National Review Online
Saturday, June 29, 2024
Scarcely anything was more central to the people who
framed our Constitution than the separation of powers. John Adams, in the
Massachusetts Constitution of 1780, wrote that it was designed “to the end it
may be a government of laws, and not of men.” It was a topic upon which the men
who gathered at Philadelphia in 1787 were effectively unanimous, having already
incorporated it in the constitutions of their several states. Even more so than
federalism, individual rights, or enumerated and limited powers, it was the separation
of lawmaking, law-enforcing, and law-interpreting powers that they saw as the
safeguard against the erosion of all the other elements of the constitutional
system. And at the tip of the spear of the law, they placed the jury system,
giving a share of the judicial power to ordinary citizens.
This system has always had its critics. The framers of
the Confederate constitution of 1861 watered it down in their own version.
Woodrow Wilson and other Prussian-inspired intellectuals thought it was
old-fashioned, inefficient, and an obstacle to rule by modern experts. Wilson’s
heirs to this day defend the bureaucratic administrative state, which
interprets its own laws, runs its own courts, and is insulated from removal by
the executive.
Americans in many walks of life have found themselves
ensnared in these institutions, which are frequently immune to elections and
unconstrained by written law. That includes the fishermen in Loper Bright
Enterprises v. Raimondo, who found themselves saddled with the cost of
regulatory monitors traveling on their fishing boats — even though Congress
never passed a law making them pay that cost.
The Supreme Court has struck a series of powerful blows
against this system. In SEC v. Jarkesy, it ruled that the Seventh
Amendment right to a jury trial in civil cases cannot be evaded in cases brought by a government
agency simply by the expedient of assigning them to an administrative law judge
employed by the same agency. In Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo,
it struck down the Chevron doctrine, which
allowed agencies not only to interpret ambiguities in their own statutes but to
demand that courts defer to those interpretations.
Ending Chevron has been a long-term
project of constitutionalists. The doctrine, minted only in the mid 1980s,
never sat comfortably with the traditional power of the judiciary to, in the
words of Chief Justice John Marshall, “say what the law is.” Nor was it
consistent with the Administrative Procedure Act, passed in 1946, which
provided that a court reviewing agency action must “decide all relevant
questions of law” and “interpret” the relevant “statutory provisions.”
Neither of these decisions prevented the agencies from
exercising powers explicitly granted by Congress, or from pursuing cases that
could stand up in court. So the alarms about crippling administrative power are
overstated. Nor were these decisions, as the Court’s liberals would have it, a
judicial “power grab.” Jarkesy requires judges to share power with
juries, and Loper Bright restores the proper primacy of Congress. And
the Court has taken this course while ruling, in Erlinger v. United States,
that criminal sentencing judges must also yield to juries the power to find
facts that increase a sentence.
The Court also brushed back an overweening Environmental
Protection Agency rule, in Ohio v. EPA, that ran roughshod over a
congressional design to share responsibility for air quality between the EPA
and the states. And it has one further case left, Corner Post v. Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, that could give regulated parties
more time to bring challenges to unlawful rules.
All of this is not only good but necessary and healthy
for a democratic and constitutional system. If it provokes in Congress the
habit of writing laws, and in agencies the habit of obeying them, all the
better. Agencies are but creatures of law, and law is but a creature of the
sovereign people’s right to self-government — a government of laws, and not of
men.
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