The Major Questions Doctrine: A Question or an Answer for Administrative Law?
Recent Supreme Court decisions have invoked what is being called the “Major Questions Doctrine.” In essence, the Court has proposed that administrative agency policies need to be evaluated on two criteria. One – does the policy have major political or economic consequences? Two – can the agency show that it has clear statutory authority from Congress on this issue? Supporters of the Major Questions Doctrine say that this could return lawful authority to Congress. Critics of the Doctrine contend that it has no constitutional basis and it opens the door for judges to engage in decisions about policy.
Christopher Walker is Professor of Law at the University of Michigan. His research focuses primarily on administrative law, regulation, and law and policy at the agency level. He teaches Administrative Law, Civil Procedure, Constitutional Litigation, Federal Courts, Legislation and Regulation, and State and Local Government Law.
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