Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Explainer: Judge Kavanaugh and why you should care about ‘Chevron deference’
Explainer: Judge Kavanaugh and why you should care about ‘Chevron deference’
Dec 31, 2025 9:01 AM

Judge Brett Kavanaugh made a second appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee today for his Supreme Court confirmation hearing. During questioning,Kavanaugh was asked about a controversial, but little-known, legal doctrine called “Chevrondeference.”

Here’s what you should know about Kavanaugh’s position andwhy you should care about Chevron deference.

What is the Chevron the Senate is referring to? The pany?

Yes, though indirectly. Chevron, the corporation, was the plaintiff in the landmark Supreme Court case Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. This case is one of the most important in administrative law and set the standard known as “Chevron deference.”

What was the case about?

The Clean Air Act, which regulates air pollution at the national level, includes a requirement that States establish a permit program regulating “new or modified major stationary sources” of air pollution. The Carter administration defined “stationary source” as any device in a manufacturing plant that produced pollution. But after Ronald Reagan was elected in 1981, his EPA (which was headed at the time by Judge’s Gorsuch’s mother, Anne M. Gorsuch) said that “source” meant the entire plant.

The Natural Resources Defense Council challenged that redefinition in federal court and won. Chevron, which was affected, appealed and the case went to the Supreme Court. The Court ruled in 1984 that when Congress passed a law that did not have a clear meaning, the courts should defer to reasonable interpretations by the federal agency applying the law. The Court said, “The EPA’s interpretation of the statute here represents a reasonable modation of peting interests, and is entitled to deference.” This standard has since been referred to as Chevron deference.

Wait, isn’t the judiciary branch in charge of interpreting laws?

We often think that the judiciary is the branch of government responsible for interpreting the law. But because of Chevron deference the executive branch, through the various regulatory agencies, provides most interpretation of statutes. Regulatory agencies handle administrative law, primarily by codifying and enforcing rules and regulations. When Congress passes a new law it usually goes to a regulatory agency to determine how the law will be put in place. Because of the judiciary branch has established the Chevron deference, any interpretation that is deemed “reasonable” is likely to be the standard that is used.

What’s the problem with Chevron deference?

It depends on how you view the Constitution. If you believe the Constitution was put into place to provide checks-and-balances, then the judiciary “deferring” to the executive on almost all interpretations of administrative law might be a problem.

What’s Kavanaugh’s position?

Earlier today, Senator Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) askedKavanaugh about his view of the powers of administrative agencies. According to the New York Times, “Kavanaugh touted several rulings in which he had upheld environmental regulations rather than striking them down, but he gave little sign of support for Chevron deference, insisting instead that executive branch agencies must not be permitted to ‘rewrite’ laws passed by Congress to expand its authority.”

“I’ve heard it said that I’m a skeptic of regulation,” said Kavanaugh. “I’m not a skeptic of regulation at all. I’m a skeptic of unauthorized regulation, of illegal regulation, of regulation that is outside the bounds of what the laws passed by Congress have said.”

Why should Christians be concerned about Chevron?

The main reason we should be concerned is because Chevron deference gives thousands of technocrats in federal agencies authorization to make decisions that affect our lives in the minutest ways. A prime example are the “mandates” that Obama’s Health and Human Services was able to create by “interpreting” the law in ways that sometimes violated religious liberties. The agencies often interpret a statute in a way that was not intended by our elected representative.

