FDRLST Media, LLC v. NLRB

FDRLST Media, LLC v. NLRB

The Third Circuit Court of Appeals will shortly hear argument on a case involving a light-hearted joke and the heavy hand of the administrative state. The case presents the court with the opportunity to restore actual aggrievement to the labor law’s explicit statutory...
Wall Street Journal: How the SEC Silences Criticism

Wall Street Journal: How the SEC Silences Criticism

One of the strongest rules in free-speech law is that the government may not engage in “prior restraint” of speech except in extreme circumstances. Yet the Securities and Exchange Commission does so routinely. Under a rule adopted in 1972, the SEC demands that parties...
How Executive Orders Circumvent Congress

How Executive Orders Circumvent Congress

 NCLA’s Senior Litigation Counsel, Peggy Little, joins “The Morning Newswatch” with Tom Miller on NewsRadio WPJF to discuss the injustice of relying on executive orders to circumvent the legislative process. Peggy Little comes to NCLA with over...
The Hill: The SEC should listen to Sen. Cotton

The Hill: The SEC should listen to Sen. Cotton

Originally published in The Hill on December 17, 2019 On Tuesday Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) asked tough questions to the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Jay Clayton, during a banking committee hearing about an opaque form of regulation which...