The Federal Trade Commission Needs To Stay in its Lane
Recent actions by the FTC show that its officers should review the Constitution.

In the immediate aftermath of the Civil War, Supreme Court Justice David Davis unequivocally dismissed the idea of an "emergency" Constitution:
The Constitution of the United States is a law for rulers and people, equally in war and in peace, and covers with the shield of its protection all classes of men, at all times, and under all circumstances. No doctrine, involving more pernicious consequences, was ever invented by the wit of man than that any of its provisions can be suspended during any of the great exigencies of government.
Davis was writing the majority opinion in Ex parte Milligan, a case where the Court freed a man sentenced to death during the war for alleged acts of disloyalty. Justice Davis could have simply concluded that Milligian should have been tried before a civilian court instead of a military commission. Instead he opted to reinforce an essential part of our constitutional order: a government with finite and fixed powers.
Recent actions by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) have challenged that understanding. Chair Lina Khan has framed several regulatory issues in the dramatic terms of someone facing an emergency that cannot wait for congressional action. When her agency tackled the topic of noncompete agreements, the headline of Khan's op-ed announcing the proposal proclaimed that these agreements "kill innovation," and she implied that the vibrancy of the U.S. economy turned on the FTC taking an aggressive regulatory posture. This perspective may explain why the FTC turned a "housekeeping statute" into a broad grant of rulemaking authority and relied on that authority to ban noncompete agreements.
Regardless of the merits of that policy, our Constitution protects means, not ends. Judge Ada Brown of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas—the first judge to review the ban's legality—reached a similar conclusion: "After reviewing the text, structure, and history of the [FTC] Act, the Court concludes the FTC lacks the authority to create substantive rules through this method."
The noncompete ban came at the cost of adhering to the Constitution's intended pathway for legislating on questions with nationwide ramifications. A bipartisan bill addressing many of the same issues was sitting before Congress at the time the FTC issued its rule. A majority of the FTC's commissioners nevertheless ignored Congress's legislative authority and persisted with their own rule—promulgated in a less transparent, less representative fashion than a bill that works its way through the legislative process.
This was not an isolated event. The commission plans to propose a rule on commercial surveillance in the near future. Few Americans would disagree with the FTC's conclusion that "new rules are needed to protect people's privacy and information in the commercial surveillance economy." But that doesn't mean those Americans want rules to come from an unrepresentative, largely unaccountable agency while Congress actively considers legislation addressing similar issues. Yet that is what Khan wants: Declaring that we may be living in the "most surveilled environment in the history of humanity," she again spoke with the broad, sweeping language that eases the use of extraordinary administrative authority.
A recent blog post from the FTC's Office of Technology indicates the Commission may squeeze Congress even further. The post analyzes the pros and cons of open-source artificial intelligence models. Though such analysis may seem innocuous, it may muddle the regulatory waters for researchers and bind the government to positions that Congress should sort out on its own. This regulatory confusion diminishes congressional authority and hinders the law's clarity, predictability, and stability. But again Kahn spoke the language of emergency, arguing that failing to make her preferred choice would come at "extraordinary cost to our privacy and security."
The FTC does not have any emergency powers. Congressional inaction does not increase the FTC's jurisdiction. Judicial opposition does not excuse the FTC's experimentation with novel theories of enforcement. Even economic upheaval doesn't change anything about when and how the FTC may fulfill its finite mandate. Justice Davis's call to respect the finite and fixed powers set forth by the Constitution should be spread around the Hill and the halls of the administrative state—especially the FTC.
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KHAAAAAN!
What a schnoz!
Just so it hurts even more when she sticks it in your business.
The FTC needs its 'lane' dug up and planted to become a park.
Another three letter way to balance the budget.
Pretty sure Vance supports this stuff, which makes anyone who opposes it a leftist.
Get a new act.
What, are you reading discarded Biden teleprompter rolls now?
“I guess I look at Lina Khan as one of the few people in the Biden administration that I think is doing a pretty good job.”
J.D. Vance
That means that if you oppose using the administrative state against your enemies like a leftist, then you oppose Trump’s running mate and that makes you a leftist.
Didn't answer my question, did you?
Deflected, didn't you?
Dodged the real issue, didn't you?
Face it, schmuck:
* You can't claim it was a joke, good or bad, because that would be admitting you have no sense of humor and were making a mountain out of a mole hill.
* You can't claim I was serious, because then you'd look like the clown prince you are.
* You can't claim I was making a stupid comment, because then you'd be admitting you have nothing better to do than rise to the bait.
You lose. Alphabet 99999, sarspasstic -99999.
For all the hand wringing about Trump’s alleged desire to be a dictator, a bureaucracy claiming that an emergency demands they make rules despite lack of authority given them by Congress is nascent dictatorship that is fully supported by the Democratic Party ideologically.
Perhaps the courts might have a say in this?
Most voters will see this as the judiciary aligning with big business versus the common man.
And tbf, this specific regulation doesn't offend me, even if it's an abuse of power.
'Instead he opted to reinforce an essential part of our constitutional order: a government with finite and fixed powers.'
Finally, a seditious anarchist that both hard core Democrats and Republicans can hate.
Seems like a recurring theme with a lot of this stuff is weaponizing time. Ban guns? Wrongfully arrest someone? Create illegal regulation? It will take months, sometimes years before the court overturns it. Its only going to get worse.