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Three Doctrines, One Constitution: Reconciling Kentucky's Conflicting Nondelegation Jurisprudence
Blogs
Recently, in FCC v. Consumers’ Research, the Supreme Court rejected a challenge to a congressional delegation of power to the FCC to assess payments from telecommunications companies to subsidize communications services in underserved communities, missing another opportunity to return to a strict prohibition on Congress’s delegation of its legislative power to the executive branch.[1] However,…
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The Loper Bright/Relentless Promise versus the Realities of the D.C. Circuit’s Post-Loper Cases
Blogs
It has been almost a year and a half since the Supreme Court overruled Chevron, and its requirement that courts sometimes “defer to ‘permissible’ agency interpretations of” statutes. In doing so, the Supreme Court unqualifiedly stated that, “[i]n the business of statutory interpretation, if it is not the best, it is not permissible.” One would…
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Could Trump Tariffs Lose 9-0 at Supreme Court?
The Supreme Court heard arguments recently in a case seeking to overturn two lower court rulings that invalidated President Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to declare a national emergency or a threat to national security and impose trade tariffs. Although a reversal is unlikely, a decision in the president’s favor…
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Removal: A Response to Professor Nelson, by Philip Hamburger
In an essay published earlier this fall, Professor Caleb Nelson argues that, as a matter of originalism, the President does not have a constitutional power to remove executive officers. Professor Nelson is a renowned scholar, whose arguments could well influence the Supreme Court in two upcoming removal cases: Trump v. Slaughter and Trump v. Cook. It’s therefore important to evaluate…
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When “General Welfare” Becomes a Blank Check: Why the Supreme Court Should Reexamine Congress’s Spending Power
Blogs
Does Congress actually have the power to spend? One looking only at the Constitution’s text would be hard-pressed to find any language that grants Congress a general spending power. Yet modern-day Spending Clause jurisprudence has given Congress an expansive spending power that cuts through other constitutional constraints. The Spending Clause, art. I, § 8,…
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7 Reasons SCOTUS Needs to Declare Humphrey’s Executor All Dead
Blogs
The United States Supreme Court will hold oral argument in early December in Trump v. Slaughter, to decide whether the President of the United States has the authority to remove a Commissioner of the Federal Trade Commission. In agreeing to hear the case on an expedited time frame, the high court also directed the parties…
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