Commercial fishermen land a big one: SCOTUS overturns the "Chevron doctrine"

LINK (PDF): https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/23pdf/22-451_7m58.pdf

https://x.com/mrddmia/status/1806696880518074629
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Massive hat tip to [MENTION=28153]vita3[/MENTION] for reminding me of this.

I've been running around all day and it slipped my mind.

It was my long lost commercial fishing shipmates that brought the suit that overturned the "Chevron doctrine".

Huge, huge win for liberty today, I cannot believe more people are not commenting about this.



Anti fed,

Wasn’t there a nice win for fishermen today? Some ruling in their favor

Yes, it was, it was the basis for overturning the "Chevron doctrine".

It was a much hated regulation, that I got a taste of back in the late 80's, just as I was leaving fishing for a living.

Fishermen had to pay the government for the wages and per diem for the spies they put on board to "monitor" you.

SCOTUS struck that down. Or, to be more precise, SCOTUS struck down the legal precedent that the government used to justify itself in mandating this.

Thanks for reminding me.


Supreme Court sides with fishermen in landmark case deciding fate of the administrative state

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/su...dmark-case-deciding-fate-administrative-state

The Supreme Court's ruling impacts what is known as 'Chevron' deference to federal agencies

By Brianna Herlihy Fox News

Published June 28, 2024 10:25am EDT | Updated June 28, 2024 12:24pm EDT

The Supreme Court on Friday ruled in favor of a group of fishermen who challenged a decades-old legal doctrine that they say gave the administrative state too much power over their business.

In a 6-2 ruling where Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson did not participate, the court's majority said the federal rule promulgated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) requiring the fishermen to pay $700 a day for an "at-sea monitor" is out of the bounds Congress set for the federal agency.

The justices in January heard the arguments of two cases stemming from lawsuits brought by New Jersey fishermen and herring fishermen from Rhode Island challenging NOAA's rule, which they say threatened to ruin their livelihoods.

The court's decision overruled what is known as the Chevron doctrine — a legal theory established in the 1980s that says if a federal regulation is challenged, the courts should defer to the agency’s interpretation of whether Congress had granted it authority to issue the rule, as long as the agency's interpretation is reasonable and Congress had not addressed the question directly.

"Chevron is overruled," Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the court's majority.
 
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So much of the tyranny we suffer under, is tyranny of the the regulatory state.

Odious and burdensome regulations, thrown down as edicts on high from a thousand different swamp agencies and bureaucracies, all staffed by pointy headed apparatchiks who hate you, all carrying the force of law, all you are expected to comply with, none of which was ever voted upon or discussed or debated by the people who are supposed to represent you in government.

Can't buy a gas powered car, this is why.

Can't buy a light bulb you want, this is why.

Can't buy a toilet that flushes, this is why.

Can't buy diesel fuel that does not cost three times what it used to, this is why.

Can't have a fireplace in you new home, this is why.

Can't have a gas stove, this is why.

And this goes on and on and on and on.

On the last vessel I commanded, the Code of Federal Regulations that pertained to my vessel, was contained in over thirty volumes of regulations.

When initially outfitting the vessel it took three pallets of books and forms, lifted on by crane, to comply with all US and UN and IMO codes.

Now you know two of the five reasons I will vote Trump.
 
Admin agencies dont get to decide own powers any longer. Need to get memos out to all of em now
 
[MENTION=28167]Occam's Banana[/MENTION]

Hey Roach, if you would like, you can merge my thread into all the others and collect them all in one place.

I'd just ask that you write a new headline that makes sure to mention it was a suit brought by commercial fishermen that tore the Chevron Doctrine down.
 
Supreme Court Deals Biggest Blow in 80 Years to Administrative State

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/...ies-overrules-chevron-deference-loper-bright/

KEN KLUKOWSKI 28 Jun 2024

WASHINGTON, DC – Federal agencies suffered a massive blow to their regulatory power on Friday, when the Supreme Court overruled Chevron, a case under which federal courts have deferred for decades to agency interpretations of the laws they enforce.

As Chief Justice John Roberts began in his majority opinion, if a court determines that a federal law “is silent or ambiguous with respect to the specific issue at hand, the court must, at Chevron’s second step, defer to the agency’s interpretation if it is based on a permissible construction of the statute.”

“Cognizant of the limits of human language and foresight, [those who wrote the Constitution] anticipated that all new laws,” Roberts explained, “though penned with the greatest technical skill, and passed on the fullest and most mature deliberation, would be more or less obscure and equivocal, until their meaning was settled by a series of particular discussions and adjudications.”

“The Framers also envisioned that the final interpretation of the laws would be the proper and peculiar province of the courts,” the 6-3 opinion continued. “In the foundational decision of Marbury v. Madison, Chief Justice Marshall famously declared that it is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.”

“The views of the Executive Branch could inform the judgment of the Judiciary, but did not supersede it,” Roberts observed. “Otherwise, judicial judgment would not be independent at all.”

“Congress in 1946 enacted the APA [Administrative Procedure Act] as a check upon administrators whose zeal might otherwise have carried them to excesses not contemplated in legislation creating their offices,” the opinion recounted. “It was the culmination of a comprehensive rethinking of the place of administrative agencies in a regime of separate and divided powers.”

