The Supreme Court Reined in Federal Regulators. What Happens Now?
The Court this year reversed Chevron, a decades-old precedent giving bureaucrats deference over judges when the law is ambiguous.

In 1984, the Supreme Court issued a unanimous ruling in favor of an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rule stemming from the Clean Air Act. The EPA rule allowed states to treat all pollution from a unified industrial group as a singular pollution source for regulatory purposes. A cohort of environmental groups challenged the rule, arguing that it allowed pollution-emitting devices to operate that would not have passed regulatory muster considered on their own.
It was a technical exercise in statutory interpretation—but the case's long-term impact had little to do with pollution or the intricacies of the Clean Air Act. Embedded in that decision, Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., was a small revolution in administrative law.
Under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), which governs regulatory agencies, courts are instructed to litigate agency rules by interpreting relevant statutes themselves. But Chevron created a new standard: If a statute was ambiguous, courts had to defer to the agency's interpretation. This became known as "Chevron deference."
Chevron deference seemed reasonable enough on its face. Regulatory statutes and the rules that stem from them are quite intricate, the thinking went, and require subject-matter expertise to understand. Courts were instructed to defer to agency interpretation because agencies had technical staff with domain-specific knowledge.
But over time, Chevron deference became a mechanism for expanding the power of executive agencies. If an agency wanted to take some action not clearly authorized by statute, agency lawyers could hunt for a seemingly ambiguous statute, then tell courts that the agency's new, extrastatutory power was implied by the law's vague language.
The courts, which were designed partly as a check on executive overreach, had tied their own hands. Bureaucratic power expanded in the four decades that followed Chevron as courts were obligated to accept agency interpretations.
The reign of Chevron deference came to an end this summer. In a 6–3 decision written by Chief Justice John Roberts, the Supreme Court overruled Chevron, declaring that it violated the APA. Writing for the majority in the case of Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, Roberts wrote that the act "requires courts to exercise their independent judgment in deciding whether an agency has acted within its statutory authority." Moreover, "courts may not defer to an agency interpretation of the law simply because a statute is ambiguous."
What happens next? The most likely immediate outcome is a modest trimming of executive overreach, as agencies will no longer feel quite so emboldened to justify dubious actions with statutory ambiguity. In some instances, courts may still give agency interpretations a thumbs-up. Case Western Reserve University law professor Jonathan Adler has noted that the ruling does not instruct judges to ignore agency interpretation; it merely removes the command to defer to them when the underlying statute is ambiguous and the interpretation is reasonable. Loper Bright, in Adler's formulation, eliminates Chevron's requirement of judicial deference and replaces it with judicial respect.
In the long term Loper Bright's most significant impact may be on Congress. To some degree, the expansion of executive power that Chevron enabled came at the expense of the legislative branch. In recent decades, Congress has sometimes decided to off-load its constitutional responsibilities to executive agencies, granting them the power not merely to carry out the law but to write it through the rule-making process. After all, agency rules are not suggestions or guidelines—they have legal force, just like the laws passed by Congress. But unlike the laws passed by Congress, voters have no direct recourse over bureaucrats writing regulations. Loper Bright should, or at least could, help restore some democratic accountability to the federal government.
But does Congress truly want to claw back the power it's delegated to the executive? In a July panel at the American Enterprise Institute on the aftermath of Loper Bright, Pat Toomey, a former GOP senator from Pennsylvania, suggested that some in Congress may not want that accountability; it might hurt them at the ballot box. In government, the desire for power often coincides with a determination to avoid accountability.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Excellent. Except the blatant ignorance of the elephant in the room.
Where is that Constitutional Enumerated Power for Environmental Protection in the first place? Maybe, just maybe, there wouldn't be such a rats-nest of political power distortion if the Supreme Law of the Land was actually honored by the government in the first place.
General welfare clause of the Constitution...
The General Welfare Clause is found in Article I, Section 8, Clause 1 of the United States Constitution, which states that Congress has the power to "provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States".
If the general Welfare of the United States requires Marxism, then Marxism we get! The Constitution itself is vague and nebulous!
Marxists are deceitfully vague/lie...
Tax for the "common Defense" and "Welfare of the United States" is pretty darn clear.
As-if "United States" everywhere in the Constitution wasn't the name of the 'federal' government.
