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Reality Check for the Administrative State - The Supreme Court is evaluating new questions and reconsidering old ones—such as Chevron deference.
City Journal ^ | 16 Jan, 2024 | Adam J. White

Posted on 01/17/2024 6:56:39 AM PST by MtnClimber

The Supreme Court continues to hear major cases involving the administrative state. As federal agencies assert ever stronger powers, the Court is evaluating new questions and reconsidering old ones. This questioning has been phrased mainly in terms of our constitutional founding, and rightly so. As Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in 2013, the “Framers could hardly have envisioned today’s ‘vast and varied federal bureaucracy’ and the authority administrative agencies now hold over our economic, social, and political activities.”

But when the justices heard their last big administrative-state case—November’s SEC v. Jarkesy—they turned to more recent history. In that case, the government relied heavily on a 1977 precedent, Atlas Roofing Co. v. OSHA­, for its sweeping proposition that an agency can negate the Seventh Amendment right to trial by jury by suing people in the agency’s own in-house tribunal instead of a trial court. The justices had a number of doubts about this line of argument, but the chief justice raised a particularly blunt one.

“Atlas Roofing is 50 years old,” he stressed. “And the extent of impact of government agencies on daily life today is enormously more significant than it was 50 years ago. . . . I mean, the government is much more likely to affect you and proceed against you before one of its own agencies than in court, and that concern and that threat is far greater today than when Atlas Roofing was set up.”

Justice Samuel Alito pursued a similar line of argument in October, when the Court heard a constitutional challenge to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s power to fund itself without congressional appropriations. When the solicitor general vaguely invoked “history” to support the CFPB’s power, Alito took a careful look at that history and pressed her to concede that the agency’s particular combination of fiscal independence and regulatory power was actually unprecedented.

Ambitious agencies already bristle against criticism that the modern administrative state violates the Constitution’s original meaning—that it is unconstitutional to make some agencies independent of the president, because the Constitution exclusively vests the president with “the executive power.” And it is the Constitution’s original meaning that is the most important question in these cases. But as Alito, Roberts, and their colleagues increasingly show, the administrative state’s doubters are not just originalists; they’re realists, too. And the agencies might get another reality check this week when the Court reconsiders Chevron deference.

In Chevron, the Court directed lower courts to give agencies great leeway in administering broadly worded statutes. When a statute—say, a provision of the Clean Air Act—is not clear but ambiguous, then the courts should generally defer to the agency’s reasonable interpretation of the statute. Following the federal courts’ micromanagement of federal agencies—especially agencies’ deregulatory efforts in the 1970s and 1980s—Chevron was originally defended as a way to ensure that judges didn’t supplant presidential administrations’ policy judgments. For decades, Chevron’s most eloquent and energetic defender was Justice Antonin Scalia.

The Chevron precedent only turns 40 this year—not quite as old as Atlas Roofing. Still, when comparing today’s agencies with those of 1984, the past truly is a foreign country. Agencies have fully supplanted Congress as the center of gravity for American policymaking. They are far bolder in claiming immense and unprecedented power under the auspices of old laws. They are far more willing and able to leverage regulatory uncertainty under vague statutes. They are more creative in imposing new policies outside of the Administrative Procedure Act’s notice-and-comment procedures. They are more adept at colluding with state or foreign regulators to whipsaw U.S. companies—say, with California over energy policy, or with Europe on financial and tech regulation.

Chevron was intended to elevate both expertise and political accountability in presidential administration, simplify judicial review, and reinforce Congress’s central role in American government. In hindsight, it fell far short in all of these objectives, and may well have undermined them. In 1984, Chevron sought to strike a prudential balance between judicial and executive power. But in 2024, the administrative state’s own dramatic changes may require a prudential re-balance.

This does not necessarily mean a complete renunciation of courts giving some weight to an agency’s interpretation of vague statutes. Indeed, a judicial approach that tries to wave away the challenge of interpreting vague statutes would be unrealistic in its own way. But it does counsel against simply reaffirming Chevron in a vastly different era of government.

This week’s Chevron deference case, and the recent SEC and CFPB cases, are just three examples where a realistic appraisal of history cuts against modern agencies’ favor. The 1935 precedent affirming the constitutionality of “independent” agencies, for example, might have made practical sense (though much less constitutional sense) in its own time, and maybe even as recently as the 1980s and 1990s. It makes much less sense today, when a turbocharged FTC, SEC, and FCC are profoundly more activist, political, and ambitious.

