BREAKING: Former Somali Prime Minister Hassan Khaire rallies for Rep. Ilhan Omar (Minneapolis, USA):
"This is not a Minnesota issue. It's not an American issue. It's an issue of Somalis."
Not a single American flag. Zero English.
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) June 30, 2024
National Rally dominates the first round of parliamentary elections in France, a fataI blow to Macron…
BREAKING: National Rally dominates the first round of parliamentary elections in France, a fataI blow to Macron. Turnout reached the highest level in 40 years. pic.twitter.com/mkW7sdLAaW
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) June 30, 2024
Brendan Carr on the Supreme Court Loper decision:
“…There’s a lot of interest in the Supreme Court’s Loper decision—and more than a few hot takes out there.
I wanted to offer some thoughts on it as someone who has litigated Chevron cases in private practice and served as the General Counsel and now Commissioner of an agency.
I’ve been on the winning side of cases where I think Chevron made the difference, been on the losing side of some of those same types of cases, and participated in many where I think the outcome would have been the same both before and after Loper.
But there’s no question that Chevron operated as a heavy thumb on the scale in favor of administrative agencies—regardless of whether those agencies were adopting new regulatory requirements or eliminating existing ones.
Though I think it would be fair to say that the lion’s share of Chevron cases involved challenges to agency decisions that imposed new regulatory requirements on private citizens or businesses.
One threshold point that I think some of the hot takes have missed. Even before this week’s decision in Loper, Chevron did not apply to the most significant agency decisions—namely, those that involve questions of major economic and political significance.
The major questions doctrine applied in those case, not Chevron. And the major questions doctrine does not require (indeed, it does not allow) courts to defer to agencies the way Chevron did. Rather, it requires agencies to have a clear congressional authorization to regulate in the manner at issue.
So Loper did not end the application of Chevron deference to agencies in cases that involve major economic and political significance. Courts were already prohibited by the major questions doctrine from applying Chevron deference in those cases.
Turning to Loper itself, the Supreme Court’s decision focused, in my view, on two core concerns with Chevron.
1. The Chevron doctrine rested on a fiction. It required courts to read certain provisions in laws passed by Congress—namely, provisions that were either silent or ambiguous as to a particular issue—as if those statutory provisions were something other than silent or ambiguous. Specifically, Chevron created a rule that required courts to treat those silent or ambiguous provisions of law as decisions by Congress to delegate discretionary authority to an administrative agency—regardless of whether the statute itself contained evidence indicating that Congress intended to provide the agency with that power.
That is not how courts normally read a vague or ambiguous provision of law. Outside the context of administrative law cases governed by Chevron, courts do not take vague and ambiguous statutory provisions and read them as delegations of power. Instead, courts apply traditional tools of statutory interpretation to identify the best reading or meaning of them. Maybe they mean that Congress delegated something, maybe not. Maybe they resolve the relevant question, maybe they have no application to the case at all.
So Loper ends this Chevron fiction. Loper says that courts in administrative law cases must now treat those silent or ambiguous provisions of law the same way courts treat other silent or ambiguous provisions of law passed by Congress. Going forward, then, courts must use ordinary tools of statutory interpretation to identify the best reading of those provisions. Applying those tools of statutory interpretation to silent or ambiguous provisions of law is something that falls within a judge’s expertise.
None of this means that Congress cannot delegate certain matters to agencies. Indeed, Loper says that Congress can still provide agencies with discretionary authority. But Congress must do so through statutory provisions or language where the best reading of the statute, applying traditional tools of statutory interpretation, is that Congress delegated discretionary authority to the agency, subject to ordinary constitutional constraints. Silence or ambiguity alone no longer requires a court to conclude that Congress delegated authority to an agency.
This is why many commentators view Loper as reinforcing the Framer’s decision in the Constitution to vest the legislative or law making power in the people’s representatives in Congress. Loper makes it less likely that courts will find that Congress leaked law making power to administrative agencies without Congress even knowing it. And even less likely that courts will uphold administrative agency decisions that effectively take legislative power from the Article I Branch that Congress never delegated.
2. I think the second problem that the Loper court had with Chevron is that Chevron required courts to adopt permissible readings of statutes, rather than the best reading. In those cases where Chevron courts determined that Congress delegated authority to an agency, the doctrine required courts to agree with an agency’s interpretation of law—even in cases where courts would have concluded, using ordinary tools of statutory interpretation, that the agency’s interpretation was not the best reading—provided that the agency’s reading was permissible.
