not saying that Congress can no longer pass a law that explicitly grants interpretive power to an executive branch agency. It's just saying that Congress did something different with this law.

kelnos
0 replies
20h40m

Congress can actually legislate the right of agencies to interpret the gaps in the laws back into effect - by passing a law that explicitly gives agencies this power.

Congress has already done that. Conservatives don't like that, calling the result the "administrative state". A very strict interpretation of the constitution could suggest that Congress cannot actually delegate legislative powers to executive branch agencies, and the conservative members of SCOTUS are (unfortunately) free to take up that interpretation.

jmyeet
0 replies
18h51m

This is naive.

I guarantee you that if Congress passed a law codifying Chevron, this same Court would overrule it on the grounds of some other doctrine they just completely made up in their minds, most likely the major questions doctrine ("MQD"). These self-described "originalists" (side note: "originalism" was invented in the 1980s) just completely made up MQD to justify overruling clear language by Congress if the issue was subjectively large enough. It was used to overrule clear authority given to forgive student debt, for example.

I don't think you understand just how much of a power grab this Court has engaged in, which is funny because its supporters who are the same people who complain about "activist" liberal justices. MQD has essentially usurped the power of the other 2 branches of government whenever they see fit.

Example: in the case yesterday when SCOTUS didn't understand what corruption was they said Congress had had the opportunity to clarify since 1986 and they chose not to so deference should be given to that inaction.

Well, Chevron was decided in 1984 and no administration took action in the last 40 years. Where's that same deference?

The Democrats can be faulted for not codifying Roe v. Wade but I guarantee you that, even if they had, it wouldn't matter. Thsi Court would've found some justification to overrule that. Deference to the states, that sort of thing.

There is no fundamental princples in play here. It's entirely results-oriented.

cchance
0 replies
4h26m

Cool but it sure feels like "SETTLED LAW" doesnt mean shit anymore.

camgunz
0 replies
8h55m

This is exactly the argument the dissent made: we've had Chevron for 80 years; if Congress was ever unhappy about it, they could have done something about it.

Animats
0 replies
18h6m

Congress can still legislate the outer perimeter of a law and let agencies grant exceptions. It just takes a different drafting style, which is easy, and Congressional willingness to accept responsibility for the outer limits, which is hard.

mushufasa
17 replies
22h36m

This is a complete disaster. The ramifications will be felt for decades. Now businesses must factor in the uncertainty of any random person launching a lawsuit that causes a local court to reverse a federal agency policy. Huge potential impacts to product / revenue, not just legal fees to fight everything. And immeasurable impacts of cowing all bold business decisions to avoid the ire of any person or group, no matter how niche or extreme.

Even if a new supreme court reverts this decision, now people are going to be concerned about the unpredictability of the Supreme Court.

tiahura
5 replies
21h49m

How would a random person have standing?

tstrimple
4 replies
21h2m

Standing doesn’t matter. A conservative website creator was able to take a case all the way up to the Supreme Court without ever have been sued. They just made up a situation where an alleged customer demanded they make a gay website. The customer never even existed. This is on top of the Supreme Court literally legalizing bribing of government officials across the country as long as the payment is made after the favor and not before. Then it’s just a gratuity and not a bribe. The entire system is rotten at this point.

avar
3 replies
20h14m

That website creator sued their state's regulatory agency, and "sufficiently demonstrated both an intent to provide graphic and web design services to the public in a manner that exposes them to [Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act] liability, and a credible threat that Colorado will prosecute them under that statute."[1]

Yes, the alleged "situation" may have been contrived, but that doesn't change whether they have standing to sue their state to challenge what they see as an unconstitutional law.

Do you think their only recourse should be to break the law, and risk the penalties associated with that if it does turn out to be constitutional?

1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/303_Creative_LLC_v._Elenis

anigbrowl
2 replies
19h15m

The strange thing there is that for a few decades now federal courts have required a plaintiff to have suffered some sort of injury before they can sue, and the notion that a credible threat is equivalent to such injury seems to overstretch that concept.

https://harvardlawreview.org/print/vol-136/standing-in-the-w...

Darrengineer
0 replies
17h0m

Also, the ‘credible threat’ of being prosecuted was based on the agency simply declining to state that it would not sue if Smith violated the law. Seeing as no such violation of the law had even been alleged, it seems incredibly flimsy to say there was a threat at all, let alone a credible threat.

