Loper Bright Enterprises, et al., Petitioners v. Gina Raimondo, Secretary of Commerce, et al.
Case Number:
22-451
Court:
Nature of Suit:
2899 Other Statutes APA/Review Agency
Firms
- American Center for Law & Justice Inc.
- Anderson & Kreiger
- Baker & Hostetler
- Boyden Gray
- Carlton Fields
- Clausen Miller
- Clement & Murphy
- Consovoy McCarthy
- Dechert LLP
- Faegre Drinker
- Gibson Dunn
- Holtzman Vogel
- Holwell Shuster
- Hunton Andrews
- Keller & Heckman
- Mayer Brown
- Moore & Van Allen
- Pentiuk Couvreur
- Potomac Law Group
- Schaerr Jaffe
- Shumaker Loop
- Troutman Law Office
- Troutman Pepper
Companies
- Advance Colorado
- America First Policy Institute
- American Cornerstone Institute Inc.
- American Federation of Labor & Congress of Industrial Organizations
- Atlantic Legal Foundation Inc.
- Cato Institute
- Competitive Enterprise Institute
- Conservation Law Foundation Inc.
- Environmental Defense Fund Inc.
- National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation
- National Taxpayers Union
- Natural Resources Defense Council
- New Civil Liberties Alliance
- Pacific Legal Foundation
- Public Citizen Inc.
- Washington Legal Foundation
Government Agencies
Sectors & Industries:
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January 01, 2024
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The fates of unrealized income under the U.S. Constitution and the Internal Revenue Service's rulemaking authority under Chevron deference are hot-button tax topics in cases pending before the U.S. Supreme Court. Here, Law360 runs down some of the top federal cases tax experts will be keeping a close eye on in 2024.
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Would Ending Chevron Deference Really Make Waves?
Experts say federal agencies and courts have drifted away from relying on Chevron deference in recent years, following the lead of U.S. Supreme Court justices who have criticized it, but the doctrine hasn't been totally abandoned by lower courts — and a closely watched high court case could decide its ultimate fate.
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Paul Clement's Big Idea: Overrule Chevron, Ease Polarization
America's entrenched political polarization has been blamed on gerrymandering, cable news, social media, demographics and other intractable issues. But one of the U.S. Supreme Court bar's most accomplished advocates sees a solution hiding in plain sight: a ruling in his favor in perhaps the biggest showdown of the high court's term.
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Are Justices Split 3-3-3? New Term Is Already Offering Clues
The U.S. Supreme Court's dawning term is quickly shedding light on fissures in a six-justice supermajority, providing new evidence of areas where the conservative camp isn't predictably rock-solid despite its rapid reshaping of the nation's legal landscape.
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Chevron Foes Pan Fed. Defenses In Fishers' High Court Case
New Jersey herring fishers pushing U.S. justices to overrule a decades-old practice granting deference to agencies' expert interpretation of ambiguous laws have urged the high court to reject a federal government defense of the legal doctrine.
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September 29, 2023
Energy Cases To Watch This Supreme Court Term
There's plenty on the U.S. Supreme Court's plate this term to interest the energy sector, including a pair of blockbuster cases that could reshape administrative law as well as potential fights over clean energy and transmission development. Here are the energy-related cases the Supreme Court will consider this term.
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September 29, 2023
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With the U.S. Supreme Court poised to start a fresh term, employment discrimination experts said they're keeping a close eye on two accepted cases and two pending petitions that address issues including the boundaries of Title VII's protections, religious rights and court deference to federal agencies. Here, Law360 looks at four cases management-side employment attorneys will be watching as the high court gets into gear.
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'Administrative State' Attacks Soar To High Court Crescendo
After methodically amassing U.S. Supreme Court victories against agency enforcers and regulators, a legal crusade against "administrative state" powers is poised to parlay piecemeal wins into a climactic conquest during the high court's new term, which is already teeming with anti-agency cases.
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The U.S. Supreme Court will tackle a variety of questions in the first half of its 2023 term that will have a broad impact on federal regulators' power and the authority of courts to intercede in major aspects of American life.
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Koch Ties Fuel Dems' Bid To Recuse Thomas In Chevron Case
Dozens of House Democrats demanded Wednesday that U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas recuse himself from a case that could kneecap the power of federal regulators, citing new reports highlighting his ties to the billionaire Koch Brothers whose "staff attorneys" represent the plaintiffs.