Last year, when the Supreme Court stripped the judicial deference granted to federal agencies to make decisions about implementing congressional statutes, many feared that judges would become the only ...
Jack Fitzhenry is a legal fellow in The Heritage Foundation's Meese Center for Legal and Judicial Studies. Follow him on X at @Jfitzy_jd. In the spirit of football season, let’s imagine a ...
Editor's Note: This Professional Perspective addresses how the US Supreme Court's impending decisions in two key cases challenging Chevron deference could alter how courts review agency actions. For ...
When the Supreme Court met last week to reconsider judicial deference to agencies’ legal interpretations, the justices grappled with one of the most unsettling qualities of modern government: sweeping ...
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One of the most anticipated decisions of the Supreme Court’s recent term was Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo.[1] While the specific underlying dispute in Loper Bright isn’t relevant to the trade ...
In 1893, a Harvard law professor named James Bradley Thayer published one of the most influential articles in U.S. legal history. "The Origin and Scope of the American Doctraine of Constitutional Law" ...
Last week, I had coffee with a wonk who works on immigration policy, a political moderate who is trying to get Capitol Hill to have a sane, bipartisan conversation about the topic and enact reforms.
In-person for students, faculty and staff only; virtual for all other attendees. CLE available for virtual attendance only. Lunch will be served for in-person attendees. The Elena and Miles Zaremski ...
A new opinion concludes Ohio courts need not defer to agency interpretations. The justices are not unanimous, but no justice writes in favor of deference. Today the Ohio Supreme Court held, in TWISM ...