SCOTUS Takes on Chevron Deference
New Jersey fishermen are challenging a 40-year-old precedent that gives executive agencies too much power.

Separation of powers is a core concept of America's Constitution. In the Founders' scheme, Congress, the courts, and the executive are independent branches of government, with their own roles and duties, intended to check one another.
But since 1984, the Supreme Court has hamstrung its own ability to act independently in the face of executive power. In Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, the high court adopted a blanket presumption of deference to statutory interpretations put forth by regulatory agencies in any case where the statute was ambiguous, so long as the interpretation was reasonable.
If there is ambiguity about what the text of a law says, the Supreme Court decided in that case, then the courts should defer to the government's experts. This became known as the Chevron deference.
In practice, the Chevron deference undermined the Court's independence, since it forced courts to just accept executive branch interpretations in many tough cases.
The doctrine also creates perverse incentives for the other two branches. For example, by giving deference to agencies in ambiguous cases, it gave executive branch regulators incentive to hunt for ambiguities in order to expand their own power. This led to decades of executive overreach, as administrations used convoluted readings of statutes to pursue agendas Congress never imagined.
By the same token, Chevron deference shifted the burden of making well-written and fully thought-out laws away from Congress. Empowering regulators meant that, at the margins, Congress had less reason to write clear, consensus-based legislation.
The result, over 40 years, has been a shift away from the intended constitutional order, in which Congress writes laws, the executive branch implements them, and the courts rule independently on matters of dispute. We now live under an often dysfunctional system in which Congress is less inclined to compromise and legislate on tough issues, regulators are more inclined to take matters into their own hands, and courts have less power to tell executive branch officials when they have overreached.
The system lends itself to politicized regulatory pingponging, as courts are generally required to defer to the differing and even dramatically opposed interpretations put forth by shifting Democratic and Republican administrations.
This was what was at stake in January, when the Supreme Court heard oral arguments that put the legacy of Chevron on trial. In Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, a group of herring fishermen from New Jersey objected to a federal rule requiring them not only to host government monitors on their boats but to pay the cost of those monitors—about $700 a day.
That requirement was based on the 2007 Magnuson-Stevens Act (MSA), which does require some types of fishing operations to host and pay for government monitors. But the fishermen in this case weren't explicitly covered by that requirement, so when the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) decided to expand the purview of the MSA in order to cover a budget shortfall, the fishermen went to court.
The fishermen's cause is important on its own merits. But for larger constitutional purposes, it's something of a red herring. The specifics of their complaint are less important than whether or not the courts had to defer to NOAA's newly stretched interpretation of the MSA.
In oral arguments, the three justices appointed by Democrats seemed inclined to keep Chevron as is, with all three suggesting that experts in regulatory agencies are better equipped than courts are to make tough decisions about difficult-to-parse statutes.
But the rest of the Court seemed skeptical. Justice Neil Gorsuch noted that Chevron deference tends to empower agencies at the expense of less-powerful individuals, such as immigrants, veterans, and Social Security claimants. Addressing the Court, Paul Clement, who defended the fishermen, put it this way: "One of the many problems with the Chevron rule is it basically says that when the statutory question is close, the tie goes to the government."
Outside the Court, news reports and activists warned of the consequences of taking down Chevron, noting that much of the federal government's vast regulatory authority rested on its rule of deference. As a USA Today report on the case noted, "The court's decision could undo decades of rules and procedures involving land use, the stock market, and on-the-job safety."
Loper Bright was not the only Supreme Court case to challenge major parts of the government's regulatory authority this term. Sheetz v. County of El Dorado takes aim at regulatory takings, and Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy revolves around the question of whether the government violates the Seventh Amendment's requirements about jury trials when judging securities claims. Collectively, wrote Cameron Bonnell in The Georgetown Environmental Law Review, these cases "indicate the Court's eagerness to continue shaping the proper scope of government regulatory authority."
For too long, the administrative state has run unchecked over much of American life. That might finally be coming to an end with this year's Supreme Court term. In discussing the problems with Chevron with NPR, Clement said, "I think it's really as simple as this, which is: When the statute is ambiguous, and the tie has to go to someone, we think the tie should go to the citizen and not the government." One can hope.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "SCOTUS Takes on Federal Regulators."
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Do you wish to live with an accountable government marked by a separation of powers with inherent checks and balances, or exist under an unelected and largely unaccountable technocracy, that exists to impose endless regulations upon every aspect of your life?
That does seem to be the choice here.
Let's ask Fauci what to do.
"Triple... no, quadruple mask!"
There's a bigger issue -- restricting the size of the judicial system. Whether explicit or not, Chevron deference is just one more way to replace expensive judges with cheap bureaucrats. I have zero doubt that part of the reason for inventing Chevron deference was because Congress was passing more laws than the court system could handle.
This also goes along with lawyers getting more and more expensive, and that was an explicit part of requiring bar exams and state licensing of lawyers back in the 1800s. It hasn't changed now.
Just for the record, those bureaucrats ain't cheap.
And the results are even more expensive.
