A new term starts Monday. The justices will confront numerous hot-button cases, while grappling with how to rebuild the public’s trust in their work.
, for example — where the majority indicated the challenges brought by conservative organizations and Republican-led states went too far.
The investigative news organization also reported on a free trip Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. took, but did not disclose, to an Alaskan fishing resort with a billionaire hedge fund manager. In a lawsuit brought by herring fishers in New Jersey, the justices are being asked to overrule a long-standing doctrine that requires judges to defer to agency interpretations of federal law when a statute’s meaning is unclear. The second case challenges the funding structure of the CFPB, whose independence Congress sough to ensure by not making it dependent on an annual appropriation.
The Biden administration and attorneys general from Democratic-led states defend the rule and say courts should rely on agency experts. Throwing out, they worry, could make it more difficult for agencies to carry out progressive policies to protect public health, the environment and consumers.
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