The APA “specifies that courts, not agencies, will decide all relevant questions of law arising on review of agency action—even those involving ambiguous laws—and set aside any such action inconsistent with the law as they interpret it.” Roberts continued. “And it prescribes no deferential standard for courts to employ in answering those legal questions.”

“The deference that Chevron requires of courts reviewing agency action cannot be squared with the APA,” the justices said. “In the decades between the enactment of the APA and this Court’s decision in Chevron, courts generally continued to review agency interpretations of the statutes they administer by independently examining each statute to determine its meaning.”

“Chevron, decided in 1984 by a bare quorum of six Justices, triggered a marked departure from the traditional approach,” the majority determined. “Neither Chevron nor any subsequent decision of this Court attempted to reconcile its framework with the APA.”

“Chevron defies the command of the APA that the reviewing court—not the agency whose action it reviews—is to decide all relevant questions of law and interpret statutory provisions,” Roberts found. “It requires a court to ignore, not follow, the reading the court would have reached had it exercised its independent judgment as required by the APA.”

“Courts interpret statutes, no matter the context, based on the traditional tools of statutory construction, not individual policy preferences,” the majority declared. “Indeed, the Framers crafted the Constitution to ensure that federal judges could exercise judgment free from the influence of the political branches.”

“The only question left is whether stare decisis, the doctrine governing judicial adherence to precedent, requires us to persist in the Chevron project. It does not,” the majority declared.

Roberts wrote:

Stare decisis is not an inexorable command, and the stare decisis considerations most relevant here—the quality of the precedent’s reasoning, the workability of the rule it established, and reliance on the decision—all weigh in favor of letting Chevron go.



Because Chevron in its original, two-step form was so indeterminate and sweeping, we have instead been forced to clarify the doctrine again and again. Our attempts to do so have only added to Chevron’s unworkability, transforming the original two-step into a dizzying breakdance.



Chevron is overruled. Courts must exercise their independent judgment in deciding whether an agency has acted within its statutory authority, as the APA requires,” the Supreme Court concluded. “Careful attention to the judgment of the Executive Branch may help inform that inquiry… But courts need not and under the APA may not defer to an agency interpretation of the law simply because a statute is ambiguous.

Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch also wrote concurring opinions, with Gorsuch’s going on for 34 pages. Justice Elena Kagan dissented, joined by the other two liberal justices, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson.
 
@Occam's Banana

Hey Roach, if you would like, you can merge my thread into all the others and collect them all in one place.

:aok::up:

I was planning on doing that after the news is no longer "headline" status.

It's a hugely significant outcome, so giving it its own thread for a while before adding it to the "lead up" thread seems good.

I'd just ask that you write a new headline that makes sure to mention it was a suit brought by commercial fishermen that tore the Chevron Doctrine down.

How about "Commercial fishermen land a big one: SCOTUS overturns the 'Chevron doctrine'" ... ?
 
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FPC amicus brief (PDF): https://www.supremecourt.gov/Docket...24161902021_22-451 - FPCAF - Amicus Brief.pdf

https://x.com/RealSpikeCohen/status/1806870813854879747
In a 6-3 opinion, SCOTUS has overruled the Chevron doctrine in Loper Bright v. Raimondo, a case in which FPC submitted an amicus brief.

For 40 years, the Chevron precedent allowed ATF and other executive agencies to run amok and interpret the law arbitrarily to the detriment of our natural rights.

This is a huge victory against the disarmament regime.
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https://x.com/RealSpikeCohen/status/1807513128479150478
{Spike Cohen @RealSpikeCohen | 30 June 2024}

For those who don't understand what Chevron Deference is, and why SCOTUS ended it, here's the long and short of it:

A family fishing company, Loper Bright Enterprises, was being driven out of business, because they couldn't afford the $700 per day they were being charged by the National Marine Fisheries Service to monitor their company.

The thing is, federal law doesn't authorize NMFS to charge businesses for this. They just decided to start doing it in 2013.

Why did they think they could away with just charging people without any legal authorization?

Because in 1984, in the Chevron decision, the Supreme Court decided that regulatory agencies were the "experts" in their field, and the courts should just defer to their "interpretation" of the law.

So for the past 40 years, federal agencies have been able to "interpret" laws to mean whatever they want, and the courts had to just go with it.

It was called Chevron Deference, and it put bureaucrats in charge of the country.

It's how the OHSA was able to decide that everyone who worked for a large company had to get the jab, or be fired.

No law gave them that authority, they just made it up.

It's how the ATF was able to decide a piece of plastic was a "machine gun".

It's how the NCRS was able to decide that a small puddle was a "protected wetlands".

It's how out-of-control agencies have been able to create rules out of thin air, and force you to comply, and the courts had to simply defer to them, because they were the "experts".

Imagine if your local police could just arrest you, for any reason, and no judge or jury was allowed to determine if you'd actually committed a crime or not. Just off to jail you go.

That's what Chevron Deference was.

It was not only blatantly unconstitutional, it caused immeasurable harm to everyone.

Thankfully, it's now gone.

We haven't even begun to feel the effects of this decision in the courts. It will be used, for years to come, to roll back federal agencies, and we'll all be better of for it.

And that's why politicians and corporate media are freaking out about it.

https://x.com/RealSpikeCohen/status/1807455343934361858
 
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