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Chevron v. National Resources Defense Council (1984) May Get Overturned


Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and Relentless v. Department of Commerce seek to overturn Chevron, a foundational decision, which places strict limits on unelected federal judges’ ability to make policy decisions for the entire nation. Chevron has been cited by 17,000 lower court decisions, and it would cause a “flood of litigation” that would result if all of these decisions were called into question.

The Decision On This Case Will Affect Thousands of Established Court Cases & How The Government Operates

#SupremeCourt #News #Chevron

in reply to Joseph Teller

Republicans rule the court. And they mean business. Business Before Anything is the motto.
in reply to Joseph Teller

A government which cannot oversee powerful corporations is essentially useless. (except for supporting a Military, that is).
in reply to Joseph Teller

So, is there a growing political trend to re-visit questions of who has what powers?
in reply to Joseph Teller

The Repubs want to use this as a means of removing the enforcement of the environmental laws among other things, including OSHA.
in reply to Joseph Teller

This is insane. There will be massive casualties across the country. And even the world, from pollutants.
in reply to Joseph Teller

I know, It's crazy, will overload the courts with cases and damages the integrity of the government's ability to function. It also becomes a power grab for the courts, damaging the administrative and legislative branches ability to function.
in reply to Joseph Teller

will overload the courts with cases and damages

And this is vastly impractical, and cruel even, as "damages" are post-hoc, after the damages have been done, while regulations are preventative.

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