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Chris's avatar

Understand your point of views, but I think Chevron decision decades ago is tied, disparately, to when Congress dropped most of the body’s work - writing laws and knowing what it says, passing budgets on time instead of simply relying on contingency and continuing budgets, earmarks (that left and now are back) and never-ending electioneering. Forcing Congress back to work after 40 years of lazy inaction is ok with this citizen.

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Dale & Laura McIntyre's avatar

Roger, correct me if I am wrong, but I understood that the original justification for Chevron deference was the assumption that subject matter experts in federal agencies would be detached unbiased sources of scientific data and logic on questions for which courts would not necessarily be well equipped to understand. Unhappiness with Chevron deference began to build when executive agencies began to manufacture "ambiguities" which allowed those agencies to expand their powers in ways well beyond the original intent of the statute. The injustices arising from the controversy on how to define the "Waters of the United States" is a prime example. When a "significant nexus" with "navigable waters" was expanded by federal agency fiat to include a house lot in a subdivision and drainage ditches 60 miles from the nearest river, it appeared to many of us that Chevron deference was out of control and over-ripe for reform.

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