Gormo
4 replies
20h48m

Now businesses must factor in the uncertainty of any random person launching a lawsuit that causes a local court to reverse a federal agency policy. Huge potential impacts to product / revenue, not just legal fees to fight everything

Businesses already have to deal with frequent litigation, including class-action lawsuits even in areas that overlap with regulatory agencies.

Quite to the contrary of what you are suggesting, reversing Chevron doctrine will allow the courts to develop a body of solid precedent surrounding these areas of law, and create a more stable legal framework, rather than the status quo of opaque, politicized agencies having the power to re-interpret their authority and change the regulatory environment at their own prerogative -- stare decisis doesn't apply to executive agencies, but it certainly does apply to the courts.

idkwhatimdoin
2 replies
19h33m

Except this and other rulings mean there's no such thing as "solid precedent" anymore.

imchillyb
1 replies
19h20m

The moment a court is asked to make a decision on one of these matters there will then be case-building precedent.

What your comment suggests is that there will _never_ be 'solid precedent' which is an inaccurate interpretation.

idkwhatimdoin
0 replies
18h6m

You're literally staring at the courts dismantling several decades long precedent, though?

sanktanglia
0 replies
20h26m

oh yeah because our courts have definitely shown themselves to be non partisan, like how one of the republican supreme court justices thinks they are at war ideologically against the other side and must win

icelancer
1 replies
19h8m

Now businesses must factor in the uncertainty of any random person launching a lawsuit that causes a local court to reverse a federal agency policy.

Spurious lawsuits annoying small businesses is already the case in America. I've defended against plenty of them. The concept of someone using random lawsuits to target local courts to overturn federal agency policy is very far removed from a businessowner's mind compared to the other types of litigation that actually happens on a regular basis.

mushufasa
0 replies
16h32m

Think bigger. You're NovoNordisk. FDA says ozempic is safe for use. A local California court bans it because they say it hasn't been properly tested and endangers Californians. Billion dollar market, wiped off the map. Now New York is following path. You can try to fight it but either way you've suffered incredible repetitional damage: FUD (fear uncertainty and denial) is now forevermore "the drug that California banned for being unsafe."

Or, imagine a texas court banning COVID vaccines.

These are not hypotheticals, these are real court cases that could now swing against agencies.

Whatever your opinion on specific factual matters, everyone should be concerned about widespread disorder.

o11c
0 replies
19h7m

We also need to consider that the chance of another Andrew Jackson approaches 100% the more this unhinged court does this.

genghisjahn
0 replies
21h34m

All of us are random people.

erichocean
0 replies
21h41m

now people are going to be concerned about the unpredictability of the Supreme Court

The Supreme Court has been reversing itself since the country's inception. I think we'll survive it making corrections in the future.

baryphonic
0 replies
21h32m

I fail to see how this parade of horribles will happen. Under the Chevron regime, any random person could still sue, and provided that the lawsuit survived an initial motion to dismiss, then any questions involving an administrative agency policy would defer to that agency's interpretation of their own policy and the law authorizing that policy.

The only change now is that the agency will have to demonstrate to an independent Article III court that its policy is correct and compatible with the authorizing law. Stare decisis will still control the lower courts once new precedents are set, and people will have meaningful appeals again.

There might be some disruption in the short term, but in a decade or two, I expect the new normal will be fine, but with the benefit that people can meaningfully appeal self-aggrandizing administrative state rulings.

debacle
10 replies
1d

Good. Make Congress do its job. Erode the executive until we're not frothing at the mouth every 4 years worrying about who will be "in charge," and instead focusing on the actions of our congressional representatives.

Spivak
8 replies
1d

So we froth at the mouth every two years instead? I get the argument but I'm not really sure this is going to help in the way you want it.

debacle
7 replies
1d

Absolutely. I have 400 times more control over who my congressman is than who the president is.

jliptzin
6 replies
1d

But your congressman has less than 1/400 the power of the President.

asdff
5 replies
1d

Realistically the president doesn't do all that much to affect the course of the country relative to congress.

Invictus0
2 replies
23h46m

Pretending like total control of foreign policy isn't the greatest power of all

asdff
1 replies
23h32m

Even trump was on a tight leash with that and basically just carried the old torch like every president does. Oh I guess he had too much lunch with putin but its not like he took us out of NATO kind of like the conservatives in the UK did with the EU and brexit. A bunch of talk but the same old neoliberal walk we've been doing for decades.

pelorat
1 replies
23h51m

Trump literally ruled by executive order.

asdff
0 replies
23h34m

And how much did anything change outside your window as a result of that?

free_bip
0 replies
1d

This won't "make" Congress do anything. They'll continue sitting on their asses because they face no consequences for their (in)actions.

