| It's probably worth noting that "someone who has litigated Chevron cases" and presumably will litigate again has a real bias to look supportive of the supreme court (or any judge who could decide his cases). For the rest of us, whether you agree with the outcome of decision or not, it overturns a 40 year old precedent which is: * old enough that several congresses have had a chance to clarify any older laws and have made new laws with it on the books * not so old that it's obviously from a different era and doesn't make sense today * and always icky from a stare decisis perspective fwiw, from a HN perspective, I'm mostly interested in how the SC works as a process with politics aside. |
But I’m curious to understand where this newfound sanctification of precedent comes from. Stare decisis has always been discretionary. The Supreme Court overturned 34 precedents in the 1970s: https://constitution.congress.gov/resources/decisions-overru.... Many of those were 50+ years old. It overturned about two dozen in the 1980s and 1990:. The current Supreme Court has overturned just 10 in 6 years and is on pace to overturn 15-16 over ten years, about the same number as from 2000-2010.
In reality, we are in a period of historically high respect for precedent. So ask yourself why this is suddenly being painted as a period of judicial activism.