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Our Zombified Courts

By: Margaret A. Little March 12, 2020
Peggy Little
  The founders believed that trial by jury was among the most precious rights secured by our federal constitution. State constitutions similarly protect the right to be judged by a jury of one’s peers in some form in every state. New Civil Liberties Alliance, where I work, is dedicated to restoring and protecting those rights.…
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Brand X deference advances ‘administrative absolutism’

March 5, 2020
​When Justice Clarence Thomas dissented from the denial of certiorari last week in Howard and Karen Baldwin v. U.S., he lamented that “Brand X has taken this Court to the precipice of administrative absolutism.” Given that Thomas himself authored NCTA v. Brand X Internet Services in 2005, the case that launched the Brand X judicial deference doctrine, this turnabout…
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The Games Bureaucrats Play: FCC Streamlined Hearing Rule—Balderdash

March 4, 2020
Michael P. DeGrandis
  The Federal Communications Commission is proposing a new regulation to “promote more efficient resolution of hearings.” The Procedural Streamlining of Administrative Hearings Rule, as the FCC calls it, claims that none of its hearings require oral testimony. For decade after decade and Commission after Commission, the FCC has held trial-like adjudications with oral testimony…
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Why You Should Clerk for NCLA

February 24, 2020
Jessica Thompson
  NCLA is fighting on the front lines of cutting-edge administrative law litigation–and you have an opportunity to be a part of that fight!  NCLA is the nation’s only public interest law firm dedicated solely to litigating administrative law issues and restoring respect for our civil liberties.  A clerkship with NCLA is an unparalleled opportunity…
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Can an Agency Rewrite the Law to Ban an Entire Industry Overnight? Maybe in New York

February 21, 2020
Caleb Kruckenberg
  One of the most pernicious tools used by the administrative state is the court-created doctrine of agency “deference.” Roughly, this doctrine says that administrative agencies are entitled to interpret ambiguous laws any way they want, and courts are required to accept that interpretation even if the court wouldn’t read the law the same way.…
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AXON v. FTC Will Put the Administrative State on Trial

February 13, 2020
Adi Dynarcategory_listJohn J. Vecchione
  There is a case of importance and promise for injecting Constitutional protections in proceedings by administrative agencies. Faced with a recalcitrant Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”), AXON Enterprises, Inc. (“AXON”) sued the FTC in federal court on January 3, 2020 seeking declaratory and injunctive relief from the process that the FTC plans to use against…
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Trevor Schakohl
Communications Specialist
Ruslan Moldovanov
Deputy Director of Communications and Marketing
In NCLA Relentless Case, Supreme Court Overturns Chevron DeferencePress Release >>
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