SCOTUS Repudiates Doctrine That Gave Agencies a License To Invent Their Own Authority
The Court says Chevron deference allows bureaucrats to usurp a judicial function, creating "an eternal fog of uncertainty" about what the law allows or requires.

In two cases that the Supreme Court decided today, herring fishermen in Rhode Island and New Jersey challenged regulatory fees they said were never authorized by Congress. They asked the Court to reconsider, or at least clarify, a doctrine based on its 1984 decision in Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, which required that judges defer to a federal agency's "permissible" or "reasonable" interpretation of an "ambiguous" statute.
Critics have long complained that Chevron deference allowed bureaucrats to usurp a judicial function and systematically disadvantaged "the little guy" in disputes with an overweening administrative state. The Supreme Court endorsed that critique by a 6–3 vote today, repudiating the idea that agencies, rather than judges, should resolve ambiguities in the statutes under which they operate.
Writing for the majority in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and Relentless v. Department of Commerce, Chief Justice John Roberts notes that the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) "incorporates the traditional understanding of the judicial function, under which courts must exercise independent judgment in determining the meaning of statutory provisions." He says "the deference that Chevron requires of courts reviewing agency action cannot be squared with the APA."
The Chevron doctrine "defies the command of the APA that 'the reviewing court'—not the agency whose action it reviews—is to 'decide all relevant questions of law' and 'interpret…statutory provisions,'" Roberts writes. "It requires a court to ignore, not follow, 'the reading the court would have reached' had it exercised its independent judgment as required by the APA….It demands that courts mechanically afford binding deference to agency interpretations, including those that have been inconsistent over time. Still worse, it forces courts to do so even when a pre-existing judicial precedent holds that the statute means something else—unless the prior court happened to also say that the statute is 'unambiguous.' That regime is the antithesis of the time honored approach the APA prescribes."
The idea that statutory ambiguities implicitly authorize federal agencies to resolve questions about their own powers, endorsed by the three dissenters, is "misguided," Roberts says. "As Chevron itself noted, ambiguities may result from an inability on the part of Congress to squarely answer the question at hand, or from a failure to even 'consider the question' with the requisite precision. In neither case does an ambiguity necessarily reflect a congressional intent that an agency, as opposed to a court, resolve the resulting interpretive question."
Roberts notes that courts "routinely confront statutory ambiguities in cases having nothing to do with Chevron" but "do not throw up their hands because 'Congress's instructions have' supposedly 'run out,' leaving a statutory 'gap.'" Instead they "use every tool at their disposal to determine the best reading of the statute and resolve the ambiguity." Roberts says "it makes no sense to speak of a 'permissible' interpretation that is not the one the court, after applying all relevant interpretive tools, concludes is best." While "agencies have no special competence in resolving statutory ambiguities," he says, "courts do." And when "the ambiguity is about the scope of an agency's own
power," that is "perhaps the occasion on which abdication in favor of the agency is least appropriate."
As Roberts notes, the concept of "ambiguity" is itself ambiguous. "The defining feature of [Chevron's] framework is the identification of statutory ambiguity, which requires deference at the doctrine's second step," he writes. "But the concept of ambiguity has always evaded meaningful definition." That puzzle, he says, has made Chevron "unworkable," leading to widely diverging understandings of ambiguity in the lower courts.
Contrary to the claim that adhering to Chevron promotes "stability," Roberts writes, it is
"hard to see how anyone—Congress included—could reasonably expect a court to rely on Chevron in any particular case," given "our constant tinkering with and eventual turn away from Chevron" and "its inconsistent application by the lower courts." Because of the doctrine's "sheer breadth" and unpredictable use, he says, "Chevron fosters unwarranted instability in the law, leaving those attempting to plan around agency action in an eternal fog of uncertainty."
Addressing the concern that rejecting Chevron "is likely to produce large-scale disruption," as Justice Elena Kagan warns in a dissent joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, Roberts says "we do not call into question prior cases that relied on the Chevron framework." The holdings of those cases that "specific agency actions are lawful—including the Clean Air Act holding of Chevron itself—are
still subject to statutory stare decisis despite our change in interpretive methodology."
