Partner Allison Handy provides analysis in this Public Chatter blog post about "what now?" in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court overturning the Chevron doctrine. https://bit.ly/3W5H19b #CorpGov #CorporateGovernance #SCOTUS #ChevronDoctrine #PublicChatterBlog
Perkins Coie’s Post
More Relevant Posts
-
Partner @ K&L Gates | Agricultural, Real Estate & Hospitality Law | Co-Chair Ag, Food & Beverage Group
An important read. #ChevronDoctrine
Did you hear the news? In a landmark ruling with far-reaching consequences for federal agencies and the regulated community, the Supreme Court overturned the 40-year-old Chevron doctrine. https://ow.ly/CHFv50Sscoe
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Read our top takeaways from the January 17, 2024 oral arguments for cases Loper Bright and Relentless, through which the Supreme Court will likely invalidate the Chevron deference doctrine or leave it toothless.
The End of Chevron?—What it Would Mean for Lower Courts, Federal Agencies, and Regulated Industry | Foley Hoag
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Read our top takeaways from the January 17, 2024 oral arguments for cases Loper Bright and Relentless, through which the Supreme Court will likely invalidate the Chevron deference doctrine or leave it toothless. More in this alert by Beth Neitzel: https://bit.ly/4b6KoUm
The End of Chevron?--What it Would Mean for Lower Courts, Federal Agencies, and Regulated Industry
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Justice Elena Kagan criticizes Supreme Court majority for "using individual cases to change society" amidst a string of controversial rulings. She calls for respect for precedent and criticizes concurring opinions, while expressing concern over the impact of the recent reversal of Chevron deference. Kagan also highlights the challenges of enforcing a new code of conduct for judges. https://ow.ly/pT4450SL8TI #LegalNews #JusticeKagan #LegalReform #SupremeCourtJustice
Kagan describes Chevron reversal as an act of 'hubris squared'
dailyjournal.com
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Should the U.S. Court Supreme Court overrule its 1984 decision in Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc.? That decision established what became known as “Chevron deference” – which requires courts to accept a federal agency’s interpretation of federal law, but only if indicated by a two-step analysis set forth in the nearly 40-year-old decision. In this blog post for Consumer Finance Monitor, Alan Kaplinsky examines last week’s oral arguments and which Justices appear most inclined to favor overruling, limiting or reaffirming Chevron. Follow this link to read the post: https://bit.ly/491aPZF #SCOTUS #BallardLitigation #BallardBusinessAndTransactions
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
As discussed by Alan Kaplinsk, the upcoming Supreme Court ruling has the ability to fundamentally change the regulatory landscape that has been in effect since 1984. One of the key questions: To what extent should Federal Courts defer to decisions by Administrative Agencies?
Should the U.S. Court Supreme Court overrule its 1984 decision in Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc.? That decision established what became known as “Chevron deference” – which requires courts to accept a federal agency’s interpretation of federal law, but only if indicated by a two-step analysis set forth in the nearly 40-year-old decision. In this blog post for Consumer Finance Monitor, Alan Kaplinsky examines last week’s oral arguments and which Justices appear most inclined to favor overruling, limiting or reaffirming Chevron. Follow this link to read the post: https://bit.ly/491aPZF #SCOTUS #BallardLitigation #BallardBusinessAndTransactions
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Research & Development Lead, Associate Principal at BranchPattern, Applied Anthropologist, Applied Evolutionist, Engineer
This is something that everyone working hard on various technical and standards committees should be paying attention to if they actually want to see their work adopted by U.S. government agencies and formally integrated into U.S. policies, standards, codes, and laws (IAQ, energy, public health, etc.). An overview of the Chevron Doctrine, the Supreme Court's (and other conservative / wealthy corporate interests') efforts to undermine it, and what it will mean to have it effectively terminated - a discussion with David Doniger of the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) on David Robert's Volts podcast. Elections matter; so does playing the long game. #chevrondoctrine #electionsmatter #climateaction #sustainabledevelopment #governmentpolicies #standards #renewablefuture #airqualitymatters #publichealthmatters #environmentalprotectionagency #environmentalprotection #osha #administrativestate https://lnkd.in/gx7_sn7h
The Chevron Doctrine: what it is and why it matters that the Supreme Court might kill it
volts.wtf
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
SCOTUS will soon rule on the Chevron doctrine. Our guide to agency deference provides a summary of the key cases that inform judicial review of agency decisions—from agencies’ policy judgments to their interpretations of governing statutes and regulations: https://ow.ly/cYh030sECa3
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Read our analysis on how SCOTUS' Chevron reversal will affect the relationship between federal financial regulators and financial firms. #scotus #administrativelaw #enforcement #FDIC #SEC #OCC #FRB #CFTC
For the last 40 years, federal administrative agencies have won 93.8% of the lawsuits filed against them by private plaintiffs seeking to set aside final agency regulations or orders. However, the regulatory landscape drastically changed this month when the Supreme Court abandoned the Chevron deference doctrine. In this alert, we discuss how federal courts must interpret ambiguous federal statutory language and the impact on federal financial agencies. https://bit.ly/3A2GMEF Juan Azel | Carl Fornaris | Basil Godellas | Kimberly Prior | Daniel Stabile | #WinstonTransactions
To view or add a comment, sign in
39,548 followers