The Supreme Court May Be on the Brink of Radically Restricting Bureaucrats' Power
Chevron deference, a doctrine created by the Court in 1984, gives federal agencies wide latitude in interpreting the meaning of various laws. But the justices may overturn that.

The United States Constitution vests all legislative powers in Congress. Yet, over the past century, we've witnessed a disturbing trend of legislators increasingly delegating much of the authority to set the laws that govern the land to the executive branch, which includes unelected officials at administrative agencies. This undermines democratic accountability, contributes to government bloat and abuse of powers, and disrupts the balance of power crafted so carefully by the Framers.
Reasserting congressional authority is essential for maintaining a balanced government and ensuring that policies reflect voters' wishes. It's also the best hope for promoting economic freedom and growth. Unfortunately, getting Congress to stop evading its authority is an uphill battle. After all, we're talking about an institution that systematically fails to do another of its primary jobs by passing legitimate budgets on a timely basis.
Nevertheless, there is some light at the end of the tunnel, as the Supreme Court might soon stop being so deferential to executive branch agencies in interpreting the laws set by Congress.
As I understand it, "Chevron deference" is a judicial doctrine created by the 1984 U.S. Supreme Court ruling Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. This ruling compels courts to defer to a federal agency's interpretation of ambiguous language in statutes that the agency is tasked with administering.
In theory, the deference allows agencies to implement complex statutes. In practice, it limits the judiciary's proper role in holding the other two branches of government responsible for carrying out and sticking to their constitutional duties. One result is too much discretionary power exercised by agencies who were envisioned to enforce, rather than create, the law.
Some plausibly argue that the concentration of power placed in the executive branch by Chevron deference leads to excessive, overreaching regulation by agencies with wide latitude to essentially set policy. Another argument against Chevron is that it encourages Congress not to do its job. Because members of Congress understand that courts will defer to agencies, they can write vaguely worded statutes, knowing that the agencies will fill in the details without much judicial oversight. It can also remove the grounds for judiciary recourse on behalf of individuals whose lives and liberties are negatively affected by regulators' outreaches.
This brings us to the case of Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo. Loper Bright Enterprises, a family-owned herring-fishing company, and other fishing companies challenged a rule issued by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) under the Magnuson-Stevens Act (MSA). The rule requires these companies to pay federal observers to collect data on board their vessels to prevent overfishing. The fishermen argued that the MSA did not explicitly authorize the NMFS to impose such costs on the fishing industry.
In 2021, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia used Chevron deference to rule in favor of the NMFS, stating that even if the statute was ambiguous, the NMFS interpretation was reasonable. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit upheld the lower court's decision, again relying on Chevron deference.
This case and a similar one involving Relentless, Inc. were argued before the U.S. Supreme Court in January. The decision, to be released soon, could be pivotal.
If Chevron is overturned, it could significantly impact how courts review and interpret agency regulations. That could in turn curtail the extent to which agencies can interpret ambiguous statutes without direct congressional authorization.
One hope is that agencies will exercise more discretion when interpreting their own powers and mandates under existing statutes. A second hope is that Congress responds by drafting statutes with more care and precision, thus being clearer—for agencies and the public—about what it intends and doesn't intend. Finally, there is also the possibility that we could look back at some regulatory abuses passed under the veil of the Chevron deference and challenge them.
The bottom line is that we might be only one Supreme Court decision away from Congress being obliged to write better and more explicit statutes than it usually does. This obligation doesn't seem like a lot. Some scholars believe that hopes for markedly improved lawmaking post-Chevron are wishful thinking. But considering Congress' now-routine cowardice at doing its job, I will take even a little hope over despair.
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The court is directly challenging the power of the Administrative State, which works directly for the Power Elite. The Deep State won't take it lying down if the court strikes at the root of their power. Pray for the safety of our Supreme Court justices.
