The Atlantic

The Supreme Court Is Making America Ungovernable

The <em>West Virginia v. EPA </em>ruling signals a future in which no one in power has the ability to tackle the biggest issues society faces.
Source: John J Custer

Like many governmental agencies, the Environmental Protection Agency has an elaborate process for developing important rules. As I saw during the Obama administration, when I headed the EPA office that oversees this process, getting a major rule over the finish line can take years. Almost every step of the way offers obstacles to addressing any serious environmental problem.

This work just got much harder, if not altogether impossible. In West Virginia v. EPA, the Supreme Court held that Congress may not authorize an administrative agency like the EPA to address an issue of great economic and political significance—in the Court’s parlance, a “major question”—unless Congress speaks extremely precisely in doing so. Broad statutory language, written with the aim of empowering an agency to take on new problems in new ways, will no longer suffice.

[Kimberly Wehle: The Supreme Court’s extreme power grab]

The Court’s decision has the immediate effect of

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