Do liberal judges have a problem applying Chevron? (Or are conservative agencies bad at following statutory directions?) By  Jonathan H. Adler  June 30
  The Supreme Court nomination of Neil Gorsuch  helped propel a largely academic debate over judicial deference to agency interpretations of law to the fore. Under the Chevron doctrine,  agency interpretations of ambiguous statutory language are to be  upheld, provided that the agency interpretations are themselves  reasonable. Although Chevron deference is not always available,  when it can be invoked it helps agencies defend their actions in  federal court. Then-judge Gorsuch’s  opinions questioning Chevron highlighted long-simmering disputes over the doctrine’s wisdom. (For my own take on this question, see  here.)
   In theory, Chevron  helps prevent judges from relying upon their own policy preferences  when reviewing agency decisions. It does this by instructing courts to  defer to agency decisions about how ambiguous statutory language should  be interpreted. In effect, it tells judges: Unless the statute is clear,  let the agency have its way, provided it’s not doing anything the  statute clearly prohibits.
   Does Chevron fulfill its purposes? A  new paper by Kent Barnett, Christina Boyd and Christopher Walker shows that appellate courts are not as consistent in applying Chevron deference as some might like. Here’s the  abstract:
   Do federal circuit courts consistently apply Chevron deference’s framework when reviewing agency statutory interpretations? Or do political dynamics result in courts gaming the Chevron  doctrine? To answer these questions, we empirically analyze  circuit-court decisions from 2003 until 2013 that review agency  statutory interpretations. Our results — from the largest and most  comprehensive database of its kind — confirm longstanding intuition and  earlier, more limited studies: courts do not consistently apply Chevron.  Our findings, nevertheless, offer some surprising insights into the  political dynamics of applying Chevron. When courts reviewed liberal  agency interpretations, all panels — liberal, moderate, and conservative  — were equally likely to apply Chevron. But when reviewing conservative agency interpretations, liberal panels applied Chevron  significantly less frequently than conservative panels. Contrary to  limited prior studies, we find no evidence of “whistleblower” or  disciplining effects when judges of different judicial ideologies  comprised the panel. Viewed together, our results provide important  implications for the current debate on whether to eliminate, narrow, or  clarify Chevron’s domain.
   Worth  highlighting is the apparent finding that liberal and conservative  panels are not equally consistent in their application of Chevron. As the authors discuss in the paper:
   It turns out that conservative judges tend to apply Chevron  deference at effectively the same rate regardless whether the agency  interpretation is liberal or conservative. And liberal and conservative  judges apply Chevron at effectively the same rate for liberal  agency interpretations. But when it comes to conservative agency  interpretations, we find that liberal judges are less likely to apply Chevron deference. In other words, Chevron deference appears to constrain conservative judges as to liberal interpretations, but not vice versa.
   What  does this mean? There are several possibilities. Among other things, it  is possible that conservative agency interpretations are less likely to  be worthy of Chevron deference, perhaps because existing  regulatory statutes have underlying liberal purposes or Republican  administrations are more prone to taking liberties with statutory  language in agency implementation. (See, for instance, the George W.  Bush administration’s approach to the 1990 Clean Air Act, which led to  repeated losses in federal court.) Under this interpretation, liberal judges are simply more likely to call out such excesses than are conservative ones.
   Another possibility, of course, is simply that liberal judges are less constrained by Chevron than their conservative brethren. Under this interpretation, suggested by the authors, such judges are less likely to grant Chevron deference to agency actions with which they disagree. This would suggest that Chevron  does not consistently constrain judges from considering or relying upon  their policy preferences in rendering their decisions. Without looking  at the specifics of the agency actions under review, it is impossible to  know for sure.
   As the authors note, this research is of potential relevance to ongoing debates about whether Chevron deference is worthwhile. As a general matter, Chevron deference helps agency actions survive judicial review. As  prior research has shown, agencies tend to win in appellate courts when Chevron deference is applied. Yet this new research suggests Chevron might not help all agency actions equally.
   Some commentators have suggested that abandoning Chevron deference  now might make Trump administration deregulatory efforts more  vulnerable to judicial review. Yet if liberal judges are less likely to  apply Chevron to conservative agency actions — such as efforts to deregulate — abandoning Chevron  might not matter as much in a court such as the U.S. Court of Appeals  for the D.C. Circuit, which has a sizable liberal majority. This could  make the Trump administration more willing to support proposed  legislation to eliminate Chevron deference. Such legislation has already passed the House and is under consideration in the Senate.
  washingtonpost.com |