Chevron deference is too powerful a tool to leave to an unelected administrative state that continues to encroach on the freedoms of Americans.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
John Calvin in Siouxland
As we enjoy the final days of 2009, notable for among other things the 500th anniversary of John Calvin’s birth, take the time to enjoy this video creation from James C. Schaap, professor of English at Dordt College, featuring quotes about creation from the writings of John Calvin, music by the Dordt College Concert Choir, and photography by Schaap. As Calvin writes, “Nothing is so obscure or contemptible, even in the smallest corners of the earth, that it can’t display...
Gladstone’s 200th Birthday
William Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898)The Mackinac Center notes that today is the 200th anniversary of the birth of British parliamentarian and statesman William Gladstone, and links to a 2003 article from the center’s president, Lawrence W. Reed. Reed points to Gladstone’s long and distinguished political career, which included multiple tenures as prime minister. What made this son of Scottish parents both great and memorable, however, was not simply a long career in government. Indeed, as a devoutly religious man he always...
Conventional vs. Cyber Terrorism
During this holiday travel season, which has you more concerned, conventional terror attacks of the kind attempted on Christmas Day or tech terrorism, which aims to take down access to or breach puter networks? John P. Avlon of the Manhattan Institute makes the case that the latter perhaps represents a greater threat to national and economic security. Avlon concludes, “Whether it is perpetrated by al-Qaida, a hostile nation, or a lone hacker, we cannot afford to wait for a digital...
Not so separate after all
The New York Times is not known to be the most reliable or mentator on matters religious, but a recent Times article (marred, unfortunately, by a couple of inaccuracies) highlighted that France’s claim to have separated religion from the state is only true in parts. French cities and the countryside are dotted with beautiful churches, but few realize that the state is responsible for the physical upkeep of many of them. This is a legacy of the famous (or, infamous,...
Books for the Arsenal of Ordered Liberty
As we begin the New Year, I find myself thinking about books that fill the conservative armamentarium for resisting the left-liberal onslaught on the past handful of years. I’ve omitted some categories, like military and foreign policy, because they are outside my areas of expertise and don’t apply as much to the Acton mission, anyway. Here are my mendations: Economics: Common Sense Economics by James Gwartney, Richard Stroup, and Dwight Lee — Dr. Gwartney taught the first economics class I...
What Would Jesus Drive? A Cadillac, of course!
There’s a new answer to the question, “What would Jesus drive?”, a contention that won’t sit well with the environmental activists who first raised the question. The inevitably revisionist logic of the prosperity gospel has to hold that “Jesus couldn’t have been poor because he received lucrative gifts — gold, frankincense and myrrh — at birth. Jesus had to be wealthy because the Roman soldiers who crucified him gambled for his expensive undergarments. Even Jesus’ parents, Mary and Joseph, lived...
Obama v. Jesus: WHO YA GOT?
The Greatest? I post the following excerpt of an editorial from a Danish news outlet without ment, other than to say that I look forward to giving our munity the opportunity to have a grand old time trying e up with new superlatives to describe just how fantastically stupid this is: EDITORIAL: Obama greater than Jesus He is provocative in insisting on an outstretched hand, where others only see animosity. His tangible results in the short time that he has...
‘A Broadened Perspective on the Ethics of Early Modern Exchange’
Camarin M. Porter of the Department of History at University of Wisconsin-Madison reviews a text edited by Stephen J. Grabill, Sourcebook in Late-Scholastic Monetary Theory: The Contributions of Martin de Azpilcueta, Luis de Molina, and Juan de Mariana (Lexington, 2007). The review appears courtesy of H-Net, a unique and indispensable set of list-servs hosted by Michigan State University. The Sourcebook includes translations into English of selected texts from the significant figures listed in the book’s subtitle, as well as a...
Acton Media Alert: Schmiesing on School Choice
Acton Research Fellow Dr. Kevin Schmiesing made an appearance earlier today on The Drew Mariani Show on the Relevant Radio Network.He joined guest hostWendy Wiese to discuss school choice and the history of public education in the United states. To listen, use the audio player below. [audio: ...
Robby George and the Reformation on Reason
Ryan T. Anderson, editor of the Witherspoon Institute’s Public Discourse, takes note of an in-depth NYT profile of Prof. Robby George (HT: MoJ). In the NYT profile, George is presented as the central figure in the formation of the ecumenical coalition behind the Manhattan Declaration, and adds a number of important contexts for George’s academic, intellectual, and political endeavors. Anderson characterizes the profile as “pretty evenhanded,” saying it “provides a nice overview of the academic and political work that George...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved