striker42
Well-known member
I don't think people are grasping how much of a departure from normal rules of statutory interpretation this SCOTUS decision was. The court basically said the plain language of the statue doesn't matter, what matters is what the court feels Congress meant.
The language of the grant of power Congress gave was broad. When Congress uses broad language, then the courts are supposed to assume the grant of power was broad. It's not up to the courts to add limitations to a statute when Congress didn't include them. This is known to the lawyers that draft statutes.
The SCOTUS basically just said that the courts shouldn't assume a statute means what it says but should substitute their best judgement. Statutes are written on the basis that their plain language controls. Letting courts second guess plain language is insane!
Put the facts of the case to the side. This SCOTUS just blazed a judicial activist trail that future, less conservative courts can follow.
The language of the grant of power Congress gave was broad. When Congress uses broad language, then the courts are supposed to assume the grant of power was broad. It's not up to the courts to add limitations to a statute when Congress didn't include them. This is known to the lawyers that draft statutes.
The SCOTUS basically just said that the courts shouldn't assume a statute means what it says but should substitute their best judgement. Statutes are written on the basis that their plain language controls. Letting courts second guess plain language is insane!
Put the facts of the case to the side. This SCOTUS just blazed a judicial activist trail that future, less conservative courts can follow.