Bureaucrats are a lot cheaper than lawyers, even when those lawyers become prosecutors and judges.
Deficits and Taxes would say otherwise.
As-if Bureaucrats somehow just pick from a magical money tree.
"Cheap Bureaucrats"... by keeping the laws ambiguous Congress through their Legislation, and Agencies through their Regulations promote corruption and bribery as this ambiguity is very fluid as cases are treated on a by case basis.
This in the age of Bitcoin. It's interesting to note that all candidates for the Presidency this year, whether independent or from the parties, all support(ed) the Bitcoin... Some people in the current executive apparently don't. but its not clear who and they've obviously recently lost their leverage...
Bitcoin is just a Bribery Token...
I'm sure NPR considered it a threat to democracy if unelected bureaucrats can no longer expand regulations as they see fit.
I believe “threat to democracy” now means anything that obstructs a progressive agenda. Being that the function of the MSM is now primarily propaganda.
Been that way for decades. BTW, challenging the progressive agenda is also known as "fascism".
Just as Progressives redefined what 'woman' means, they have redefined 'democracy' to mean rule by Democrats.
Hopefully Chevron gets overturned this term, and we have a challenge to Wickard soon after.
Growing up during the Cold War generation, it was generally assumed that communism would be with us forever (it remains so in China, but only as a hybridized market economy and political totalitarianism) and that Germany would never reunite. Those changes have led me to believe anything is possible, even the overturning of Wickard v Filburn.
aye
"As a USA Today report on the case noted, "The court's decision could undo decades of rules and procedures involving land use, the stock market, and on-the-job safety.""
And they think that's a bad thing?
Freedom is a threat to democracy!
The explanation could have been shortened to say that Chevron effectively handed legislative power to the executive and unelected bureaucrats.
The legislature did that themselves long before Chevron. In large part I think because the elected legislature size stayed constant from 1910 on while the federal government (spending and employees) grew. Hence - no legislative oversight and no ability to 'tweak' the rules. The Presidency was forced to defer much of its authority over the executive via civil service reform. The judiciary didn't just introduce the idea.
I don't trust Reason in the slightest re their motivations here. They aren't looking to create some structure that will control agencies. That's not the role of the judiciary anyway. It just smells to me like abandoning Chevron deference will put agency control into the hands of K Street as driven by how much they can drown the DC Circuit in lawsuits. They own the legislature - now they can own the agencies too.
"They own the legislature – now they can own the agencies too."
Too late, they already own them. It's called regulatory capture. The only solution is to make the federal government smaller. Dumping Chevron would help do that by limiting the self-fueled growth of the agencies. the courts would not be overwhelmed, or at least not for long. When reading agency power expansively results in takedown by the courts, the agencies will respond by staying in their own lane more.
The only solution is to make the federal government smaller.
Ok. So when pigs fly and all.
Dumping Chevron would help do that by limiting the self-fueled growth of the agencies. the courts would not be overwhelmed, or at least not for long. When reading agency power expansively results in takedown by the courts, the agencies will respond by staying in their own lane more.
Dumping Chevron does none of that. Chevron deference was not new. Before that (and after) was Auer deference and Skidmore deference and Universal Camera deference and MVMA deference and BW Tobacco deference and etc. Deference rules ain't going away.
The political purpose of dumping Chevron imo is to increase the workload of the DC Circuit Court in order to provide a bigger judicial bench for the SC. Specifically for donor-class R's to be able to assess potential SC nominees on some basis other than abortion. How beholden are they to WashDC and beltway concerns and ideological arguments? To give K Street and billionaires more options to jurisdiction shop
I think there should be real structural control of agencies. But I see nothing here other than 'trust us judges'. And I don't trust any shit from here.
'In oral arguments, the three justices appointed by Democrats seemed inclined to keep Chevron as is, with all three suggesting that experts in regulatory agencies are better equipped than courts are to make tough decisions about difficult-to-parse statutes.'
Of course. "Trust the experts" never leads to dysfunction and disagreement, right?
Every time. Make no mistake, progressives want tyranny. And will call it “democracy” until they have what they want.
Thank god for Trump.
I can only imagine what kind of justices Hill-dog would have appointed. SC Justice Barack Obama, anyone?
3 more party apparatchiks that would be rubber-stamping every possible expansion of government. Even with only 3 on the court now it's touch a go for a lot of issues. If they had 6 bolsheviks we'd be witnessing the death of all freedom in hyper speed.
No need to imagine. The one's elected are the one's, "In oral arguments, the three justices appointed by Democrats seemed inclined to keep Chevron as is ... But the rest of the Court seemed skeptical."
Which has been their (Democrat Appointees) running record for as long as I've been alive. They sell a little 'limited' government propaganda during confirmation but always flips-over on it as soon as they are seated.
A little bit of research and anyone can pretty much entirely blame the VOIDING of the US Constitution on Democrat appointees.
The only time unelected bureaucrats should have power is when they’re framing the duly elected president for treason.
Sounds like they're almost saying the quiet part out loud: that those "decades of rules and procedures" are un-fucking-constitutional and they know it.
