The petitioners seek to overturn or greatly limit a 39-year-old Supreme Court case,Chevron vs. Natural Resources Defense Council. That ruling said that if a federal law is silent or ambiguous on a specific question, courts should defer to government agencies’ interpretation of the statute. Adv...
May 1, 2023 Tweet The Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case that could reverse -- or at least narrow -- the longstandingChevrondoctrine, which grants EPA and other federal agencies discretion to reasonably interpret ambiguous statutory language. The court May 1 granted a petition for awrit ...
The Supreme Court'sreversal of the Chevron decisionalso further demonstrates the willingness of its six-justice conservative majority to jettison decades of past rulings. In June 2022, the courtoverturned Roe v. Wade, dismantling the constitutional right to abortion, and in June 2023, itended aff...
The Supreme Court is putting the power of federal agencies on the chopping block. The latest case before the justices could forever change the way the government operates. Craig Green, law professor at Temple University, joins CBS News to explain. ...
Tax Development Aug 17, 2023 By Mark L. Nachbar The U.S. Supreme Court accepted review of Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo,1 which may determine the fate of the deference doctrine established in Chevron2 in 1984. The issue in Loper is whether the Court should overrule Chevron, or ...
On May 1, 2023, the Supreme Court grantedcertiorariinLoper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo,Case No. 21-5166. The Supreme Court will decide "[w]hether the Court should overruleChevronor at least clarify that statutory silence concerning controversial powers...
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v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., the Supreme Court famously held that judicial deference to agency interpretations of ambiguo... LS Bressman - 《George Washington Law Review》 被引量: 21发表: 2007年 Seminole Rock's Domain The seminal case on judicial deference to reasonable agency ...
PiercePublished: May 01, 2023 5:29 PM EDT Save Article DANIEL SLIM//Getty Images The high-end real-estate speculation firm now d/b/a the Supreme Court of the United States decided on Monday to decide whether or not the agencies of the executive branch will be allowed to function or not...
The Supreme Court’s decision to hear a case that could directly reverse or narrow long-standing Chevron deference to federal agency interpretations brings risks to a host of EPA rules, including those that do not depend on the doctrine for their legal j