And then you get what is happening under parliamentary democracies with weak constitutional protections fir civil liberties, like Canada, and the UK. An oppressive nanny state that despises the people who have the temerity to tell the government "no".
Here's the abridged version of the Constitution. The one Congress uses.
"Congress shall do everything necessary and proper to promote the general welfare and regulate commerce.”
There you go. Unlimited power.
Exactly. The fitting cherry-picked words out of context/sentences to fit their power-mad agenda is exactly how corrupt most politicians are.
Meh. It's not hard to see the Federal government having a role in regulating the interstate transit of pollution.
Air pollution isn't often local.
Then get the votes to amend the Constitution.
Just because you think the Tinker Bell State is dousing the planet with poisonous pixie dust doesn't mean the Constitution is VOID. If your intent was to ensure Justice any found (non-imaginary) pollution could be taken to claims court; but ensuring Justice isn't what your suggested 'role' is about is it. Totalitarianism is what 'role' you suggest.
It's about time SCOTUS began reining in the so called powers of unelected nameless, faceless bureaucrats with self induced Godhood.
Now, if only we could eliminate 95% of these useless wastes of taxpayer's money and allow America to be America, not some twisted version of the old Soviet Union.
Butt then WHO will PROTECT us from Medically Dangerous cheap plastic flutes?!?!?
SOME professions NEED to be SUPER-highly educated to that they can PROTECT us benighted peons! Think of super-highly edumacated DOCTORS of Expert Medical Doctorology, who protect us from the use of not-properly-authorized DANGEROUS medical implements of mass death and destruction, such ass cheap plastic flutes, AKA, the dreaded, complex and dangerous LUNG FLUTE!!!
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!
Eliminating the Department of Education would be good start; of all the nefarious agencies, that one is public enemy number one. And then several more, starting with NPR.
NPR will continue to exist without public funds. We need separation of media and state.
The Roberts Court overturning Chevron was simply part of a decades long project by corporate conservatives to use the courts to reshape the law back to their favor rather than use Congress. They went that route because they knew that their goals would not be popular with voters. At least, they wouldn't be if the full implications of what they wanted were known to the voters.
Unless voters make up 3/4 of the States and 2/3 Congress it doesn't matter. It is ILLEGAL by the Supreme Law of the Land.
The USA is NOT a 'democracy'.
It is a *Constitutional* Republic.
No, Chevron was overturned because it represented giving the executive undue lawmaking authority reserved to Congress without proper judicial oversight. You are suggesting that your ends justify the means bringing policy outcomes into it, which is a contentious assertion in itself given the reality of regulatory capture.
The problem with the new ruling isn't that it cuts back the power of the executive. The problem is that the courts now get to step in and make their own decisions on these disputes about what the law should be. They won't say that, of course, but it has become more and more obvious that judges are less likely to be nonpartisan than people thought. It is not an improvement to have unelected judges deciding whether a regulation is good or bad compared to bureaucrats making and enforcing the regulations. The bureaucrats can at least be controlled somewhat by electing a different President. Federal judges can't be controlled by voters at all once appointed.
^ This is the steaming pile of slimy lefty shit who supports murder as a preventative measure:
JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?…”
FOAD, asshole.
I don't really see the problem there. It is the courts whose job it is to interpret the laws Congress passes. The executive also must interpret the laws it has to implement, but courts are supposed to be the arbiters of disputes about those interpretations, not solely the agencies themselves.
Yes, Congress passes laws but when unelected, nameless bureaucrats create laws out of thin air and can prosecute anyone, anytime for any infraction, then we do not have a republic. It's nearly a Supreme Soviet.
Read the book, "Three Felonies A Day" by Harvey Silverglate,
Yes, Congress passes laws but when unelected, nameless bureaucrats create laws out of thin air and can prosecute anyone, anytime for any infraction, then we do not have a republic.
Creating laws "out of thin air" that they can "prosecute anyone, anytime" for happens in the fever swamps of your nightmares. I would be highly skeptical that anything that got to the courts that ran against Chevron were anything like that.
Read the book, “Three Felonies A Day” by Harvey Silverglate,
Did you? Or did you take the title as being literal and that Silverglate backs that title up with reliable data and analysis and not just anecdotes and unrealistic hypotheticals? I don't have time for ideological polemics like that.
I'm curious, does your jaw ever get tired?
