Chevron Deference


Huge, huge win. Would rather have this one than any of the Trump case wins.
Comments
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You mean “trust the science” is dead?
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Fuck what our democratically elected congress thinks, that would be bad for democracy.
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RIP "The Science".
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This should quash BATFE communist made up "laws" they keep installing. They create felonies on a regular basis.
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Stuff like this is far more important.
And Florida should be happy DeSantis lost because he's doing way more as governor
I guess the president matters on Supreme Court nominations and executive orders and general tone that we aren't some weak ass Hamas supporting bitch state
It's the logical reason to vote for Trump
After last night there isn't even an emotional reason to vote Biden
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And when Congress doesn't act to fill in the details . . . what?
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I would disagree on the emotional piece- that's all dems have. Your rank as a good dem is your level of hatred for Trump.
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Thanks for making my point.
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They might actually have to read the bills they pass.
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Likely the biggest SCOTUS decision in decades
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It's almost like the system is broken
Like we've been saying
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The pro-democracy side is outraged that unelected people are transferring power to elected legislators, and the authoritarian ultra-MAGA right is celebrating. What a world we live in.
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I have bad news for the cabals that @HHusky say run the country.
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So, your point is that you favor the sort of anarcho-capitalism I accused you all of favoring in the first place. We understand each other perfectly.
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Now get to sun-setting old laws that aren't applicable and start trimming payrolls of the bloated Federal Government. Duplicative / redundant staffing that the States are doing would be sensible.
For instance, I'm all for education but is the size, scope, and budget of the Federal Department of Education really needed? WA State already spends something like $22,000 per student due to local, county, and state taxes.
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Lazy argument. What is preventing legistlation from being passed? Prior to this, the court decision just allowed Congress to do nothing. Why negotiate anything if the agencies and courts just decided anyways?
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I would say that what H calls anarcho capitalism is better than socialist capitalism heavily regulated so the party in power picks winners and losers
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Deference could always be overcome, Chevron or no. But the idea that the agency charged with administration of a particular law develops no special expertise is belied by experience.
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But only congress can make laws and the left has been doing it for decades via government agencies. You cheer political operatives being able to write laws without congress. That's not how the constitution works. HTH
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You have always been able to argue and prevail upon showing that an agency had exceeded its authority. Your expertise as a Mall Cop is not equal to that of someone who has worked in the area of law at issue though.
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I was replying to HH.
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Svetlana, you do not need to further convince me that you’re for the Statist/Politburo approach to lawmaking. Unelected party apparatchiks are your preferred form of Daddy.
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New negotiating rule, for every new regulation added, one entire DEI department in Federal government gets cut.
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Yeah, expertise like the CDC? EPA? FDA? DOJ? Using CAFE to ban internal combustion engines for EVs show what source of expertise?
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"Throw that damn baby out with the bath water!", shrieked Gasbag.
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Yeah, sure that's what I said. There is a big difference from banning ICEs through regulation versus the SEC administering the Securities Acts. But it doesn't mean that the SEC can use administrative proceedings to impose fraud penalties when the defendant clearly has a right to a jury trial under the Constitution.
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Those complaining about appointed bureaucrats reconciling gaps in the legislation are now thrilled to have appointed judges doing it instead.
congrats