> Chevron is probably the most frequently cited case in American administrative law,[16] but some scholars suggest that the decision has had little impact on the Supreme Court's jurisprudence and merely clarified the Court's existing approach.
The judgement discusses that. Previously in cases where a statute was ambiguous the courts interpreted it. Chevron changed that to allow the executive to interpret ambiguous laws, but the judgement argues that interpretation of the law is and always has been the role of the courts.
> Chevron is probably the most frequently cited case in American administrative law,[16] but some scholars suggest that the decision has had little impact on the Supreme Court's jurisprudence and merely clarified the Court's existing approach.