It is the courts whose job it is to interpret the laws Congress passes. The executive also must interpret the laws it has to implement, but courts are supposed to be the arbiters of disputes about those interpretations, not solely the agencies themselves.
It might be instructive to understand what Chevron did and didn't say. The Court in that decision took the view that judges would need to listen to or read a huge volume of testimony from experts to decide most of those cases where it was debatable about whether a regulation was within the parameters of the law or not. As a practical matter, a large number of those kinds of cases entering the judiciary could take up a lot of time. Add in the small percentage of cases that Circuit courts take up for appeals, and the small percentage of those cases that the Supreme Court takes up when those decisions are appealed, and it just gets unworkable to have the courts reviewing every dispute with an agency over regulations and which way to go when the law was ambiguous.
Agencies employ a lot of experts to craft these regulations and enforcement mechanisms. The executive branch shouldn't have too much power, obviously, but that is why Congresspeople can also take the time to hold hearings and call upon other experts to evaluate the agency claims and decide whether to pass a CRA resolution or to amend the law directly.
This is about judicial restraint, in my view. That is something conservatives and libertarians are always saying that they believe in, but judges should not be quick to overrule the elected branches in ways that substitute their views for those of Congress or the President.
What you describe there is exactly why this is a good thing. Laws need to be understandable. If the federal courts are not equipped to thoroughly understand the laws, that's a problem with the laws and congress needs to write more comprehensible laws.
Yeah man; Why have 3-branches of checks-and-balances when P.O.S. [D]-judges made their “own decisions” and decided a [Na]tional So[zi]alist Security was somehow legal-legislation because the [D]-trifecta Congress decided they could vote-VOID the definition of the USA?????? /s
Here a better idea for you leftards who don’t even know what a USA is or flat out despises it.
Why not just get rid of all the branches and just elect a HITLER. /s
After all; That's 'democratic' representation isn't it? The people elected the Hitler. It's that 'democracy' the leftards believe and very foundation means absolutely everything.
The USA is a *Constitutional* Republic; not a 'democracy'.
Nothing about 'democracy' ensures Liberty or Justice.
Nothing about 'democracy' ensure Human/Individual Rights.
This nation is falling apart because leftard idiots don't get that or they simply don't care.
It's not that they don't get it of they don't care, the leftists want total power and control over the rest of us. They support the idea of totalitarian regime with the power to censor free speech, free press and liberty. They want to disarm the people so that they can impose a leftist dictatorship / one world government.
It’s not that they don’t get it of they don’t care, the leftists want total power and control over the rest of us. They support the idea of totalitarian regime with the power to censor free speech, free press and liberty. They want to disarm the people so that they can impose a leftist dictatorship / one world government.
So, my arguments about the Roberts Court are wrong because, why? I'm evil or something?
I consider endless excuses to dismantling the USA (defined in the US Constitution) 'evil'. Course that might just be because I'm a US Patriot and not a [Na]tional So[zi]alist sympathizer.
Bureaucrats don't change with administrations. They all keep their jobs. Only the political appointees at the very top change. Civil Service employees are forever and they can ignore the appointees because the Civil Servants at every department will still be there long after the political appointees are gone.
Wow, that is some next-level conspiracy-theorying. Using the courts to bypass Congress by [checks notes] restoring authority and responsibility to Congress.
You should check the notes more carefully. The reason that agencies have the ability to interpret vague language in law is because Congress wrote vague language. They could fix the vague language easily enough if they want to. It also can object to a specific rule when first enacted with a resolution through the Congressional Review Act. This is subject to the President's veto, just like any other change to the law, of course. Rewriting the law would probably be more likely if the President would veto a CRA effort, because that could be put in another bill that would be politically harder for the President to veto.
The short version is that Congress already had the power to act if it didn't like how an executive agency was interpreting the law. And the agency is run by people appointed by the President, and the President could sign a CRA resolution if he disagreed with the agency rule and couldn't get the rule quashed directly for some reason. Also remember that a judge could rule against the agency when the law is not ambiguous (in its view) and the agency rule was not consistent with the law in question.
My claim here is that the ruling striking down Chevron deference is sold as restoring the authority to Congress, but it is actually giving the courts the authority to insert itself into what is a policy question. The policy question being how to execute a law when the law is ambiguous about how it should be executed.