They're just pissed that their "fuck you, that's why" free pass might be about to come to an end.
Hayek talked about something called Rechtsstaat which was developed after the Constitution to deal with the issues of a technocracy/bureaucracy that is partially independent because it has to be.
We deal with issue via deference - by all three branches and individual rights that are frozen in 1789. Rechtsstaat deals with it via formal constitutional structures.
"The court's decision could undo decades of rules and procedures involving land use, the stock market, and on-the-job safety."
Got a little chubby reading. Damn you USA Today and your sexy quotes, but I know that your just a tease.
"But since 1984, the Supreme Court has hamstrung its own ability to act independently in the face of executive power. In Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, the high court adopted a blanket presumption of deference to statutory interpretations put forth by regulatory agencies in any case where the statute was ambiguous, so long as the interpretation was reasonable."
TRANSLATION: Fuck you, that's why!
Conservatives on the Supreme Court are itching to do away with Chevron because they want to replace unelected bureaucratic experts interpreting broad or ambiguous laws with unelected judges doing that, namely, them. Roberts, and especially Thomas and Alito, are no doubt drooling at the chance to strike down regulations that cut into corporate profit margins.
"strike down regulations" ... Like that's a bad thing.
The *real* reason people hate Trump gets realized by phrases like these.
I'm sure you'd love to live in a world without safety regulations. If one of your children got injured from a poorly designed toy, you could just sue the manufacturer with its deep pockets that would just consider dealing with your lawsuit a cost of doing business. Perhaps you could try to join other parents in a class-action lawsuit to pool your resources and pose a bigger challenge together. At least, you could assuming the Supreme Court doesn't continue to make it more difficult to obtain class-action status, and otherwise help corporations by making it harder for plaintiffs to win product liability cases.
As for Trump's role in all of this...
Republican politicians have been fooling their voters into thinking that slashing regulations is always a good thing for the average person for decades. At least since Reagan, they have made everything about government the enemy, when really, the big money behind their campaigns makes sure that they target regulations that would reduce the profits of those donors, regardless of any benefit to the average American, while simultaneously working to totally gut anti-trust enforcement so that they can further enhance their profits by growing so big as to stifle all potential competition. The side benefit of being 'too big to fail' so that they can get bailed out by taxpayers when shit happens or they fuck up is icing on the cake.
... paraphrased, "Only politicians with gov-guns can save my children from getting injured from products bought with my own stupidity and arrogance!" and "Only gov-guns can stop human resource providers from getting rich!"
Stupid and Envy shine through like a sunny day.
Here's a thought. If you need pampered by someone else's decision making while purchasing toys for your kids perhaps you should hire a consumer consultant and since you're envious of those who offer human resources perhaps you should produce something yourself else seek psychiatric help for your problems.
All of which is a YOU responsibility so just leave the rest of us alone with your big gov-gun tyranny.
Please excuse my annoying topicality but
The SEC votes this week on controversial climate change rule: Here’s what’s at stake
Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler on Wednesday will hold a vote on one of his most controversial proposals: a rule that would require corporate America to disclose material risks posed by climate change.
President Joe Biden said climate risk is an “existential threat” and that it posed a greater risk than nuclear war.
=============
was there ever a lazier or more stupid President ??? I watch Europe and if war breaks out that ends in annihilation it will almost certainly be because of climate impositions agasint ordinary people that eventuates in loss of jobs on a huge scale
Just another way for Ginsler to pick the winners and losers for his overlords. Haven’t heard much about his daughter being tits deep in the FTX debacle he allowed under his watch, lately. Wonder how that’s turned out.
Also, arbitrarily classifying ADA Cardano and Polygon MATIC as securities have held them back to during the current crypto Bullrun. He must own a bunch of ethereum or something.
Well. This is mostly just a need in the haystack. The REAL dysfunction is the judiciary branch 'deferring' to Congress in the first place. How does one pretend checks and balances when one is just asking the other what to do?
The judiciaries very purpose is to 'defer' to the US Constitution.
i.e. "The peoples" supreme law over their government.
The progressives' argument (that needing exec-branch experts, Congress should abdicate power to them) doesn't hold water.
Congress can always task an agency with drafting rule language. Congress can hold hearings to understand the reasoning behind those *proposed* rules.
But those rules must ultimately be passed through the Constitutionally ordained legislative gauntlet before becoming law.
It's the Constitution -- Accept no substitutes!
This is Woodrow Wilson, our only PhD president and he just could not abide free enquiry and honest discussion. Rabidly racist and intransigent, he thought we would be better off with the intelligent and virtuous, people like himself 🙂
Chevron articles remind me of high school and 'those guys' who ran for class president. Glib, unprincipled,gladhanders ---they only got where they went on sophistry and back-slapping. We know about regulatory capture and Public Choice research shows that the agencies live off attacking and mistreating their clients. How did banks react to CFPB ? By finding bad loans to minoriites and elderly and writing them off as cheaper than a fine. THis put many honest small lenders out of business and added instability to the housing marker.