MR4D
6 replies
1d

Congress can’t write good laws (good = clean, unambiguous) due to a variety of reasons, most of which are just political and not practical reasons.

Here’s hoping this decision causes Congress to write laws with more clarity now that they cannot be as sloppy and get away with it.

There may be much upheaval in the short term, but for that reason alone, I think it will have a positive impact on the country.

One other reason I think this decision is good - if we are innocent until proven guilty, then ambiguities should go in favor of the individual not the State.

masklinn
4 replies
23h55m

Congress can’t write good laws (good = clean, unambiguous) due to a variety of reasons, most of which are just political and not practical reasons.

A massive reason in this case is that congress are not matter experts, laws are already large and unwieldy, and agencies need flexibility in their work as, as ponderous as they are, they're still more nimble than congress and need that in order to react to changes in the area they regulate.

One other reason I think this decision is good - if we are innocent until proven guilty, then ambiguities should go in favor of the individual not the State.

I'm sure the individual will greatly benefit when the EPA's regulation of the next great carcinogen is struck down on grounds that congress has not explicitly restricted it.

deveac
2 replies
23h17m

A massive reason in this case is that congress are not matter experts,

Perhaps they should not be crafting new laws concerning things that they do not understand. If this results in fewer new laws, that may be better. If this also results in their having to spend more time doing homework on new urgent laws of greater importance, that may also be a good thing.

A return to the Constitutional prescription that Congress writes the laws, the Executive administers them, and the Courts interpret them certainly does not seem inappropriate, and discarding this framework in the name of arbitrary desired outcomes like EPA rulings feels off. If it's a bandwidth issue, maybe we should up the number of judiciary and lower the number of extra-judicial agency bureaucrats.

throwaway4220
0 replies
22h47m

It all sounds great on paper, but real world ambiguity has to be dealt with on an expert level with some teeth.

masklinn
0 replies
22h45m

Perhaps they should not be crafting new laws concerning things that they do not understand.

Which is why instead of crafting new laws concerning things they do not understand, they appoint agencies for the purpose of understanding the things and regulating them.

If this results in fewer new laws, that may be better.

It certainly does if you don't like your patent medicines being regulated.

If this also results in their having to spend more time doing homework on new urgent laws of greater importance, that may also be a good thing.

This ruling will do the exact opposite at best. Again, the point of federal agencies is to take on the burden of understanding and regulating specific domains. That way congress can work on the broad strokes and leave the details to expert they can consult.

A return to the Constitutional prescription that Congress writes the laws, the Executive administers them, and the Courts interpret them certainly does not seem inappropriate

That is not what this ruling does. This ruling is a decision by the courts that policy is decided by the courts. Even though congress delegates to executive agencies for that exact purpose.

Literally the first test of the Chevron doctrine is "does the law already cover this specific issue". The second test is "is the agency allowed to interpret or regulate this issue under its statutes".

If the first is a yes, then the agency has no grounds to go against congress. If the second is a no, then the agency does not have standing. Otherwise, the courts defer to the agency as the agent of congress on the matter.

If it's a bandwidth issue, maybe we should up the number of judiciary and lower the number of extra-judicial agency bureaucrats.

That does not follow, makes absolutely no sense, and would in fact do the exact opposite. Because under the completely wacky idea that agencies have no rulemaking or regulatory powers they would have to be staffed by 90% lawyers as they would have to bring everything to court.

Again, against the express purpose of their establishment and statutes.

FactKnower69
0 replies
21h11m

I'm sure the individual will greatly benefit when the EPA's regulation of the next great carcinogen is struck down on grounds that congress has not explicitly restricted it.

This is the real motivation; the Lead Paint voting bloc is dying off and desperately needs replacing if current political demographics are to be maintained

cryptonector
0 replies
20h21m

You imply that Chevron is a big reason for why Congress has become ineffective. I think you're right.

CobrastanJorji
5 replies
23h52m

Why did the Supreme Court invent Chevron deference 40 years ago? To serve corporations. It's not called "Chevron" because it's about inverted V's, after all. The EPA wanted to interpret the law in a way that Chevron liked and the Natural Resources Defense Council did not like, so the Supreme Court said "no, no, the EPA gets to decide, we are but poor unqualified judges."

