The Supreme Court denied the conservative legal movement something it has long sought.
Supreme Court won't strip federal agencies of all power to interpret regulations, a top priority of conservativesWASHINGTON – The Supreme Court denied the conservative legal movement something it has long sought Wednesday, refusing to strip federal agencies of the power to interpret ambiguous regulations.
Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch went further in a 42-page concurrence, labeling the decision"more of a stay of execution than a pardon." He and Associate Justices Clarence Thomas and Brett Kavanaugh said they would have overruled the high court's precedent on agency deference.Supreme Court rules for sex offender in child pornography case testing power of judges, juries
Challengers wanted that power left to federal trial judges when regulations get challenged in court. Under Supreme court precedents from 1945 and 1997, courts are encouraged to defer to administrative agencies with expertise the judges lack.
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