During a major hearing this week, the conservative justices made clear theyāre about to gut the federal governmentās power to regulateāand take that power for themselves.
The Supreme Court heard two consolidated cases yesterday that could reshape the legal landscape and, with them, the country. The cases take on Chevron deferenceāthe idea that courts should defer to executive agencies when applying regulations passed by Congress. Theyāre the most important cases about democracy on the courtās docket this year, and I say that knowing full well that the court is also set to decide whether a raving, orange criminal can run again for president, and whether former presidents are immune from prosecution for their crimes in the first place.
Thatās because what conservatives on the court are quietly trying to do is pull off the biggest judicial power grab since 1803, when it elevated itself to be the final arbiter of the Constitution in Marbury v. Madison. Theyāre trying to place their unelected, unaccountable policy preferences ahead of the laws made by the elected members of Congress or rules instituted by the president. If conservatives get their way, elections wonāt really matter, because courts will be able to limit the scope of congressional regulation and the ability of presidents to enforce those regulations effectively. And the dumbest justice of all, alleged attempted rapist Brett Kavanaugh, basically said so during oral arguments.
Iām contractually obligated to tell you that the cases were technically about fees that fisheries are required to pay to federal observers. But all the justices talked about was Chevron deference. Only Justice Sonia Sotomayor even bothered to mention the fish, three hours and 20 minutes into a three-and-a-half-hour hearing.
Wow, 1803 really making a comeback:
https://lemmy.world/post/10997640
Really a bad choice to let the insects take over our judiciary.
Are you saying theyāre all locusts?
Their effect on civil rights and justice in general is analogous to the effect of a colossal swarm of locusts on fields of crops, yes.
And here I thought they were lizards.
In both 1803 and 2024, one of the broods that emerged was Brood XIX, also known as āThe Great Southern Brood.ā Coincidence? š¤
Electric Boogaloo