In contrast with agenda driven Nazi-Agency bureaucrats interpreting/creating vagueness however they want to fit their agenda??? Having the judiciary in there adds a non-agenda driven entity; like a 3rd party. The way it is suppose to work. Congress can still re-write the law as they see fit but there was ZERO excuse to ‘favor’/defer-to agenda driven Nazi-Agency bureaucrats. The Judiciary should've (well did) rule Nazi-Agencies UN-Constitutional from the beginning but FDR threatened to stuff the courts ... because that's what leftards do.
^ This is the slimy pile of lefty shit who supports murder as a preventative measure:
JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?…”
"The reason that agencies have the ability to interpret vague language in law is because Congress wrote vague language."
Key argument here, and I agree! It's been this way for WAAAY too many years!
"Every one will BEEEEE GOOOOD!" they write oh so Magnanimously, into Law, and walk away smugly! They have SAVED US ALL! Why didn't I think of this wonderful new law?
^ This is the steaming pile of lefty shit who supports murder as a preventative measure:
JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?...”
FOAD, asshole.
Don’t fear the revolt!
(insurrection)!
All our times have come
Here, but now they’re gone
Seasons don’t fear the revolt
Nor do the wind, the sun, or the rain
(We can be like they are)
Come on, baby
(Don’t fear the revolt)
Baby, take my hand
(Don’t fear the revolt)
We’ll be able to fly
Baby, I’m your man
La, la la, la la
La, la la, la la
Valentine is done
Here but now they’re gone
Horst Wessel and Ashli Babbs
Are together in eternity
(Horst Wessel and Ashli Babbitt)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horst_Wessel
Horst and Babbs both wanted to grab political power through violence, and got back, what they were dishing out. Karma is a bitch! Live by the sword, die by the sword!
Refute it, bitch!
FOAD, spastic asshole
So.... You think Ashlee Babbitt was there to insist the Government take her hand and take care of her???
The way you leftards self-project is truly a gift or should I say grift.
Ashlee Babbitt was there to insist that the Government Almighty should LISTEN to HER, under the threat of HER political violence! Taking a few clues (along the long-long way) from Der TrumpfenFarter-Fuhrer and HIS endorsements of political violence!
Trump offers to pay legal bills for violent offender at Trump rally…
https://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-trump-campaign-protests-20160313-story.html
Trump’s endorsement of violence reaches new level: He may pay legal fees for assault suspect
Trump agrees with “Hang Mike Pence!”
https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/25/politics/donald-trump-january-6-mike-pence-chants/index.html
Trump reacted with approval to ‘hang Mike Pence’ chants from rioters on January 6
Violence- with no weapons?? A bunch of unarmed morons walking around looking stupid is not an insurrection. It's trespassing or disturbing the peace.
If there are a dozen people outside of your door, none have "weapons" but one of them grabs a folding chair and starts bashing on the window next to the door, and then someone starts coming through it after it was broken open, is that just "trespassing or disturbing the peace"? Are you going to just try and grapple with that one person to stop them from getting past you to the rest of your family while others behind that one would be able to get around you easily? Or would you have been warning them not to enter with the gun you own and shoot that first person to try and get through?
lmao. It's downright funny how you tried to make that an 'insurrection'.
I see you’ve received your Media Matters talking points for the day.
Now the feds ignore the court's decision. There are no consequences for doing whatever they want.
^THIS. Biden forging his Student Loan Debt forgiveness against all branches of government is literally Hitler-to-power re-runs. People should be far more alarmed about that then they are.
Hey, Suderman! Where do you think we'd be if your 'strategic, reluctant' vote had carried the day?
To paraphrase a certain freedom loving ruler -
How many divisions does the supreme court have?
"The Supreme Court Reined in Federal Regulators. What Happens Now?"
How about eliminating almost all of the needless, expensive and onerous bureaucracies...or does that make too much sense?
We can't have that. Who would protect us from ourselves? Who would tell us what's right and what's wrong? How would we know what's disinformation or misinformation without big daddy government telling us?
Or just eliminate all the needless, expensive, and onerous bureaucrats?
Bureaucrats don't change with administrations. They all keep their jobs. Only the political appointees at the very top change. Civil Service employees are forever and they can ignore the appointees because the Civil Servants at every department will still be there long after the political appointees are gone.