Anonymous ID: e2cacf Jan. 19, 2024, 7:01 a.m. No.20267061   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7165 >>7327 >>7403

Review of current arguments in SC

Gorsuch calls out Chevron’s ‘disparate impact’ on regular citizens

January 17, 2024 7:56 pm

Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch on Wednesday expressed sympathy toward everyday citizens challenging federal agency overreach in courtrooms across the nation, arguing that a long-standing precedent that gives deference to such agencies has created a “disparate impact.”

 

The nine justices heard two challenges that arose from a 2020 federal regulation forcing owners of fishing vessels in the Atlantic herring fishery to pay for at-sea monitors who collect data and oversee operations on their vessels.

 

However, the subject of fishing was only seldom mentioned during the more than three hours of oral arguments spread across the cases collectively. Instead, the justices focused on the 1984 legal doctrine known as the Chevron deference, which requires courts to defer to agencies’ interpretation of laws passed by Congress if the interpretation is “reasonable.”

 

Gorsuch, one of six Republican-appointed justices, stood out as the most ardent backer of the fishermen seeking to uproot Chevron, which the plaintiffs blame for their defeat at the appeals court level in their bid to avoid paying the at-sea monitors nearly $700 for each fishing venture.

 

“The cases I saw routinely on the courts of appeals — and I think this is what niggles at so many of the lower court judges — are the immigrant, the veteran seeking his benefits, the social security disability applicant, who have no power to influence agencies, who will never capture them, and whose interests are not the sorts of things on which people vote, generally speaking,” Gorsuch told Justice Department Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, who was defending Chevron on behalf of the government.

 

“And there Chevron is almost always, and in fact I didn’t see a case cited, and perhaps I missed one, where Chevron wound up benefiting those kinds of peoples,” Gorsuch said, adding that “it seems to me that it’s arguable — and certainly the other side makes this argument powerfully — that Chevron has this disparate impact on different classes of persons.”

 

Gorsuch, one of three appointees of former President Donald Trump, has championed the same calls by conservative judicial advocates for the reverse of the doctrine in question, which gives federal agencies broad authority to impose regulations.

 

Business groups and conservative court watchers, including a network founded by Charles Koch that has funded the challenge by the fishermen, say Chevron has led to unchecked bureaucracy. Prelogar on Wednesday countered those beliefs by arguing that environmental efforts, public health, and other matters thrive off of agency expertise and uniform rules.

 

Gorsuch in 2022 notably issued a dissenting statement when his colleagues declined to hear an earlier challenge to Chevron, arguing that “it is time to give the profoundly wrong Chevron doctrine ‘a tombstone no one can miss.'”

 

Carrie Severino, president of the conservative legal advocacy group JCN, summarized Gorsuch’s remarks as: “How come Chevron never benefits the little guy?”

 

Gorsuch, appointed to the high court in 2017, is also the son of a former chief of the Environmental Protection Agency, Anne Gorsuch. The mother of the justice was known for being the first female leader in the agency’s history, but her tenure was cut short due to backlash from critics who said her policies weakened federal environmental enforcement.

 

The majority of the nine justices, six of whom were appointed by Republican presidents, appeared critical of the 1984 precedent. Even if the eventual majority opinion does not upend Chevron, the Supreme Court could also take an alternative approach that would place additional limits on when lower court judges should defer to agencies without necessarily overturning the precedent.

 

Anastasia Boden, director of Cato Institute’s Center for Constitutional Studies, told the Washington Examiner that courts can take agency interpretations that are “persuasive” into account but should not be pigeonholed into accepting agency interpretation at the expense of “judicial humility.”

 

“[To force] courts to accept agency interpretations in place of their own is not judicial humility, it is judicial abdication,” Boden said, adding, “As Justice Gorsuch warned, it will come at the expense of politically powerless parties who simply seek to challenge government overreach before a neutral arbiter.”

 

(Gorsuch has been longstanding justice opposed to use of the Chevron Deference, or the Administrative State)

 

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/justice/2802526/gorsuch-calls-out-chevrons-impact-on-regular-citizens/

Anonymous ID: e2cacf Jan. 19, 2024, 7:28 a.m. No.20267222   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7228 >>7327 >>7403

After Vowing No More Continuing Resolution Spending Bills Last Year, Guess What the Republican Majority UniParty Just Passed

January 18, 2024 | Sundance1/2

Yup, another kick-the-can continuing resolution spending bill has passed the House. This extension lasts until March 1st and 8th.

 

The short-term CR negotiated in part by House Speaker Mike Johnson, passed the House on a 314-108 vote margin.207 Democrats and 107 Republicans voted for it.Yes, that’s correct; more democrats supported the CR than republicans, and this is with a republican house majority.

 

It’s a Democrat CR bill being brought up by a Republican House Speaker and passed by the UniParty.Almost half of the Republicans voted against it (106), while just 2 Democrats voted no. The DC UniParty in its full glory.