The dispute at the center of these cases illustrates how vulnerable Americans are to the whims of federal agencies empowered to invent their own authority. The plaintiffs are family-owned businesses that cannot easily bear the financial burden imposed by the requirement that they not only make room on their cramped boats for observers monitoring compliance with fishery regulations but also pay for that dubious privilege.
That cost, which amounts to about a fifth of the money these businesses earn each year, adds insult to injury. "The framing generation was vexed enough by being forced to quarter British soldiers," wrote Paul D. Clement, a former U.S. solicitor general who represented the New Jersey plaintiffs, "but not even the British forced the unlucky homeowner to personally pay the redcoat's salary."
Worse, Clement noted, the relevant statute says nothing about collecting such fees from operators of herring boats in New England waters, although it does authorize them, within specified limits, for "certain North Pacific fisheries, limited access privilege programs, and foreign fishing." Two federal appeals courts, the D.C. Circuit and the 1st Circuit, nevertheless ruled that the unauthorized fees fit within the leeway required by Chevron deference. Today's ruling overturns those decisions.
In a concurring opinion, Justice Neil Gorsuch, a longtime Chevron critic, notes that "the scales of justice are tilted systematically in favor of the most powerful" when executive agencies are free to resolve questions about their own statutory authority. "Legal demands can change with every election even though the laws do not," he writes, and "people are left to guess about their legal rights and responsibilities."
Gorsuch illustrates that point by describing a bewildering series of reversals concerning regulation of broadband internet services. Initially, he notes, "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." And "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." Instead of "promoting reliance by fixing the meaning of the law," Gorsuch says, "Chevron deference engenders constant uncertainty and convulsive change even when the statute at issue itself remains unchanged."
That "constant uncertainty," Gorsuch adds, is especially burdensome for people like the plaintiffs in these cases. "Sophisticated entities and their lawyers may be able to keep
pace with rule changes affecting their rights and responsibilities," he writes. "They may be able to lobby for new 'reasonable' agency interpretations and even capture the agencies that issue them. But ordinary people can do none of those things. They
are the ones who suffer the worst kind of regulatory whiplash Chevron invites."
Those "ordinary people," Gorsuch notes, include veterans seeking disability benefits and immigrants fighting to remain in the United States, as illustrated by cases he heard as an appeals court judge. Under "the Constitution, the APA, and our longstanding precedents," he says, "agencies cannot invoke a judge-made fiction to unsettle our Nation's promise to individuals that they are entitled to make their arguments about the law's demands on them in a fair hearing, one in which they stand on equal footing with the government before an independent judge."
In short, Gorsuch says, Chevron "represents a grave anomaly when viewed against the sweep of historic judicial practice" and "undermines core rule-of-law values ranging from the promise of fair notice to the promise of a fair hearing. Even on its own terms, it has proved unworkable and operated to undermine rather than advance reliance interests, often to the detriment of ordinary Americans. And from the start, the whole project has relied on the overaggressive use of snippets and stray remarks from an opinion that carried mixed messages. Stare decisis's true lesson today is not that we are bound to respect Chevron's 'startling development,' but bound to inter it."
Timothy Sandefur, vice president for legal affairs at the Goldwater Institute, welcomed that burial. "Today's ruling overturning the Chevron rule is a game-changer—more accurately, it makes the game more fair for the American people," he says in an emailed press release. "Our constitutional system of separation of powers was designed to protect our freedoms. Yet administrative bureaucracies ignore that principle by making rules, prosecuting alleged violations, and putting people into so-called 'hearings' where the rules that protect us in the courtroom don't apply….By pushing back against that principle and saying judges should exercise their own independent judgment, the Supreme Court today has taken a step toward leveling the playing field between government bureaucrats and citizens."
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Wickard needs to be on the chopping block next.
If that happens... oh man. The ecstasy.