Why did the Supreme Court take it away? Because agencies started interpreting laws in ways that corporations did not like, so the Supreme Court changed its tune to "who are these agencies to interpret the law, we are the judges here."

RIMR
3 replies
23h47m

This is pretty much direct irrefutable evidence that the SCOTUS has been corrupted. The extreme ideological tilt is disturbing enough, but it's clear that these judges answer to the highest bidder, not the American people or the intent of the Founding Fathers.

soerxpso
1 replies
23h43m

What? Some guy making a vague statement on a web forum with nothing concrete to back it is "direct, irrefutable evidence"? I'd like to see any evidence at all that any SCOTUS judge is actually profiting from this decision in any way. Chevron was corrupt 40 years ago; overturning it is not, or at least isn't more corrupt than the decision originally was in the first place.

fzeroracer
0 replies
20h11m

Clarence Thomas? The huge amount of gifts he's taken from Republican donors who have ties to real estate companies and businesses that benefit the most from things like 'pesky environmental regulations' being weakened or removed?

onlyrealcuzzo
0 replies
23h43m

If the spirit of the ruling originally by the SCOTUS was to benefit corporations , and they overturned it because it was no longer benefiting corporations - are they really corrupted? Or just business as usual?

lefstathiou
0 replies
23h42m

Per the written opinion, Congress started purposely drafting vague laws with the intent of having them interpreted by unelected (politically appointed) officials in a manner that best suited their agenda.

So it seems reasonable to me that once the circumstances change (or we have more data), so would the law. It was a nice experiment, I'm glad we tried it, now we know people are people, and thankfully it's mostly done.

rayiner
2 replies
22h48m

The media's coverage of this as a "conservative win" is extremely misleading. This case is simply about whether agencies or judges should interpret what federal regulatory statutes mean. Chevron itself was written by five conservatives (and one democrat--with three other justices not participating) and overruled a decision authored by then D.C. Circuit Judge Ruth Bader Ginsberg. She had sided with an environmental advocacy organization in finding that the EPA's interpretation of a Clean Air Act amendment was incorrect.

Chevron has always been a double-edged sword for both conservatives and progressives. In many cases, public interest advocacy organizations would much rather have judges deciding what laws mean than bureaucrats, because agencies tend to be staffed with industry people who are--while well meaning and operating in good faith--often veterans of industry and very sympathetic to it.

shawndrost
1 replies
21h19m

What an incredible coincidence that everyone -- the media, the judges who voted 6-3, and HN commenters like yourself -- sees this case along ideological lines!

rayiner
0 replies
20h13m

Every case is obviously going to be viewed through the legal of legal ideology. That’s different from making it seem like it favors one particular political ideology. Liberals hated Chevron because agencies were generally less willing to push the law in their favor than judges. Under this ruling, they can go and sue in the ninth circuit and have liberal judges Decide what the clean air act means.

fullspectrumdev
2 replies
22h26m

Can anyone speak to what this will mean for the ATF’s “rulemaking”?

cryptonector
0 replies
20h12m

They won't be able to stretch the law as much as they have at times. As the court's decision in Raimondo and the concurrences note, the court had already stopped using Chevron since 2016. Notably the court ignored Chevron last week when they decided that bump stocks are not machine guns -- if you read that decision it was all about the interpretation of "more than one shot with a single action of the trigger", which is precisely what the court would have deferred to the ATF on under Chevron and which it did not now.

The scaffold of federal gun control (NFA etc.) remains untouched by Raimondo. Only ATF rulings regarding various technologies developed in the past 40 years will be affected, and probably not that very many. I doubt more than a very small handful of ATF rulings will be affected.

chasd00
0 replies
20h25m

It means a judge can, if they so choose, decide if an ATF rule is lawful or not instead of the ATF itself always having the final say. Speaking of the ATF, it took a Supreme Court ruling to get ammonium perchlorate off the explosives list so model rocketry could continue as a hobby. With this ruling, a case like that wouldn’t have to go all the way to the Supreme Court. This is a good thing.

BurningFrog
2 replies
20h43m

The best argument for this is the "separation of powers" one.

In the system of Thursday, regulatory agencies can be "both judge, jury and executioner", ordering people to do whatever they want, since that's how they choose to interpret their mandate.

Power like this can and will be abused, even if it's true that the agency has the best expertise in the area.

It also makes it very dangerous for those who are abused to complain publicly, since they can arbitrarily be found in violation of the law as retribution.