 

“Our Speaker, Mr. Johnson, said he was the most conservative speaker we’ve ever had, and yet here we are, putting this bill on the floor,”said. Rep. Eli Crane of Arizona in a floor speech ahead of the vote, adding that the situation is what “led to us to vacate Speaker McCarthy in the first place.”

 

WASHINGTON DC – On a 314-108 House vote, Congress just bought six more weeks to continue the fiscal 2024 funding fight. But even the new March government shutdown deadlines are going to be a challenge to meet.

 

STEP 1: ANOTHER NUMBERS DEAL — Top Hill leaders might have agreed on overall spending levels nearly two weeks ago, but appropriators can’t get to work writing legislation until the two appropriations chairs — Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) and Rep. Kay Granger (R-Texas) — work out their own deal on how to divvy up the topline number among the 12 individual bills, setting what’s known among wonks as the 302(b)s.

 

It’s been slow going, and other top appropriators are growing impatient. “I have no insights as to why it’s taking so long,” said Senate Appropriations Vice Chair Susan Collins (R-Maine). “I’m very concerned.” As to whether there’s enough time for Congress to meet the split March 1/March 8 deadlines: “I think there is if we get the allocations promptly next week,” Collins said.

 

People familiar with the process have stressed that negotiating subcommittee allocations typically takes a while. Speaking before the Senate passed the latest stopgap earlier this afternoon, Murray said she’s “working nonstop” with her House counterparts to keep things “moving as quickly as we possibly can.”

 

STEP 2: ENTER THE SUBCOMMITTEES — Once the 302(b)s are set, the 12 appropriations subcommittee chairs and ranking members will start trading offers on how to distribute their allocations among each department, agency and program in their jurisdiction, while also haggling over potential policy stipulations.

 

For several of the bills, that’s going to be a challenge, considering the vast differences between the measures that the House and Senate each pumped out last year…

 

https://theconservativetreehouse.com/blog/2024/01/18/after-vowing-no-more-continuing-resolution-spending-bills-last-year-guess-what-the-republican-majority-uniparty-just-passed/

Anonymous ID: e2cacf Jan. 19, 2024, 7:30 a.m. No.20267228   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7327 >>7403

>>20267222

2/2

 

Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), chair of the State-Foreign Operations panel, told us that he and GOP counterpart Sen. Lindsey Graham (S.C.) have a lot of daylight to close in negotiations with their peers across the Capitol.“Lindsey and I work well together,” he said. “But the gap between our bill in the Senate and the House is pretty significant. So once we have allocations, there’s still a lot of work to do.”

 

STEP 3: RIDER TIME — House conservatives, who’ve failed for months to secure steep spending cuts, say they’re hellbent on securing major policy wins, such as anti-abortion provisions and immigration restrictions that are dead on arrival for the Democratic-controlled Senate. They have backing from Johnson, who just last Sunday said the new funding patch will buy time to fight for “meaningful policy wins” while cajoling Republicans to support the latest stopgap.

 

As our Alice Miranda Ollstein and Meredith Lee Hill report today, House Freedom Caucus chair Rep. Bob Good (R-Va.) said many in the House Republican conference will be “disappointed and upset” if the speaker doesn’t win on anti-abortion language, arguing that House Republicans “should get at least half of what we want.”

 

STEP 4: PASS IT OR BUST — If lawmakers fail to pass full-year appropriations bills over the next six weeks, senior appropriators are warning that will mean yet another continuing resolution — this time, through the rest of the fiscal year. They are counting on the threat of flat budgets and potentially devastating cuts to avert that outcome.

 

A continuing resolution through Sept. 30, for instance, would cut non-defense budgets by a total of $73 billion from current levels. Separately, lawmakers are facing another potential “sequester” scenario, thanks to a provision baked into the debt limit package passed last year. If the government is operating under any short-term CR come April 30, there will be a $10 billion cut to the military’s budget and a $41 billion cut to domestic programs. (MORE)

 

Madness….. Complete and utter dysfunction.

 

(Johnson is just a more meek, but more devious speaker than McCarthy.They share the same name though, Liars!Johnson is just more un-Godly, and McCarthy is Godless.PS Johnson is such a coward he determined yesterday would be a snow day for the House)

Anonymous ID: e2cacf Jan. 19, 2024, 7:37 a.m. No.20267275   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Darren Beattie on Tuckers, drops the bomb, the FEDS planted the pipe bomb

 

Tucker Carlson

@TuckerCarlson

It seems likely that government officials were involved in planting pipe bombs in Washington, DC three years ago, as part of an effort to keep Donald Trump from running for president again. Darren Beattie has details.

 

5:58 PM · Jan 18, 2024

·2.8M Views

 

https://x.com/TuckerCarlson/status/1748117563228483869?s=20