White Zombie Electric Head, Part 2 (The Ecstasy) best played LOUD
This song came out in the late 90s, right? I remember playing this song a lot. Great song. Thanks for the memories.
Yeah. Saw them play that song at Red Rocks. It was fucking awesome. Then Pantera came on.
Hey maybe you and Fatfuck can get together. He can tear through a 55 gallon drum of Ben & Jerry’s while you down a gallon of bottom shelf liquor.
Edit: Can anyone here draw cartons? I was thinking of basing a comic strip on Sarc and Jeffy. Could call it ‘Fellow Travelers: The Retarded Adventures of Drunky and Fatfuck’
Better played without half-assed censoring lol
That’s why I listen to it on the original compact disc.
Wickard needs to be on the chopping block next.
For the first time in my life I feel the "so you're telling me there's a chance" 1 in a million odds that the commerce clause gets gutted by SCOTUS.
It is about time.
About fucking time. Separation of powers is meaningless when an alphabet agency makes the rules, enforces the rules, and has their own judges who will always side in their favor. It's literally what the Founders rebelled against.
A suit needs to be filed against every rule from every agency starting right now. Gut the whole damn thing. Start with the ATF and EPA.
Easy there tiger. Read the whole thing to the end.
By doing so, however, we do not call into question prior cases that relied on the Chevron framework. The holdings of those cases that specific agency actions are lawful—including the Clean Air Act holding of Chevron itself—are still subject to statutory stare decisis despite our change in interpretive methodology. Mere reliance on Chevron cannot constitute a “‘special justification’” for overruling such a holding, because to say a precedent relied on Chevron is, at best, “just an argument that the precedent was wrongly decided.”
This is also in line with what I said a week or so ago regarding Maryland's asinine pardoning of 100,000 degenerate junkies and dealers just because the laws they were convicted under are no longer laws. It undermines the very heart of criminal law that demands accountability for its deliberate and intentional breaking. Or, if you prefer, overturning Roe doesn't mean we can now retroactively punish anyone who had an abortion during the time it was in effect. What Roberts is saying is, we're not going to go back and undo everything just because we now changed the way we're going to look at things.
It wouldn't be in keeping with stare decisis.
I guess I am cautiously optimistic about this. No, agencies shouldn't be their own watchdogs when it comes to interpreting ambiguous laws. But the danger is that the supposed 'deep state' now just moves from the executive to the judiciary. They will just be wearing black robes now.
The real problems here, are (1) having an ambiguous law in the first place, and (2) having a dysfunctional Congress which can't fix its own ambiguities.
But the danger is that the supposed ‘deep state’ now just moves from the executive to the judiciary.
I've been hearing that same argument from progressives who want unelected and unaccountable experts making rules with the power of law. These tend to be the same people who cry "legislating from the bench" when courts don't rule in their favor, but they whine and cry about overturning RvW which was literally legislating from the bench.
I'm looking for some principles here.
In fairness, all sides tend to scream 'legislating from the bench!!!' when a court case doesn't go their way.
When there is an ambiguity in the law, and someone has to make a judgment call about what to do in a particular edge case, then I think it is proper that that judgment call is subject to judicial review. So as a principled matter I think this is the right call. I am just not so sanguine that it will yield better results than the status quo.
am just not so sanguine that it will yield better results than the status quo.
At least it won’t be completely opaque. Judicial decisions are more visible than what happens behind closed doors while unaccountable bureaucrats do whatever it is they do.
Well, there *is* a public rulemaking process. But yeah, not many people care about it or even know about it.
There's no real public input to the rule making process. It's basically "this is what we are going to do, now you get 60 days to complain before we go ahead and do it anyway"
Sarc, are you familiar with dems often bypassing congress with sue or settle? Or is that a myth?
If anyone ever questioned Jeff's primary care about is just keeping unchecked power for a 90% democrat unaccountable state, since voters will never be able to change the captured institutions, here you go.
