Advertisement"So that is, in theory, taking power away from unelected officials," Justin Crowe, a professor of political science at Williams University who researches the Supreme Court, told Business Insider.
With Corner Post, Entin said, the Supreme Court created a statute of limitations that, from the standpoint of federal agencies, never really expires.
But the Court didn't stop at giving itself the reins to interpret regulations that federal agencies are beholden to.
In the Trump case, the Supreme Court offered Trump broad immunity for some of his acts concerning his January 6 election interference case.
In the July 6 episode of Slate's Supreme Court analysis podcast "Amicus with Dahlia Lithwick," Senior Court Reporter Mark Joseph Stern said the Court spent this term expanding its power and "restructuring representative democracy to make it less representative and less democratic."
Persons:
—, Raimondo, Reagan, presidentially, Justin Crowe, wouldn't, Loper, Jonathan Entin, Entin, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Dahlia Lithwick, Mark Joseph Stern
Organizations:
Service, Loper Bright Enterprises, Inc, Governors, Federal Reserve System, Business, Chevron, Environmental Protection Agency, Congress, Williams University, EPA, Securities Exchange Commission, of Health, Human Service, Case Western Reserve University, Federal Reserve Board, Supreme, DC Circuit, Federal, Trump v ., Trump, DC
Locations:
Chevron, Trump v, Trump v . United States