Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “Appropriations Presidentialism,” by Lawrence, Pasachoff, and Price

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “Appropriations Presidentialism,” by Matthew B. Lawrence, Eloise Pasachoff, and Zachary S. Price, which is forthcoming in the Georgetown Law Journal Online. Here is the abstract: The executive branch is attempting to change how federal spending works by asserting unilateral authority to condition, delay, cancel, or otherwise disrupt federal […]

Notice & Comment

The Unfolding Meaning of Jarkesy, by Matthew Strada

The battle lines in the war over the administrative state have been years in the making, and several Supreme Court decisions in 2024 made clear that the battle has been joined. One of them was the Court’s decision in Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy, in which it held that an SEC administrative proceeding in […]

Notice & Comment

States Should Decouple From Federal Law, Including Regulations (And They Should Have Done So Yesterday), by Darien Shanske

Let us stipulate that the federal government is having some problems doing careful analysis generally, much less analysis as to how its actions might affect the states.  I believe that my area, tax law, offers some guidance as to how states should proceed. First, some context.  Over forty states with income taxes conform to federal […]

Notice & Comment

How Courts Might Review Uses of the “Good Cause” Exception to Deregulate, by Elias Neibart

Eli Nachmany just wrote a characteristically insightful piece on the current administration’s ability to use the APA’s “good cause” exception to “accelerate repeals of unlawful agency rules.”  His argument is straightforward: “The Administrative Procedure Act usually requires agencies to give public notice and allow interested parties to file comments whenever the agency wants to issue […]

Notice & Comment

Founders as Administrators: Historical Precedents for the Modern Regulatory State, by Mauni Jalali

Introduction July 4, 1776, declared our independence from a king. April 2025 may mark the month we hand that same power to a president. When President Trump summarily dismissed Federal Trade Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter, he did more than fire a bureaucrat—he launched a constitutional transformation. With a stroke of a pen, he swept aside decades […]

Notice & Comment

Fifth Circuit Review – Reviewed: Due Process on the Line

In AT&T v. FCC, the Fifth Circuit vacated a $57 million forfeiture order issued by the Federal Communications Commission, ruling that the agency’s internal enforcement process violated AT&T’s constitutional rights under Article III and the Seventh Amendment. The opinion, authored by Judge Stuart Kyle Duncan, represents one of the most significant applications yet of the […]

Notice & Comment

D.C. Circuit Review – Reviewed: More Administrative Stays

The D.C. Circuit entered three administrative stays and decided three administrative law cases on the merits last week. Emergency Orders Alien Enemies Act In J.G.G. v. Trump, this month’s special panel administratively stayed the district court’s interim order on contempt. As Thomas Griffith has discussed on this blog, the district court entered a temporary restraining order prohibiting the removal […]

Notice & Comment

“Good Cause” to Deregulate, by Eli Nachmany

Deregulation season is in full bloom at the White House. In a recent memorandum, President Donald Trump directed agencies to employ the Administrative Procedure Act’s “good cause” exception to accelerate repeals of unlawful agency rules. After years of regulatory overreach, President Trump’s bold action will help ensure that the executive branch gets back within the […]

Notice & Comment

D.C. Circuit Review – Reviewed: The D.C. Circuit Takes a Hard Pass on a First Amendment Challenge

This post covers the two published opinions of the D.C. Circuit for the week of April 7. Ateba v. Leavitt addressed a journalist’s First Amendment challenge to the White House Hard Pass Policy. Under this Policy, “[t]he White House issues hard passes,” which afford “preferred access to the White House Press Area,” to “reporters who are accredited […]

Notice & Comment

Enforcing the Payday Lending Rule, by John Lewis

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s Payday Lending Rule has had a rough decade. In an effort to protect consumers from abusive financial practices, the Rule prohibits lenders from continuing to attempt to withdraw a payment from an account after the second failed attempt and requires lenders to provide certain disclosures before attempting a withdrawal. CFPB […]

Notice & Comment

Automating Federal Agencies, by Joshua D. Blank & Leigh Osofsky

The Trump Administration has recently proposed replacing many workers in federal agencies with automated systems, like chatbots, that can answer questions the public has about their legal rights and obligations. For instance, instead of human customer service representatives at the Department of Education, chatbots may soon be responsible for answering questions that millions of parents […]

Notice & Comment

Join Us on May 8, 2025, for the ABA Administrative Law Scholarship Conference

On Thursday May 8, 2025, in Washington, DC, the ABA Section of Administrative Law and Regulatory Practice is hosting a terrific scholarship conference that will feature paper presentations and commentary by distinguished scholars, as well as a late afternoon reception welcoming the Section’s Fellows, Leaders, and Award Winners. The conference brochure is here, and the […]

Notice & Comment

Did Loper Bright Also Overturn Notice-and-Comment Rulemaking Procedure?, by Cary Coglianese & Daniel E. Walters

It is hard to believe it was less than a year ago that the Supreme Court decided what then seemed like the biggest news for administrative law in living memory: the overruling of Chevron. In ditching this forty-year-old precedent, the Court fundamentally unsettled what we have called the “administrative governance game”—that is, the complex, interdependent […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “Presidential Administration After Arthrex,” by Rosenblum & Hills and “Science and Politics in Public Health Regulation,” by Bagenstos

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room delivers a twofer (you’re welcome). The first entry is “Presidential Administration After Arthrex,” by Noah A. Rosenblum & Roderick M. Hills, Jr. The second is “Science and Politics in Public Health Regulation,” by Samuel R. Bagenstos. Here is Rosenblum and Hills’ abstract: The federal government employs over 2 million civilian […]

Notice & Comment

Sunshine Week, Loper Bright, and FOIA, by Ryan P. Mulvey

The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) is codified with the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) as part of Title 5 of the U.S. Code, and FOIA law is uncontroversially considered a subset of administrative law.  At the same time, FOIA is unique, with its own judicial review provision and standards, as well as rather unconventional litigation […]