Again, this is not the way courts approach questions of statutory law outside the context of administrative law. As relevant here, courts approach those questions by adopting the best reading of the law.
Commentators have noted that Chevron questions would arise in litigation between two parties—a private person or company on the one hand and a government agency on the other. In contexts other than administrative law, Chevron did not require a court to accept the permissible reading of a statute when offered by one party in the litigation (the government) even though the other party (the private citizen or business) offered a reading that the court considered to be the best reading of the law.
But Loper does not mean that an agency’s interpretation of a law it administers is irrelevant when it comes to administrative law cases. Loper makes clear that a court may agree with an agency’s view that a statutory provision means X even in cases where a court, in the absence of the agency’s views, might have concluded that the statutory provision means Y. Going forward, an agency’s views are likely incorporated into the court’s analysis as part of the judiciary’s application of its traditional tools of statutory interpretation.
But again, even before Loper, Chevron did not apply to cases involving questions of major economic or political significance. The Court has required agencies to point to clear congressional authorizations in those cases, not mere silence or ambiguity. So Loper did not end Chevron’s application to the most significant set of agency decisions.
At bottom, agencies will still win significant cases after Loper, but the Supreme Court’s decision puts regular people and businesses on a more level playing field with the government when they challenge a regulatory overreach…”
There’s a lot of interest in the Supreme Court’s Loper decision—and more than a few hot takes out there.
I wanted to offer some thoughts on it as someone who has litigated Chevron cases in private practice and served as the General Counsel and now Commissioner of an agency.…
— Brendan Carr (@BrendanCarrFCC) June 30, 2024
Our great nation needs a functioning two-party system committed to our American constitution and history…
A Party of Shameless Liars. How Did Dems Let This Happen?
Related:
What Else Are Democrats Lying About?
A lot:
Clyburn: Trump Has Very Low Opinion of Black and Brown People
Biden campaign co-chair Jim Clyburn claims he hasn't "heard a single person express anything negative" about Biden's disastrous debate performance pic.twitter.com/Y0ksv3IDc8
— RNC Research (@RNCResearch) June 30, 2024
Nancy Pelosi: “There Are Health Care Professionals Who Think Trump Has Dementia”
Former Biden Comms Director Kate Bedingfield: “The Race Has Not Fundamentally Changed” Since Debate
Ex-Melania Trump Friend Blames Biden’s Debate Performance on Bad Lighting
House Democrat Snatches Man’s Phone When Questioned on Biden’s Mental Decline
Joe Biden Rolls Out De Niro for Another Fundraising Plea Following Debate Disaster
Biden’s Border Chief Claims Power to Admit More Illegals
Democrats have gone nuts.
Same old garbage.
Perhaps sending Crazy Nancy out to defend Biden's cognitive ability wasn't the best idea pic.twitter.com/gWzmWA7Nxq
— RNC Research (@RNCResearch) June 30, 2024
REPORTER: "What do you say to Trump who blames you for orchestrating January 6th?"
PELOSI: "He's a fool. He thinks I planned my own assassination? He's sicke than I thought."
One minute later
Nancy Pelosi confessing her guilt from not sending the National Guard on January 6,… pic.twitter.com/W2sSWjIznZ
— 1776 (@TheWakeninq) June 29, 2024
The J6 scam was another Democrat Russia, Russia, Russia hoax…
The future is bright. The nation must turn away from the path the Democrats have set us on…
David Sacks…
Remarkable monologue from David Sacks:
"The Democratic party is a collection of interests who want to remain in power. The Democratic Party is the party of government. Its goal is to allocate money and power from the government to the collection of interests who back the… pic.twitter.com/FjT0AK0NAj
— Revolver News (@RevolverNewsUSA) June 29, 2024
Nigel Farage rally…
Extraordinary scenes here in Birmingham, England, where @Nigel_Farage is about to take the stage for a gigantic @reformparty_uk rally. pic.twitter.com/hLQs2Zz5pf
— Raheem. (@RaheemKassam) June 30, 2024
Well, some mean speech. A colossally bad decision by a politicized court. Un-American. Unconstitutional. Democrats on the court did this even knowing it won’t stand scrutiny…
Obvious to any reasonable person that was paying attention. Many simply lied to themselves and others.
