By Avalon Zoppo | July 18, 2024
Raymond Kethledge seemed doubtful of the Biden administration's argument that a 1991 U.S. Supreme Court decision that relied on Chevron remains binding precedent.
By Ross Todd | July 18, 2024
With the Supreme Court handing down two blockbuster APA decisions at the end of last term, federal agencies and private companies are adjusting to the new lay of the land.
By Jimmy Hoover | July 17, 2024
Texas, Alaska and South Carolina seek an emergency order blocking the president's plan to reduce the percentage of discretionary income borrowers must spend on student debt repayment.
New Jersey Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Bill Wolfe | July 17, 2024
As a former DEP regulator and environmental advocate, I read with interest your editorial: "New Jersey's Experience Shows That 'Chevron' Deference Not Essential to the Administrative State."
By Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman | July 15, 2024
The majority opinion for the D.C. Circuit upheld a National Labor Relations Board administrative order, but Judge Neomi Rao in a dissenting opinion described the administrative order as "arbitrary and capricious and unsupported by substantial evidence."
By Maydeen Merino | July 15, 2024
"Today the Commission is making clear that contractual terms prohibiting franchisees from reporting potential law violations to the government are unfair, unenforceable, and illegal," FTC Chair Lina Khan said.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Bradford J. Kelley and James A. McGehee | July 15, 2024
Lawmakers' attention should focus first on the most glaring weakness of the Uniformed Service Employment and Reemployment Rights Act—its enforcement structure, which is split among three federal agencies.
By Colleen Murphy | July 12, 2024
"The fact that the Chevron challenge was pending during the briefing cycle, in effect, robbed the Department of Education of the ability to rely on Chevron in its briefs, which I think was important and made the department's case weaker than it otherwise would have been," Brooklyn College history and legal affairs professor KC Johnson said.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | July 12, 2024
Without more, we are as yet unprepared to join those who believe that the overruling of "Chevron" in and of itself will result in the disassembly of modern administrative regulatory programs.
By Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman | July 11, 2024
Liz Magill resigned as the University of Pennsylvania's president last December after providing controversial testimony before the U.S. House Committee on Education. Magill suggested "context" would determine whether calling for the "genocide of the Jewish people" violates Penn's code of conduct.
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