The reason jeff hates the judicial branch is Trump was able to make it slightly less liberal activist. So he demands the power be kept within the bureaucracy along with service rules to make sure a republican can't fire them. Especially after shown The Resistance and activists not even able to be fired for misusing government tools for activism and bragging about it.
Well, Jesse, why do you think that judicial rulings on ambiguous laws will produce better results than agency rulings? Because the agencies are filled with "90% Democrats"? If you are so concerned with how difficult it is to fire unelected bureaucrats working in these agencies, it is even MORE difficult to fire a federal judge.
Remember the judge in Hawaii who put the nationwide injunction on Trump's travel ban? Well, this decision just gave that judge more power. Happy now?
I don't "hate the judiciary", lol that is absurd. But I also don't think this decision will lead to libertarian paradise. I think what we will have, instead, is that now ambiguities will be settled by the courts, but when the courts get it wrong, it will be much more difficult to change their wrong decisions.
Isn't this what the courts exist for, per the founders?
Why do you think that the status quo with executive agencies taking on the powers of the legislature and the judiciary is not worse?
Because the executive is the branch with that deals out violence. Congress makes legislation. Judiciary make rulings. Executive kills people. That’s the whole point of the separation of powers. Tyranny is when the executive makes the rules, judges disputes, and then uses violence when people don't cooperate.
Which was the status quo. This ruling goes against that, which is why the Left is upset about the ruling.
From a process perspective, I agree with the decision.
From a results perspective, it is hard to say which will produce better results, because in the end it boils down to decision-makers who are shielded from direct political accountability. Both bureaucrats and judges are just as likely to make bad decisions.
… because in the end it boils down to decision-makers who are shielded from direct political accountability.
Judges can be impeached. Nameless bureaucrats on committees, not so much.
Bidens new EO makes it even harder to fire them. And them being able to sue of Trump does on the DC circuit, good luck.
This is stupidly wrong as usual for Jeffey. Bureaucrats are empowered through their own bad decisions whole judges are not. In this case the fees charged massively increase their agencies budget and scope of responsibilities, increasing their own compensation and growth opportunities as well. I see his perfect record of always being wrong in favor of the left remains intact.
Whole judges or partial judges? What parts of uncooperative judges do you leave?
Just the tip.
Don't worry jeff, your boos in state agencies can still make rules like bees are fish.
And instead of government scientists who actually know something about the material in question, we will have ignoramus judges who are every bit as susceptible to biases, are not subject to the detailed methodology of the Administrative Procedure Act, and can't be overruled.
Chevron was at the time considered a victory for conservatives. They will live to regret this.
I'm awaiting the Reason article explaining at length how this impacts immigration.
Ilya has entered the chat
Without burdensome regulations enforced by unelected bureaucrats, the coming boom in the food truck industry will create a labor crisis only solvable via open borders.
Yesterday I was talking with a guy who owns a tire shop and he wishes there were illegals around that he could hire. They show up and work.
Leftist racism at its finest. Weird. All the tire shops have plenty of legal employees here. They all work as well.
Guessing your story is bullshit or he wants to pay them under the table to avoid taxes.
Also I never see immigrants marching demanding work permits. Can give you dozens of them doing so for housing and cash benefits.
There is a labor shortage in most of the US.
"sarc-ecdote" sighting above.
My immigrant partner, who took the time to get his citizenship, can’t get immigration to approve moving his family here.
Fuck him for trying to do it the legal way, right?
I mean all the mayorkas memos changing immigration status for sub groups would fall under this.
Or FAFSA or whatever it is.
Will no one rid me of these three tempestuous witches?
Glad to see the SCOTUS majority (generated by the trump admin) was able to make this happen.
Another Burger Court decision bites the dust. Add Chevron to Lemon v. Kurtzman, Abood v. Detroit Board of Education, and, the big one, Roe v. Wade (let me know if I missed any others). Which Burger Court decision will be next? My prediction: Stone v. Graham (1980).
Finally, someone saying that Congress needs to start doing its job and legislate rather than delegate legislating so that they can't be blamed. If you want a seat with the adults, you gotta act like an adult.