This is no way to live, and the system of Monday should be better, even if it may be confused and cumbersome for a few years.

anigbrowl
1 replies
18h47m

Power like this can and will be abused

Compare and contrast judicial shopping, eg patent disputes filed in the Eastern District of Texas.

TimTheTinker
0 replies
16h49m

The solution to both problems is law, and the rule thereof.

dilippkumar
1 replies
1d

There’s a lot of negativity around this ruling here on HN.

As a not-lawyer, non expert, I welcome this ruling. The strongest argument I can make in favor of this come from the dissenting opinion by Justice Kagan:

This Court has long understood Chevron deference to reflect what Congress would want, and so to be rooted in a presumption of legislative intent. Congress knows that it does not—in fact cannot—write perfectly complete regulatory statutes...

It knows that those statutes will inevitably contain ambiguities that some other actor will have to resolve, and gaps that some other actor will have to fill. And it would usually prefer that actor to be the responsible agency, not a court...

In other words, Congress can not get its shit together, but someone still has to do the work of figuring out what rules we should all follow. Congress would much rather play politics and make speeches and theatrical high-drama hearing rather than doing the hard work of legislating laws.

It is obvious that Congress can not get all the details right. Neither can the regulatory body. The only advantage of delegating the work of rule-making to regulators is that the iteration times are faster.

Why are the iteration times faster? It has more to do with the Congress being a dysfunctional body.

When incompetence is rewarded by reduced work loads, incompetence is amplified.

Yes Congress can not get their shit together. But that’s way more visible to voters when their incompetence translates to visible inaction.

This is the way the system should work (in my opinion). Feels like a positive ruling to me.

eightysixfour
0 replies
17h26m

When incompetence is rewarded by reduced work loads, incompetence is amplified.

What? When incompetence has more responsibility, the effect of incompetence is amplified.

chrismaeda
1 replies
18h21m

One of the issues that led to this decision is regulatory overreach. Standard example is the clean air act which regulated air pollution. Years later the EPA decided that green house gases were air pollutants that could be regulated under the act. Then they tried to say that CO2 was a pollutant, and businesses started to fight back hard.

eightysixfour
0 replies
17h43m

Pollution, the addition of any substance (solid, liquid, or gas) or any form of energy (such as heat, sound, or radioactivity) to the environment at a rate faster than it can be dispersed, diluted, decomposed, recycled, or stored in some harmless form.

Sounds like green house gases are pollutants.

anamax
1 replies
13h23m

Chevron deference is actually fairly recent.

Therefore, what happened before is a reasonable guide to what will happen now.

newzisforsukas
0 replies
13h7m

Not really as the world is completely different?

BadHumans
1 replies
1d

I imagine this is table setting to give the Trump stacked courts more range for when he wins.

cryptonector
0 replies
18h52m

How?!

Animats
1 replies
23h49m

This would be less of a problem if Congress was more active at drafting and passing bills. We got into this mess because Congress stalled out.

cryptonector
0 replies
20h16m

Chevron arguably helped Congress shirk its responsibility.

wnevets
0 replies
1d

The heritage foundation is doing so much damage to this country

unethical_ban
0 replies
1d

The supreme Court is hosting a revolution upending the common understanding of modern government, without firing a shot.

We need to amend the constitution to revert what these jurists are doing to destroy our administrative state.

tomcam
0 replies
19h55m

The Supreme Court on Friday curtailed the executive branch's ability to interpret laws it's charged with implementing, giving the judiciary more say in what federal agencies can do.

That is one way to view it. Another way is that legislation should be left to legislators.

throwaway4220
0 replies
1d

What does this mean for the FDA?

tekknik
0 replies
3h59m

What happened to no politics on HN? The US is getting closer to a major election so articles like this are going to pop up more and more.

seaourfreed
0 replies
23h45m

Cryptocurrency industry, will now innovate far more

rpmisms
0 replies
19h45m

FINALLY. Chevron is the bedrock of bureaucracy, and it provides a layer of opacity. It's fundamentally anti-democratic and anti-republic--note the lack of capitalization.

r3db34rd
0 replies
10h57m

This is the best news of 2024.

nerdright
0 replies
17h10m

I bet a lot of commenters here don't understand the extent to which this ruling will apply.

The ruling affects cases where statutes do not explicitly grant interpretive authority to the enforcing agency. When a statute clearly delegates interpretive authority to the enforcing agency, the agency's interpretations will definitely prevail in the courts.

