Major Questions and Juristocracy

Center for Progressive Reform 2022-01-31

Summary:

The idea that unelected judges rather than an elected U.S. President should resolve "major questions" that arise in the course of executing law makes no sense. And the idea that major questions should be resolved to defeat policies that the two Houses of the U.S. Congress and the President have agreed to makes even less sense. Yet, the so-called "major questions doctrine" endorsed by the U.S. Supreme Court's current majority suggests that the rule of law only governs minor cases, not matters of "vast economic and political significance." In important cases, the Court has abandoned the role that the Administrative Procedure Act assigns it—checking the executive branch when it contravenes the policies that Congress and the President have approved. Instead, it has assumed the role of constraining the faithful execution of the law based on unpredictable judicial fiats.

Link:

http://progressivereform.org/cpr-blog/major-questions-and-juristocracy/

From feeds:

Berkeley Law Library -- Reference & Research Services » Center for Progressive Reform

Tags:

Authors:

David Driesen

Date tagged:

01/31/2022, 14:33

Date published:

01/31/2022, 13:41