I've said it several times recently, but the last few years have had a concerted effort to reduce the perceived legitimacy of the supreme court. Constant media attacks backed by social media blitzes, spectacles like the Kavanaugh hearings, staged protests, and significant incivility from other government officials.
It feels very orchestrated. It will get ramped up significantly at some point if the SCOTUS crosses the wrong line.
SCROTUS could get kicked in their collective nut-sack! And then get sacked!
The unethical conduct of Alito and Thomas are the biggest reasons why SCOTUS has lost the confidence of the American people.
Trump's appointees actually are acting like ordinary conservatives.
Thomas and Alito were the only Justices who didn't betray America into dictatorship in Texas v. Pennsylvania.
The rest should hang for their treason.
Nonsense. The Independent State Legislature Theory violates the very State Constitutions that create the State Legislatures in the first place.
And if the US were a dictatorship, you would already have been rounded up and you wouldn't be commenting here.
A theory? Dude, we're talking about reality here.
I think that's right. We are watching as lawfare has transformed the US into a banana republic right out in the open. Frankly I think political assassinations would be cheered by a significant percentage of the population and the media. If the Biden regime somehow retains power it's almost inevitable. But even if it's Trump in the white house it seems likely. Don't forget that Bill Barr ran cover for the Jeffrey Epstein murderers.
I fear Supreme Court justices would be high on the list for assassination. They got away with killing Scalia.
Bigfoot and Elvis, ass mind-cuntrolled by the Lizard People, were seen on the grassy knoll, doing THAT one!
(Or was it mindlessly cunt ass-rolled, snot ass mind-cuntrolled? I'm snot sure; some folks fight over the issue, butt I'm staying OUT of that fight!)
I'm secretly looking forward to watching the "Ides of March" play out in congress someday soon. The temptation to stick a knife into one of their colleagues necks must be a daily occurrence.
Scalia died from natural causes. He had had a history of heart trouble. The only person with access in his last night of life was Admiral Poindexter. You have just accused him of a political assassination. This is why the world doesn't believe a word of what you right wing nutjobs say.
Most political assassinations in the US are by loners. And unfortunately now that most states have legalized open carry, you can't stop the assassin until he actually shoots. Were I an assassination target I would not live in an open carry state.
Trump's entire legal team is a massive lawfare campaign to make sure that he will never ever be held accountable for his many crimes.
You’re an idiot.
Is this guy a sock puppet of Cuckland?
Bill Barr may be the #1 Traitor of the Coup.
There are so many strong contenders, but he's certainly in the top 5.
SCOTUS is Trump's greatest gift to the USA and the world so far,
but 4 more years will yield many more.
Butt... Butt... Butt... Butt if Our Unelected Protectors are NOT allowed to protect us from deadly medical implements of mass destruction, we will all DIE-DIE-DIE!!!
PLEASE keep on keeping us all SAFE from deadly cheap plastic flutes!!!!
To find precise details on what NOT to do, to avoid the flute police, please see http://www.churchofsqrls.com/DONT_DO_THIS/ … This has been a pubic service, courtesy of the Church of SQRLS!
Now if you really want to cut government overreach off at the knees, do Wickard v Fillburn.
Snot rags and booger rags are traded across state lines... Therefor the attack dogs of Congress (regulators) will regulate precisely when, where, and how we may blow upon our noses!!!
(Even the one-nostril-obstructed-by-finger-pinch "booger beam" maneuver shall be regulated, since rag-free nose-blowing ALSO affects interstate commerce!)
Wickard v Filburn was awful, but the Slaughterhouse decision was even worse. It eliminated the right to own and acquire property, the right to engage in a lawful profession and the right to buy and sell any personal property. Slaughterhouse actually cut the "Privileges or Immunities" clause from the 14th Amendment.
Getting rid of Wickard is the first step, getting rid of Slaughterhouse is the next step to reestablish liberty.
The Slaughter House decisions are usually hailed as triumphs of federalism by conservatives, preserving the rights of state governments to take away your rights!
Are you especially sarcastic, or should I just mute you along with the other fifty centers and trolls?