Other aspects of the Supreme Court’s work in administrative law also deserve a realistic reappraisal. In an era when federal agencies and state governors can make and remake rules with head-spinning quickness, and when federal trial courts are much more adept at issuing “nationwide injunctions” that determine federal regulatory policy, it would be unrealistic for the Court not to think hard about modernizing its own procedures for taking cases, issuing decisions, and granting emergency relief in the meantime. In fact, developments during and after the Covid-19 emergency suggest that the justices already are undertaking that procedural reconsideration—carefully, prudently, and realistically.

Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. famously asserted that “the life of the law is not logic but experience.” Actually, the law needs both. And constitutional logic and administrative experience increasingly point to a new era of reform.

Adam J. White is a City Journal contributing editor, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and co-director of the Antonin Scalia Law School’s C. Boyden Gray Center for the Study of the Administrative State.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Society
KEYWORDS: chevron; leftism; scotus

1 posted on 01/17/2024 6:56:39 AM PST by MtnClimber
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To: MtnClimber
As Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in 2013, the “Framers could hardly have envisioned today’s ‘vast and varied federal bureaucracy’ and the authority administrative agencies now hold over our economic, social, and political activities.”
2 posted on 01/17/2024 6:57:13 AM PST by MtnClimber (For photos of scenery and wildlife, click on my screen name for my FR home page. More photos added.)
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To: MtnClimber

.


3 posted on 01/17/2024 6:57:38 AM PST by sauropod (The obedient always think of themselves as virtuous rather than cowardly.)
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To: MtnClimber

This would truly be the answer to prayers.


4 posted on 01/17/2024 7:03:17 AM PST by Tell It Right (1st Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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To: MtnClimber; All

>
As Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in 2013, the “Framers could hardly have envisioned today’s ‘vast and varied federal bureaucracy’ and the authority administrative agencies now hold over our economic, social, and political activities.”
>

Oh, they DEF could have envisioned it. In fact, they knew EXACTLY (“Government is not reason; it is not eloquent; it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master.” - G. Washington).

They specifically DENIED their existence (”ONLY Congress...” ala A1S8 vs. 9th/10th).

Unfort. we have 3 branches of ‘you scratch my back’ whom failed to adhere to the plain English of our Constitution, and a faux dichotomy of willfully ignorant voters that continue to allow the same.


5 posted on 01/17/2024 7:22:04 AM PST by i_robot73 (One could not count the number of *solutions*, if only govt followed\enforced the Constitution.)
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To: sauropod

The true answer is to rid ourselves of 2/3 of our federal agencies that were never constitutionally created anyway.


6 posted on 01/17/2024 7:37:03 AM PST by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose of a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped)
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To: MtnClimber

Wickard v. Filburn MUST be struck down - it is 82 years old, and (illegitimately) gives the federal government the power to regulate EVERYTHING involving commerce, even that which is intrastate (in violation of the Commerce Clause). In that case, a farmer was prohibited from raising food to feed his own family on his farm, because it might have a tiny impact upon the price of food in interstate commerce several states away. It is an absolutely absurd ruling, made shortly after FDR‘s court-packing scheme, when the Supreme Court was thoroughly intimidated by the power of the Executive. The fact that we were also at war at the time the case was handed down undoubtedly had some impact that would not normally have been a factor in the decision-making process. Again, Wickard v. Filburn must be struck down. It is the very basis for unlimited federal power.


7 posted on 01/17/2024 7:41:02 AM PST by Ancesthntr (“The right to buy weapons is the right to be free.” ― A.E. Van Vogt, The Weapons Shops of Isher)
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To: MtnClimber

First Chevron, then Wickard.

L


8 posted on 01/17/2024 7:41:07 AM PST by Lurker ( Peaceful coexistence with the Left is not possible. Stop pretending that it is. )
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To: MtnClimber

If they even so much as TOUCH the deep state’s power the screams of “PACK THE COURT!” will be deafening.


9 posted on 01/17/2024 8:57:15 AM PST by FrankRizzo890
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To: MtnClimber

One of the primary traits of a dictatorship is unelected, unaccountable bureaucrats writing law and enforcing that law.


10 posted on 01/17/2024 11:03:50 AM PST by sergeantdave (AI is the next iteration of a copy and paste machine.)
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