Supreme Court’s Administrative Law War Previews Abortion Battle
When Chief Justice Roberts rules in favor of a long-standing precedent, it should be headline news.
Always looking at his legacy.
Photographer: Drew Angerer/BloombergThe U.S. Supreme Court issued an important decision Wednesday narrowly declining to overrule an important doctrine of administrative law, with Chief Justice John Roberts joining the liberal justices solely on the basis of stare decisis — the principle that precedent should be respected, even if you don’t agree with it.
For those who care deeply about the future of the administrative state, the first half of that sentence is the interesting one. The court is now fully engaged in an epic battle over whether to dismantle administrative law as we know it. That battle pits the insurgent, activist Justice Neil Gorsuch against the court’s liberals, who are very much on the defensive. In the case decided Wednesday, Kisor v. Wilkie, Justice Elena Kagan managed to pull off a successful piece of counterinsurgent strategy, persuading Roberts not to go over to the rebel side.
