The federalist

GOP Lawmakers Urge SCOTUS to Limit Administrative State

Dozens⁢ of congressional GOP lawmakers led by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., ‌are calling on the Supreme⁣ Court to curtail the administrative state’s power through a rollback ⁣of the 1984 Chevron decision.

On Monday, McCarthy filed an ⁣ amicus brief by‌ the House general counsel on behalf of the lower chamber supporting a legal challenge ​to the nearly 40-year precedent that gives federal⁣ agencies wide latitude‍ to interpret congressional‍ statutes.

“As part of our Commitment to America,⁤ House Republicans pledged ​to‍ hold Washington accountable,” McCarthy said in a statement. “The Chevron framework ‍makes it easier for unelected bureaucrats to weaponize ⁣federal regulations against the American people. The Court should rein in the power of‌ unelected⁤ bureaucrats and restore the separation of ​powers.”

In May, the Supreme Court granted certiorari​ in​ Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, setting ⁢the ‌stage for a landmark ⁢decision that ⁢could narrow​ the ‌scope of bureaucratic agencies to unilaterally impose⁤ burdensome rules ⁢and regulations. The ⁤conservative majority on the court led by Chief ⁣Justice John Roberts already signaled its willingness ‍to “rein ​in” the⁢ administrative state last summer with its decision in​ EPA⁤ v. West Virginia.⁤ In that case, justices struck down​ the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan, ruling the Constitution⁣ did not allow federal‍ agencies to ​circumvent Congress ⁣by implementing ⁤broad ⁣regulations to wide effect.

In 1984, the⁤ Supreme Court established “Chevron deference” in Chevron‍ v. Natural Resources ⁤Defense Council, broadly ⁣defined as allowing administrative agencies to substitute their own interpretation ⁣of congressional statutes when a particular issue is implicit. Justices on the ⁣current court ⁤have debated whether the 1984 case law has been properly interpreted. Regardless, Republicans say its application‍ has‍ been abused ⁤by ⁤a burgeoning‍ administrative state run by unelected bureaucrats.

Three dozen lawmakers, led by Sen. Ted Cruz,‍ R-Texas, ⁤and Rep. Mike Johnson, R-La., filed another brief on Monday in ⁣support of a challenge⁣ to the Chevron⁤ ruling. The ‌brief includes 18 total ‍signatories‍ from the upper chamber, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, and 18 from the House.

“Decades‌ of application of Chevron deference have facilitated the exercise of functions by‍ the executive branch that more⁢ properly belong ‍to the⁣ legislative and ‍judicial branches,” the brief reads. “Agencies exploit general or broad​ terms in statutes to engage in ‌policymaking functions of questionable legality with the assumption that‌ courts will grant deference and not independently evaluate the lawfulness of those agency interpretations.”

The court will revisit⁤ the nearly four-decade-old doctrine in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, with ⁣New Jersey fishermen objecting to⁤ rules from the Commerce Department that would force commercial fishing vessels ⁣to pay federal observers.‍ Such on-board monitoring could cost ⁢more than $700 a day and about a fifth of fishermen’s profits, according to the Cause of Action Institute, which is representing the ⁢plaintiffs.


Tristan ⁢Justice is⁤ the ⁢western correspondent for The Federalist ‍and the author of Social Justice Redux, a conservative ⁢newsletter on culture, health, and wellness. He has also written for The Washington⁢ Examiner and The Daily Signal. His work has also been featured in Real Clear Politics and‌ Fox News. Tristan graduated from George Washington University‌ where he⁢ majored in⁢ political science and minored in journalism. Follow⁢ him on Twitter at @JusticeTristan or contact him at [email protected]. Sign up for Tristan’s email newsletter here.

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