{"title":"The Tethered President: Consistency and Contingency in Administrative Law","authors":"William W. Buzbee","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.3175473","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The law governing administrative agency policy change and checking unjustified inconsistency is rooted in a web of intertwined doctrine. The Supreme Court’s 2016 opinion in Encino Motorcars modestly recast that doctrine to emphasize that the agency pursuing a change cannot leave “unexplained inconsistency” or neglect to address past relevant “underlying facts,” but reaffirmed its central stable precepts. Nonetheless, radically different views about broad, unaccountable, and rapid agency power to make policy changes have been articulated by current Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch, when on the appellate bench, and agencies pursuing deregulatory policy shifts under the leadership of President Donald J. Trump. This article analyzes the mutually reinforcing strands of this body of law, shows the errors underpinning these policy change power claims, and explains how the “contingencies” underlying an initial policy action must always be engaged by a later advocate of policy change. Statutory language constrains while usually leaving room for change, but facts and past agency reasoning unavoidably must be engaged to surmount the sturdy core requirements of consistency doctrine. Recent efforts to overcome or recast consistency doctrine seek greater room for politics and presidential influence and downplay agency obligations to provide rational explanation and engage with regulatory contingencies. Due to the balanced interests protected by consistency doctrine, this article argues that such a doctrinal reworking is unlikely and would be unwise.","PeriodicalId":258454,"journal":{"name":"LSN: Structure of Government & Separation of Powers (Topic)","volume":"17 3","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-04-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"LSN: Structure of Government & Separation of Powers (Topic)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3175473","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The law governing administrative agency policy change and checking unjustified inconsistency is rooted in a web of intertwined doctrine. The Supreme Court’s 2016 opinion in Encino Motorcars modestly recast that doctrine to emphasize that the agency pursuing a change cannot leave “unexplained inconsistency” or neglect to address past relevant “underlying facts,” but reaffirmed its central stable precepts. Nonetheless, radically different views about broad, unaccountable, and rapid agency power to make policy changes have been articulated by current Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch, when on the appellate bench, and agencies pursuing deregulatory policy shifts under the leadership of President Donald J. Trump. This article analyzes the mutually reinforcing strands of this body of law, shows the errors underpinning these policy change power claims, and explains how the “contingencies” underlying an initial policy action must always be engaged by a later advocate of policy change. Statutory language constrains while usually leaving room for change, but facts and past agency reasoning unavoidably must be engaged to surmount the sturdy core requirements of consistency doctrine. Recent efforts to overcome or recast consistency doctrine seek greater room for politics and presidential influence and downplay agency obligations to provide rational explanation and engage with regulatory contingencies. Due to the balanced interests protected by consistency doctrine, this article argues that such a doctrinal reworking is unlikely and would be unwise.
管理行政机构政策变化和检查不合理的不一致的法律植根于错综复杂的学说。最高法院2016年对恩西诺汽车案的意见略微改写了这一原则,强调寻求变革的机构不能留下“无法解释的不一致”或忽视解决过去相关的“基本事实”,但重申了其核心的稳定原则。尽管如此,现任最高法院大法官尼尔·戈萨奇(Neil Gorsuch)在上诉法院任职时,对机构制定政策变化的广泛、不负责任和迅速的权力,以及在唐纳德·j·特朗普(Donald J. Trump)总统领导下追求放松管制政策转变的机构,表达了截然不同的观点。本文分析了这一法律体系中相互加强的部分,展示了支撑这些政策变化权力主张的错误,并解释了最初的政策行动背后的“偶然事件”如何总是被后来的政策变化倡导者所采用。法定语言虽然通常留有改变的余地,但必须不可避免地采用事实和过去的代理推理来超越一致性原则的坚实核心要求。最近克服或重塑一致性原则的努力寻求为政治和总统影响力提供更大的空间,淡化机构提供理性解释和应对监管突发事件的义务。由于一致性原则所保护的平衡利益,本文认为这样的理论改造是不可能的,也是不明智的。