The U.S. Supreme Court took up a case this week that could be the end of the road for a nearly 40-year precedent requiring judges to defer to federal agencies when interpreting statutes that are ambiguous – otherwise known as Chevron doctrine. On this week’s episode of The Term, we talk through how the issue landed at the court, and how far it might go in rethinking the precedent. Also this week, partisan politics were on full display at a Senate Judiciary committee hearing on whether Congress should mandate formal ethics rules for the justices.
S1, E36: Where Are All The Opinions?
S1, E35: DACA, Title VII Bombshells Land Early
S1, E34: So Many Blockbusters, So Little Time
S1, E33: Sotomayor Scorches On Pensions, Puerto Rico
S1, E32: Roberts On Lessons Of The Pandemic
S1, E31: Clarence Thomas Steps Into The Spotlight
S1, E30: Trump Taxes And Frodo Baggins
S1, E29: Flushing Arguments Down The Toilet
S1, E28: How The Court's First Phone Hearings Will Work
S1, E27: Unlikely Alliances Take The Spotlight
S1, E26: To Begin Your Oral Argument, Press 1
S1, E25: Dissecting The Court’s First COVID-19 Decision
S1, E24: Coronavirus Ain't Keeping RBG Down
S1, E23: Justices Press On With Work, At A Distance
S1, E22: COVID-19 Shuts Down The Supreme Court
S1, E21: Does The Supreme Court Favor The Rich?
S1, E20: Roberts Rebuke Overshadows CFPB, Abortion Args
S1, E19: A Key Test For Abortion Rights
S1, E18: Billions At Stake In Pipeline, Terrorism Cases
S1, E17: Whitehouse Says ‘Dark Money’ Is Swaying The High Court
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