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by sanderjd
859 days ago
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I see the "major questions doctrine" the opposite way. I see it as a power grab by the judiciary to deign to decide that some things are too important to trust to the text Congress wrote into the laws they passed. The Court is telling Congress "you weren't specific enough when you wrote this law and the agency is taking advantage of your ambiguity, and we won't allow it". Instead, the Court should say, "what this agency is doing is plausibly within the bounds of this legal text due to its ambiguity". If Congress would like to clarify, they are free to do so. The Court should not be saying "we believe this is too important of an issue for ambiguity to allow this action", they should only ever say "we believe this action is unambiguously in violation of this law". (And FWIW, what I described is pretty much just what Chevron deference already is.) |
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Unfortunately, Congress is, and has been for a long time, nonfunctional. Besides routine reauthorizations and trivialities like renaming post offices, how often in the past 20 years have we seen actual, significant legislative action? What's legal and illegal today is roughly the same as what was legal and illegal back in the '90s, and it will probably be roughly the same in the 2050's. We've totally ossified and are incapable of meaningfully changing outside of judicial interpretations and "legislating from the bench."