I don’t think they will. Instead they’ll rely on courts to clarify ambiguous law, or just make shit up like qualified immunity.
This part is absolute bunk.
If Chevron deference is bunk now, it's been bunk since the Supreme Court dreamed it up out of whole cloth in 1984. Every one of its uses since is bunk and ought to be undone.
If someone steals a credit card and buys $1000 worth of stuff before the victim notices the theft, the thief doesn't get to keep everything stolen so far. That was theft from the moment it happened, not only once it was discovered.
Same thing with bullshit laws. If Chevron deference is unconstitutional now, it has been unconstitutional since the day they dreamed it up
That would be like calling into question all the cases where someone was convicted after being arrested by a cop who was caught planting evidence. I don't think they do that. It would mean admitting to being wrong.
No shit Sherlock. That's what I'm complaining about. It's bunk.
The Court likes to make decisions that are even more narrow than Jesse's mind. So that's not a surprise.
You try so hard. It is so precious.
I already addressed why it’s not.
And they didn't say it was unconstitutional. They said it was the incorrect approach to statutory interpretation. Same way Dobbs didn't say that abortion is unconstitutional - it said that Roe, like Chevron, was incorrectly decided and that their frameworks don't work and lead to bad results.
It's astonishing how much evidence there is that Trump is better for Americans, especially libertarian Americans, than any Democrat even if he is personally a jackass. Simply not supporting the leviathan is such a massive advantage the rest is irrelevant.
Do you even Nirvana Fallacy bro.
Chickenshit congress critters will have a slightly harder time hiding behind their pet bureaucratic monsters to shield them from the repercussions of their political choices and policies. Let them own their vague and unpopular implementations of party doctrine, and answer for them on election day. Well past time for them to get off their asses and get to work.. They gotta get their hands dirty now..
Without commenting on the subject matter or its implications in the political realm, I just want to say: this is hands down one of the best opinions I’ve ever read. It is, in a word, majestic.
If I taught history, civics, social studies, current events – whatever, it would be required reading. It’s not overly complicated, you don’t need to be a lawyer to understand it, and it lays out beautifully EXACTLY WHAT the Judiciary is, what it does, why it does it, why nobody else should be doing it; it explains Agency, the Executive/Agency relationship, how it came to be, and Agency powers; it explains how statutory interpretation works, and Congress’ responsibilities in writing clear, unambiguous, easy-to-understand laws – I could very easily title this opinion A Primer on the Federal Government.
If you haven’t read the entire thing, you should. And if you think it’s going to be dry and boring, trust me, it’s got some positively brutal moments.
“In the business of statutory interpretation, if it’s not the best, it’s not permissible.”
Ouch.
“Chevron’s presumption is misguided because agencies have no special competence in resolving statutory ambiguities. Courts do.”
Daaaaaang.
“Chevron fosters unwarranted instability in the law, leaving those attempting to plan around agency action in an eternal fog of uncertainty.”
FINISH HIM!
“Chevron accordingly has undermined the very “rule of law” values that stare decisis exists to ensure.”
FATALITY.
Seriously. It’s the best thing you’ll read all month. Go read it.
They've had some moments lately, Bruen was pretty sexy for a SCOTUS ruling.
Yea, they’re really reasserting themselves right now. With a very clear state's rights/constitutionality direction, and a clear sign that they're not going to be dragged into partisan games.
Ambiguity should go to the non-government entity, kind of like in baseball, ties go to the runner.
Congress can pass a law if something is THAT important. But they don’t like having to work or be blamed for the consequences of their decisions (and it cuts both ways). For them it is best that faceless bureaucrats rule over all with an iron fist, and the plebes can merely shrug and say “Oh well, what can you do?”
Of course if we were actually following the Constitution as written and intended (I mostly mean on economic regulation here, and obviously not the “original intent” of subsequently amended and removed things like slavery or Prohibition — to pre-emptively shut down the resident leftist trolls who would claim otherwise), probably 99% of federal regulations would not exist.