Supreme Court Ends EPA’s Climate Change Reign of Terror

Contact Your Elected Officials

The decades-long, push by EPA and environmentalists (“environmental community”) to impose a comprehensive and costly regulatory structure to address climate change ended with the Supreme Court’s ruling in West Virginia vs Environmental Protection Agency (“WVA v. EPA”). The court reaffirmed the legislative power of Congress that was undermined by the environmental community’s coordinated campaign of litigation, Executive Orders, and rulemaking to create laws without Congress.

By formally announcing the “Major Question Doctrine,” the court made clear that regulatory agencies can only act on matters of economic and political significance if the agency… point[s] to “clear congressional authority.”

While the Supreme Court could have resolved the controversy (EPA’s “new found authority” to impose a cap-and-trade scheme for carbon emissions) using statutory construction, it recognized agencies were finding “vague language of a long-extant, but rarely used, statute[s]” as authority to regulate major economic and political issues without congressional authorization. The climate debate was the perfect set of facts for clarifying the roles of Congress and agencies.

Congress consistently rejected climate legislation

The court noted, “Congress, however, has consistently rejected proposals to amend the Clean Air Act to create such a program [regulating climate change].” It cited the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009, the Clean Energy Jobs and American Power Act of 2009, the Climate Protection Act of 2011, and Save our Climate Act of 2011. There were many more failed attempts by the environmental community to enact a comprehensive legal structure to address climate change: The Kyoto Protocol (Senate voted 95-0 against ratification), The Paris Agreement (Lacking votes, it was never submitted as a Treaty); McCain-Lieberman, Kerry-Lieberman-Graham, and others that never received a vote. Congress clearly spoke.

Efforts to make law by litigation

Realizing Congress would not impose a massive climate change scheme on American society, the environmental community orchestrated a nationwide litigation campaign to persuade courts to impose such a system. It filed lawsuits across the nation under any statute that might relate to climate change – Clean Air Act, (186), Endangered Species and other wildlife statutes (174), National Environmental Protection Act (322), Clean Water Act (58), miscellaneous land use statutes (168), constitutional claims under the Commerce Clause (20), First, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments (41); under state laws (464), common law (29), public trust (27) and securities and financial statutes (24). The environmental community had some successes, however, its overreach ended in a defeat for the administrative state.

Using Executive Orders to make climate law

On Biden’s first day in office, he issued several Executive Orders to address climate change. Biden further directed all executive departments to place a moratorium on oil and gas leasing programs and establish the Social Cost of Carbon to justify the high cost of the regulatory structure. A week later, Biden ordered a whole-of-government approach to address climate change. This order was followed by the SEC’s proposed climate disclosure rules which again raise the question of identifying the needed congressional authority.

The futile march to circumvent Congress ends

As the environmental community was suffering legislative defeat after defeat, Obama’s EPA issued an “endangerment finding” that greenhouse gases contributed to man-made climate change that may endanger public health and welfare.  This finding served as the foundation for EPA’s Clean Power Plan (“CPP”) regulations, the issue decided in WVA v. EPA.  The CPP was a cap-and-trade rule. President Trump repealed the CPP and put in its place the Affordable Clean Energy rule that limited EPA’s regulatory power to available emission reduction technologies, consistent with the Clean Air Act. On Trump’s last day in office the DC Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the Trump rule, however, before President Biden could reinstate a new CPP rule, the Supreme Court accepted the case for review.

The Supreme Court establishes regulatory sanity

While the Supreme Court held “Congress could not have intended to delegate a decision of such economic and political significance (regulation of climate change) to an agency [EPA] in so cryptic of a fashion,” its decision limits the regulatory power of all agencies to enact major political and economic matters unless the agency can point to “clear congressional authority.”

Had the environmental community been successful in expanding the authority of agencies to regulate climate change without statutory authorization, many agencies would search for and find “long-extant authorities” to further diminish the role of Congress. By reaffirming the constitutional powers of Congress, and placing limits on the Executive’s power to legislate using the rulemaking process, the Supreme Court also solidified its role as a co-equal branch of our government.

The most gratifying aspect of the long battle over the power of EPA to regulate climate change is the ironic ending to the struggle. In the end, EPA’s aggressive regulatory overreach resulted in limits being placed on the regulatory powers of all federal agencies.

William Kovacs
William Kovacshttps://www.reformthekakistocracy.com/
William Kovacs served as senior vice-president for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce chief-counsel to a congressional committee; chairman of a state environmental regulatory board; and a partner in law D.C. law firms. He is the author of Reform the Kakistocracy: Rule by the Least Able or Least Principled Citizens, winner of the 2021 Independent Press Award for Social/Political Change.

Obama’s Perverted Speech to Texas Dems Hiding in Plain Sight!

Former President Barack Obama apparently decided it would be...

The geometrics of power

In the annals of American political history, few terms evoke as much controversy as gerrymandering – a practice synonymous with electoral manipulation.

ChatGPT Plunges Hapless User Into Epic Hallucinatory Crash-Out

AI plunges pothead into potentially career-ending spiral in collaborating to conjure a nonsense “mathematical framework” called “Chronoarithmics”

Does a Rube Goldberg Contraption Help Explain Donald Trump’s Comeback Victory in 2024?

Let's take a look at events surrounding the 2020 presidential election and those which spun their way through to the wee hours of Nov 6, 2024.

Benny Johnson Exposes TX Rep. Jasmine Crockett as a Fraud!

There are some Internet content creators that are so...

California Democrats Unveil Proposed Congressional Map to Counter Texas Redistricting

CA Democratic lawmakers unveiled a proposed redrawn state congressional map intended to be on the Nov. ballot amid a redistricting battle with Texas.

RFK Jr. Says He’s Not Running for President in 2028

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Aug. 15 said he will not be running for president in 2028 and that he is loyal to President Donald Trump.

US Consumer Sentiment Falls on Deteriorating Inflation, Labor Outlook

U.S. consumer sentiment unexpectedly softened in August, as the public anticipates inflation and unemployment to worsen in the future.

Washington DC Files Lawsuit Challenging Trump’s Takeover of Police Department

The District of Columbia sued the Trump administration on Aug. 15 over its takeover of the Metropolitan Police Department.

Trump Signs Order to Refill Strategic Reserves of Pharmaceutical Ingredients

Trump signed EO to enhance American drug supply chain resilience by filling and maintaining the strategic reserve for essential pharmaceutical ingredients.

White House Orders Review of Smithsonian Exhibits Ahead of Nation’s 250th Birthday

WH ordered review of some Smithsonian museums and exhibitions to ensure public-facing content celebrates U.S. exceptionalism.

Homeless People in DC to Face Fines, Jail if They Refuse Shelter, Treatment: White House

Homeless people in Washington could face fines and be jailed if they refuse to go to a shelter or receive mental health services, according to the White House.

What to Know About E.J. Antoni, Trump’s Nominee to Lead the Bureau of Labor Statistics

President Trump nominated E.J. Antoni, chief economist at The Heritage Foundation, to be the next commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central