Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Notice & Comment

Quorum Rules in the Face of Presidential Removal, by Nicholas R. Bednar & Todd Phillips

In March 2025, the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB)—the three-member commission that considers employment claims brought by federal employees—lost its quorum. Raymond Limon retired as his term expired even though the MSPB’s statute permitted him to remain for an additional year, and President Trump removed Cathy Harris from her position, violating statutory protections that limit […]

Notice & Comment

FOIA and Classification Procedures: Project For Privacy And Surveillance Accountability v. DOJ

On July 18, a D.C. Circuit panel decided that an agency could invoke Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) Exemption 1 (the national security exemption), even though it had not met some of the procedural requirements related to classification set forth in Executive Order 13,526.  Project for Privacy and Surveillance Accountability v. Department of Justice, slip […]

Notice & Comment

Comparative Administrative Law Scholarship Corner (July 2025)

The Comparative Administrative Law Listserv, which was established by Susan Rose-Ackerman (Yale, USA) and expertly administered by Neysun Mahboubi (UPenn, USA), is currently being reinvigorated by a terrific group of new administrators. These include Mariolina Eliantonio (Maastricht, NL), Yseult Marique (Essex, UK & UCLouvain, BE), and Oren Tamir (Arizona, USA). One of their many exciting initiatives is the introduction of […]

Notice & Comment

Seeking Disclosure of AI Usage in Agency Rulemaking, by Jordan Ascher

The Trump Administration has shown great interest in using artificial intelligence tools in governance. It has reportedly used AI to, among other things, evaluate federal workers’ responses to the government-wide “Fork in the Road” email, “munch” agency contracts it viewed as nonessential, and assist General Services Administration staff—and it plans to “accelerate” AI usage across […]

Notice & Comment

Vacatur: Is it Historical? Constitutional? — Part I, by Jameson M. Payne & GianCarlo Canaparo

[Part II is available here.] Universal relief is dead; long live universal relief! With the recent decision in Trump v. CASA, nationwide injunctions have been taken off the table as a way to control agency power. But as innocuous footnote 10 of the majority opinion notes, there remains another way for courts to grant universal, […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “The Gray Area: Finding Implicit Delegation to Agencies after Loper Bright,” by Matthew Stephenson

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “The Gray Area: Finding Implicit Delegation to Agencies after Loper Bright,” by Matthew Stephenson. Here is the abstract: In Loper Bright v. Raimondo, the Supreme Court overruled Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council and repudiated Chevron’s the across-the-board presumption that statutory ambiguities should be treated as implied delegations […]

Notice & Comment

D.C. Circuit Review—Reviewed: When Does a Rule Become a Rule?

The D.C. Circuit has once again addressed the surprisingly vexing question of when a rule becomes a rule. National Council of Agricultural Employers v. Department of Labor involves two competing rules modifying the H-2A farmworker visa program. The Trump administration’s Department of Labor submitted a final rule to the Office of the Federal Register (OFR) on January […]

Notice & Comment

OLC Rears Its Head to Recognize an Unlimited Presidential Power to Abolish National Monuments for Any Reason, by Justin Pidot

As Jack Goldsmith observed in February, one of the “innovations” of the second Trump presidency has been to “cut down or eliminate” the legal interpretive authority of the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) and “center that authority firmly in the White House like never before.” OLC’s culture and tradition of independent thinking, once viewed as […]

Notice & Comment

Fastened to the Statute: The Federal Circuit’s Decision in Oman Fasteners and Its Implications for the Administration’s Trade Agenda, by Kraz Greinetz

As the Federal Circuit considers the legality of President Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs, its under-the-radar decision in Oman Fasteners, LLC v. United States offers complications for the administration’s trade agenda. Oman Fasteners dealt with antidumping and countervailing duties, which the Department of Commerce imposes on foreign goods to combat perceived unfair trade practices. Antidumping duties […]

Notice & Comment

D.C. Circuit Review – Reviewed: Independent Judgment for Independence Day

Last week, perhaps in anticipation of Independence Day, the D.C. Circuit exercised its “independent judgment” in two administrative law cases that dodged interesting questions about Loper Bright. When Has Congress Delegated Interpretive Discretion to an Agency? Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo answered one question – Chevron, nevermore? – and raised another – when has Congress […]

Notice & Comment

Universal Injunctions and the Role of the Judiciary, by Allen C. Sumrall

In a startling but unsurprising decision, the Supreme Court last Friday dramatically shrank the ability of federal judges to issue universal injunctions. In Trump v. CASA, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, writing for the six Republican appointees, concludes that universal injunctions “likely exceed the equitable authority that Congress has granted to federal courts.” For that reason, […]