The U.S. Supreme Court took up a case this week that could be the end of the road for a nearly 40-year precedent requiring judges to defer to federal agencies when interpreting statutes that are ambiguous – otherwise known as Chevron doctrine. On this week’s episode of The Term, we talk through how the issue landed at the court, and how far it might go in rethinking the precedent. Also this week, partisan politics were on full display at a Senate Judiciary committee hearing on whether Congress should mandate formal ethics rules for the justices.
S4, E19: BigTech Seems Likely To Keep Immunity, For Now...
S4, E18: Supreme Court Lawyers Adapt To Changed Bench
S4, E17: How Justice Harlan Became A Civil Rights Hero
S4, E16: The Jane Roberts Recruiting Story, Explained
S4, E15: Why Did Justices Duck Attorney-Client Privilege?
S4, E14: Leaker Unknown After 8 Months, 126 Interviews
S4, E13: Where Have All The Opinions Gone?
S4, E12: Do The Justices Need Time Management Training?
S4, E11: Justices Wary Of Novel Election Theory
S4, E10: Free Speech Or Discrimination?
S4, E9: Immigration, Corruption And Alito Ethics Intrigue
S4, E8: Alito Given Hero's Welcome By Conservatives
S4, E7: Justices Debate Native Homes For Native Kids
S4, E6: Trump Taxes And Courtroom Protests
S4, E5: The Grim Fate Of Affirmative Action
S4, E4: Carter Phillips On His Supreme Court Success
S4, E3: Justices Fear State 'War' Over Morality Laws
S4, E2: Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson Has The Floor
S4, E1: A New Normal For The Court?
S3 FINALE: Lessons From A Historic Supreme Court Term
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