| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| In a major decision, the Supreme Court recently overturned the Chevron Deference Doctrine. | |
| Critics called it the Lord Voldemort of administrative law. | |
| So what is this obscurely named doctrine, really? | |
| How did it transform the federal government? | |
| And what are the implications of the recent Supreme Court decision? | |
| If they're going to hand off rulemaking to agencies, it should be authorized by Congress. | |
| And I think that will be a pressure on Congress to actually get back to its legislative function. | |
| In this episode, I do a deep dive with constitutional law scholar and Columbia Law professor Philip Hamburger. | |
| He's the founder and CEO of the New Civil Liberties Alliance, which argued the case in front of the Supreme Court. |