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by runako
779 days ago
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Since "major questions" has no concrete definition, this means each minor point can/will be litigated until the court determines whether that individual point is a "major question." Quite arguably, Congress deemed the precipitating questions were not "major questions" and expressed as much by delegating to agencies. |
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That's a tremendous stretch because Congress can be very vague in its delegation of authority and decades later the agencies it delegated power to can interpret anything they want into that language and -because of the oft-repeated point about Congress' disfunction- the agencies can't be stopped.
> Since "major questions" has no concrete definition,
It's like obscenity: you know it when you see it. But it's simpler: if there's a controversy, there's a chance that the issue is a major powers issue, and then you have to look at whether the liberty/economic impact of the regulation is extreme enough that Congress must decide it.