[finger hovers...]
Wickard is the only reason farmers are able to make a living today.
Maybe we should overturn it and allow them all to starve.
You can't be serious. Tell me you don't know the facts of Wickard v. Filburn without telling me me you don't know the facts.
If Chevron is overturned, it could significantly impact how courts review and interpret agency regulations.
But it wont. Liberal judges will still act like it is in place and each case will have to go to SCOTUS. The effect will be all but a slim few will make it that far because defendents lack the resources to keep fighting. The deep state will keep on keeping on.
This.
Social Justice means punishing your enemies and rewarding your allies. Always.
If Chevron is overruled, they'll just cite some other bullshit.
Indeed liberal judges will then be unshackled to overturn all the conservative rulemaking by the next conservative administration, and there will be no way for the Congress or the President to address this. There will be no way for the SC to take all the resulting cases so most of those examples of judicial activism will remain.
Unintended consequences happen a lot. The major winners in Citizens United turned out to be labor unions. Previously they were only allowed to lobby their own members. But with CU, union treasuries have been unleashed to advocate to the general public. Few for profit corporations have taken advantage of CU because they know that their bottom lines will be harmed if the greatly offend one side or the other in a political dispute.
Good luck. The majority of Americans can not only not name the three branches of federal government, they have an innate preference for just one: a Dear Leader strong executive. When their guy is in power, they want an unencumbered agenda. And when the other tribe holds the presidency, they simplistically focus on taking back that one office (while blaming that one person for everything bad).
Sorry, but the average citizen sees the president as not just the face of government, but the embodiment of federal power. And also prom king.
A step in the right direction is still a step in the right direction.
Beats a sharp stick in the eye, but it's way beyond time to stop looking to the courts and the Supremes to defend us form the Lizards.
They endorsed The Steal, and declared we have no standing to contest crooked elections.
We won't vote our way out of our dictatorship.
We won't sue our way out of our dictatorship.
There is no Army of White Hats waiting to make their move. We live in a dictatorship, and its end is a long ways off.
Hardly worth the time. The Constitution has enumerated powers and that is where the 'restriction' needs to clean the endless [Na]tional So[zi]alist agencies (illegal) bureaucratic power.
^ What this guy said
Even when congress passes laws that seem pretty straightforward someone finds a technical loophole. The SCOTUS bumpstock ruling is a great example. By demanding exceptional rigor in articulating regulations in an extremely complex world in effect, makes regulation next to impossible. Anyone with large pools of money and a stable of lawyers can constantly challenge agency actions and make execution of laws difficult to impossible.
This is by design of course. If you have money you can forestall just about any action. Trump is proving this. By spending millions on lawyers he is able to drag out his court cases. His legal strategies are baked into his business model. For someone like him where making money is based on cons it is a brilliant strategy. Unfortunately, this lawfare strategy being perfected by the oligarchs is making democracy whither away.
The left is doing the same thing when it comes to environmental protections. It is all but stopping large infrastructure projects and the property owners are explouting the environmentalists' strategies in the name of NIMBYism. This is a problem all around.
It's great to say congress should write better laws but with a flibuster in place it means needig 60% to implement any kind of regulation. That's 60% of our our senators which amounts to what, 70% of our actual voters because of the way sentaors are apportioned and gerrymandering. No wonder we are on the brink of electing an authoritarian who wants to overturn all of these processes.
Senators are elected in state wide elections. How can they be gerrymandered?
My definition of progressivism is the belief in government by committees of unelected bureaucrats.
I’m not interested. I don’t think it’s what the government is supposed to be, by design.
You’re basically correct.
Congress has delegated everything except the bending over and getting down on their knees. The things they like.
I've said it before. If it can deprive me of my wealth, my property or my freedom, it needs to be a Law not a Regulation.
No it doesn't. You are entitled to due process, not to a statute.
