Interesting

Here is my post from the Chevron thread:

Scotus has decided to take up a case whereas herring fishermen must have federal monitors on their ships and pay the salary and expenses for the monitors. I know this is a CBS link but it is actually well written and informative. I have long called for every regulation passed by an agency to be approved by Congress before it could take effect and we are inching closer to that goal. I read, cannot find the link, that Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson has recused herself because she heard the case at the Appellate Court level. Some notable clips from the article:

The proposal included provisions that required vessel owners, for some trips, to arrange for monitoring and pay for the services rendered on a given trip.

While serving on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, Gorsuch wrote in 2016 that Chevron "seems no less than a judge-made doctrine for the abdication of the judicial duty." In 2022, he wrote that the Chevron doctrine "deserves a tombstone no one can miss."

Thomas, too, has been critical of the Chevron decision, writing in a 2015 concurrence that it "wrests from courts the ultimate interpretative authority to 'say what the law is' and hands it over to the Executive."
 
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