This side by side of Biden’s decline over the last 5 years is devastating.
Shame on everyone who covered this up and left our country in such a terrible position. pic.twitter.com/qacTgorqfx
— Matt Whitlock (@mattdizwhitlock) June 30, 2024
remember: the media democrat complex is reacting in horror over joe's condition not because they saw it – it's because you saw it.
— GregGutfeld (@greggutfeld) June 29, 2024
Liberal Mental Disorder, a type case. This man looks like he could have a full mental breakdown any moment:
The level of media malpractice from Joe Scarborough @JoeNBC and Company is criminal. pic.twitter.com/Ts3lZEHCwR
— Kurt Schemers (@KurtSchemers) June 28, 2024
The liberal media is garbage:
Ladies and gentlemen, let’s revisit this supercut from 12 days ago.
Well done MSM! pic.twitter.com/pSrnmnoVMo
— MAZE (@mazemoore) June 28, 2024
The cheap fake rage from a few days ago. This was made up or otherwise fake according to the White House and liberal media elite:
🤦♂️ pic.twitter.com/LsenVdxzHP
— Rapidsloth (@Rapidsloth_) June 30, 2024
Are people seeing the garbage media for what it is?
👀 Chamath Palihapitiya & David Sacks on What the Biden Debate Revealed
"The mask has come off. The whole shell game has been revealed. It's obvious that Biden was always a puppet for these interests who were hiding behind him and now it's all being exposed."@chamath… pic.twitter.com/c7EUGhFyvW
— Chief Nerd (@TheChiefNerd) June 29, 2024
List of shame…
List of shame (of course they have none)–
DC judges who went along with the DOJ's unlawful application of 1512(c)(2) in J6 cases:
Judge Beryl Howell (Obama, former chief judge)
Judge James Boasberg (Obama, current chief judge)
Judge Rudolph Contreras (Obama)
Judge Trevor…
— Julie Kelly 🇺🇸 (@julie_kelly2) June 28, 2024
It’s a statement of how twisted our border policies have become that the USSC has to state the obvious…
“Walk around San Francisco, it is NOT America anymore.”
WATCH: Kevin O'Leary Slams 'Wasteland' of California and Gov. Newsom | @kevinolearytv
Kevin O'Leary recently lambasted California and Governor Gavin Newsom, voicing his utter disgust with the state's current condition.
"Walk around San Francisco, it is NOT America anymore."… pic.twitter.com/7jUkMgubQD
— Overton (@OvertonLive) June 29, 2024
The next Fani Willis transmogrified as a dentist. DEI means didn’t earn it…
Gee… I wonder how she got accepted to dental school with 0 volunteer hours, a terrible score, and minimal shadowing. pic.twitter.com/hLfAx29BBr
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) June 29, 2024
Related:
His GPA score is 97.3%, SAT score is 1560, enrolled in a top high school, does tons of extracurricular work.
He was rejected by multiple colleges.
They call this equity and inclusion. pic.twitter.com/4SBkcg43nH
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) June 29, 2024
Can you figure out why?
Politicized marketing research is not marketing research it is liberal politics…
Headline of the day…
Mark Robinson…
I salute Sen. John Fetterman…
WATCH: Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) visited Israel today and met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, while sporting a casual hoodie pic.twitter.com/LtHu9LpQ07
— Overton (@OvertonLive) June 26, 2024
I wish he would dress nicer.
Dr. Ben Carson…
NOW – Dr. Ben Carson delivers closing remarks at the barbershop roundtable with Black American business leaders in Atlanta;
“The founders of this country understood that we would come to a point where our democracy would be challenged. And they left the final solution in the… pic.twitter.com/101KIIGn1H
— Overton (@OvertonLive) June 26, 2024
He is a good man.
RFK Jr. on FDA malfeasance…
RFK jr stuns Dr Phil with the level of kickbacks Fauci and the NIH get on the Moderna vaccine.
Not only does the NIH own half of that vaccine, several high level officials under Fauci collect $150000 a year forever as long as that MRNA technology is on the market.
A topic… pic.twitter.com/DjVpvfe1Bi
— Kat A 🌸 (@SaiKate108) June 29, 2024
Dr. Phil turns out to be a serious man. I apologize to him for thinking he was an empty Hollywood suit.