So this ruling is not as terrible as most comments think. If anything, it's very rational. If a law explicitly applies to X, you don't want the executive branch applying it to Y and Z. That's how you create a rogue executive branch (even though you may be well intentioned).

mjfl
0 replies
21h23m

I think it's good that courts will no longer have to defer to federal agencies granting themselves powers "because we say so." This will stop mission creep of the federal regulatory agencies and correct a long term error in court precedent. The Supreme Court is doing its job.

knodi
0 replies
20h37m

Nothings is getting through congress... so we're fuked.

kernal
0 replies
21h57m

This ruling removes power from the executive branch and returns it to the state and to the people. How anyone could view this as a terrible thing is bizarre IMO. In what world is giving federal agencies wide powers to interpret laws and decide the best ways to apply them a good thing? That's a rhetorical question because the answer is it isn't.

karmasimida
0 replies
23h40m

I would prefer less regulation than more, so this is welcome.

jmyeet
0 replies
23h31m

There's some interesting history here [1].

Anne Gorsuch Burford was appointed by Reagan to head the EPA. She beleived federal regulations had become too onerous and the power of the administrative state had become too large. It was her mission to roll back environmental protections and gut the agency through reorganizations and layoffs.

This did not go well. She ultimately resigned over a scandal where she withheld funds to help clean up a site to hurt a Senate campaign and lied about it. The Reagan administration eventually discovered the lie and I believe she resigned to avoid proseecution.

The EPA under Reagan tried to limit clean air responsibilities by narrowly scoping what a "source" of static pollution is. The Natural Resources Defence Council ("NRDC") sued, in a case called Natural Resources Defence Council v. Gorsuch [2].

Interestingly, the trial court judge was future Supreme Court judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The Court ruled against the EPA. That case was appealed to the Supreme Court as Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc [3].

The Supreme Court reversed this decision and said that the EPA had the broad authority to define what a "source" was as policy and this become the basis for what we now called (or used to call) "Chevron deference". It's worth noting that SCOTUS at the time made what was then a pro-corporate and anti-environmental decision.

Former EPA Anne Gorsuch Burford's son is Neil Gorsuch, current Supreme Court justice who voted to overturn Chevron deference and essentially avenge his mother, continuing her anti-government legacy.

[1]: https://www.commondreams.org/views/2022/07/07/why-neil-gorsu...

[2]: https://casetext.com/case/natural-resources-defense-council-...

[3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chevron_U.S.A.,_Inc._v._Natura....

hn1986
0 replies
21h42m

This is a net negative for US citizens

emmelaich
0 replies
16h58m

Average number of pages in the Federal Register is around 70k each year since the mid 1970s.

I found his and other interesting facts about USA govt rule making in

Counting Regulations: An Overview of Rulemaking, Types of Federal Regulations, and Pages in the Federal Register Sep 2019

https://sgp.fas.org/crs/misc/R43056.pdf

davidguetta
0 replies
7h18m

Idk im french and it seems a good decisio

dantheman
0 replies
22h5m

Fantastic!

dadjoker
0 replies
14h37m

Wow, truly amazing all the people in here who are perfectly content to let unelected, unaccountable bureaucrats make one "rule" after another because it makes them feel like they're doing their jobs, only increasing the regulatory burden on everyday Americans. So sad how many people prefer an oppressive regulatory government over the freedoms and liberties America was founded on.

cchance
0 replies
4h26m

Doesn't this fuck things like the 400ft drone limit and remote id and a bunch of other shit as well?

banish-m4
0 replies
11h36m

Chevron also snuck out of a billion dollar lawsuit liability based on whether a comma in a civil engineering build code meant "and" or "or".

annoyingnoob
0 replies
23h44m

Judges are appointed, not elected. Federal Judges receive lifetime appointments.

This decision takes power away from elected officials and hands the power to appointed officials, officials appointed for life.

Conservatives have played the long after to Roe to attempt to stack the courts with conservative judges. This is how we got to the Supreme Court that we have now.

_DeadFred_
0 replies
23h30m

The conservatives in for some crazy awakenings with this. So many federal law enforcement practices that are super shady get handwaved away under the Chevron doctrine. I think this was a bad ruling as far as running a functional country goes, but a lot of shady stuff the government got away with is finally going to get stopped.

Invictus0
0 replies
23h44m

Congress is a mess because the country is a mess--the elected represent the electorate.