You need to read Article I Section 1 of The Constitution of The United States of America
Reasserting congressional authority is essential for maintaining a balanced government and ensuring that policies reflect voters’ wishes.
That may well be – but reasserting congressional authority via a Supreme Court decision on behalf of a family fishery is not how it will happen.
The issue of Congress writing legislation that is clear enough for bureaucrats to administer in all circumstances without any questions requires that Congress do oversight and force accountability (and a ton of magic beans). That horse left a century ago when we froze the size of Congress and instead expanded the size of unelected Congressional staffers.
The issue of bureaucrats stepping all over the rights of citizens ain’t gonna be solved by ensuring that Congress decides how much boot is appropriate, under ‘voter wishes’, to stomp on someone’s face. Hayek wrote about this issue – called it rechtsstaat. In those countries, special administrative courts deal with administrative law. They have the knowledge to understand the issues involved, the focus on individual rights that will be preserved under both statutory and common law, and they are part of the judicial branch not the executive.
This issue of the bureaucratic/administrative state didn’t exist in 1789. It happened later. So it is a structural issue – not a mere ‘judicial decision’- that simply isn’t in the constitution.
Overturning Chevron deference actually removes authority from Congress. Any rule made by the executive branch can be overturned by statute. Rulings by judges cannot be.
The Administrative Procedure Act was enacted in 1946 and it requires the executive branch to follow procedures that protect the rights of stakeholders to grant input into these decisionmaking processes. Courts can and do overturn rules when the agency did not follow the Act sufficiently closely. That is different from saying that any federal judge can substitute his/her own opinion for a rulemaking process.
We are headed for a tyranny of the judiciary.
And you prefer a tyranny of an unelected and unaccountable bureaucracy.
Ok, mute it is.
The headline buys into the leftist narrative of "SCOTUS" doing something (this headline, restricting bureaucrats' power).
It's not SCOTUS doing it. It's the Constitution doing it. We FINALLY in my lifetime (since the 1960s) have a Supreme Court that at least pretends to follow the Constitution. Not all the way, but baby steps.
Rewrite the headline, something like "Supreme Court set to apply the Constitution to bureaucratic actions that have run amok for decades."
So unelected judges whose decisions are not subject to congressional review will now be all powerful. Unelected judges with no scientific or engineering training will be reviewing everything from the efficacy of medications to the dangers of consumer products. We will get a lot of bad science and it will be bad for business.
We see this already with the insane glyphosate lawsuits. Glyphosate has been proven NOT to cause cancer in humans but the courts are allowing billions of dollars in damages. This will be the tip of the iceberg if we allow judges to decide scientific and engineering questions.
This is a fairly common dodge being used by Monsanto/Bayer.
It's true that you can roll around in glyphosate to your heart's content and never get cancer.
But it's also true that glyphosate as used, in solution with the surfactants that make it an effective herbicide, is highly carcinogenic.
A law professor in Michigan did the work and determined what “executive authority” meant to the framers of the Constitution. And he found that what it meant (and so what it means) is “the authority to execute the laws as written”.
The President can veto a law or follow it. Period. Executive orders are extra-legal and unconstitutional. Agency policies that do anything but uphold laws that are passed by Congress to the letter are extra-legal and unconstitutional.
I’d love to see the Justices hand down that ruling.
We again come to the same problem, Congress is not functioning as it should be and doing the job the Constitution assigns. Will overturning Chevron help? I don't really think it will get Congress moving. We need to shut down the extreme right and left and move control of Congress to the center where work can get done. Good luck with that.
Another hope here is not that it will encourage Congress to do their jobs but, rather, that it will encourage Congress NOT to impose more and ever more regulatory interference in commerce. Far from encouraging Congress to write better regulatory legislation, requiring them to write less ambiguous bills delegating their authority to the Executive branch will make it far less likely for any bills to pass at all. And, of course, that's a GOOD thing in my opinion. Now if we could just get the Court to strike down all the previous unconstitutionally vague laws that undermined the separation of powers in the first place!