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The ruling could amplify the impact of a separate decision overturning the Chevron doctrine, which had required courts to defer to executive agencies’ interpretations of statutes.
The nation’s highest court issued a trio of decisions this term that handicap federal agencies’ regulatory and enforcement powers, and could lead to less oversight of the wealth management industry.
Opinion: Other Supreme Court decisions will get more coverage, but this one will change how our government operates, writes Dace Potas.
Chevron's overturning has been hailed as a "game changer" by crypto advocates seeking to limit the SEC's reach.
Chevron was just one of several consequential decisions from the court this term, Cary Coglianese writes in a guest commentary.
The Supreme Court made it easier Monday to challenge long-standing federal rules, the latest in a series of decisions that give the federal judiciary a greater say in federal government policies. A 6-3 decision in Corner Post Inc.
Bureaucrats writing rules and enforcing them are a threat to our constitutional system, but a recent SCOTUS ruling may put an end to that practice.
Three new Supreme Court decisions can be invoked by the President to rein in overregulation by federal agencies.
Markets slip; Supreme Court curtails federal agencies; Nike takes a hit; Tractor Supply ditches DEI.
The high court sent nine cases back to the lower courts in light of recent rulings weakening federal agency authority.
Since the Loper Bright ruling, a viral post with more than 11 million views and 135,000 likes claims that federal agencies can no longer create public safety standards. FEDERAL AGENCIES CAN NO LONGER CREATE STANDARDS IN THE INTEREST OF PUBLIC SAFETY BY WHICH PRIVATE COMPANIES MUST OPERATE.
The Supreme Court’s Chevron ruling marks a watershed moment of change in the basic ideology of the contemporary conservative legal movement, Bloomberg Opinion columnist Noah Feldman writes.
Attorneys and agency officials warn of chaos and restricted agency power after high court constrains executive branch power.
In an ideologically-split 6-3 ruling Friday, the Supreme Court overruled what’s known as Chevron deference, a longtime legal principle that held that when administrative statutes are not explicit, federal agencies have latitude to interpret them,
A widely anticipated Supreme Court ruling will sharply limit federal agencies’ power to interpret the laws that they execute and decide how best to carry them out.
The Supreme Court on Monday weakened a law protecting federal regulations from lawsuits, granting the companies governed by those rules more time to challenge them. The move effectively eliminates any statute of limitations on rules issued by a wide range of federal agencies,
A new overtime rule went into effect Monday, requiring businesses of all sizes to pay overtime wages to their employees making less than $43,888 per year, up from a previous wage limit of $35,568. The Department of Labor rule covers any employee who meets other requirements such as job titles,
The power of federal regulatory agencies took a major hit in recent days with a couple of court rulings that will have wide-reaching implications.
Welcome to The Hill’s Business & Economy newsletter {beacon} Business & Economy Business & Economy The Big Story Supreme Court makes it easier to challenge federal regulations
The Supreme Court last week overturned a 40 year precedent. In a case brought by New England fisherman, the court reversed the Chevron deference.
Federal agencies setting regulations for Medicare, Medicaid, pandemic response, and drugs and devices are likely to see power diminished.
In a series of rulings last week, including a reversal of the "Chevron deference," the Supreme Court threatened the Biden administration’s climate and social justice agenda just as it has started to deliver results.