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The Supreme Court limited the ability of federal agencies to impose monetary penalties through special in-house tribunals, a blow to the SEC that could have ripple effects across the federal government.
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The New York Times - Top stories
Supreme Court’s Chevron Ruling Limits Power of Federal Agencies
A foundational 1984 decision had required courts to defer to agencies’ reasonable interpretations of ambiguous statutes, underpinning regulations on health care, safety and the environment. -
CBS News - Top stories
Why the Supreme Court's decision limiting federal agencies is so significant
The Supreme Court overruled a 40-year-old decision that said federal courts should defer to agencies in certain cases. Here's what it means. -
NBC News - Politics
Supreme Court delivers blow to power of federal agencies, overturning 40-year-old precedent
The Supreme Court overturned a 40-year-old precedent that has been a target of the right because it is seen as bolstering the power of "deep state" bureaucrats. -
ABC News - Top stories
Supreme Court dumps 40-year precedent in major blow to federal regulators
The Supreme Court on Friday ruled to limit the power of federal regulatory agencies, upending a 40-year precedent widely known as the Chevron Doctrine. -
CBS News - Top stories
Supreme Court overturns Chevron precedent, limiting federal regulatory power
The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 Thursday to overturn a 40-year-old decision that had given federal agencies broad regulatory power, curtailing the agencies' ability to enforce regulations. Former federal prosecutor Scott Fredericksen joined CBS News ... -
CBS News - Politics
Supreme Court curtails federal agencies' power in major ruling
The Supreme Court overturned a landmark 40-year-old decision that gave federal agencies broad regulatory power. -
The Hill - Politics
Supreme Court takes sledgehammer to federal agency power in Chevron case
The Supreme Court took a sledgehammer to executive agencies’ power Friday by overruling a prominent precedent that bolstered their ability to implement regulations in wide areas of American life, including consumer and environmental protections. ... -
The Hill - Politics
Supreme Court broadly shifts power from federal agencies to judges
The Supreme Court has broadly expanded the power of judges at the expense of federal agencies with a pair of decisions this week, and it could be poised to do so again next week. Altogether, its actions to transfer authority from agencies to the ... -
The New York Times - Business
Supreme Court Rejects S.E.C.’s Tribunals, Curbing Regulatory Agencies Again
Common in executive agencies, such tribunals hear enforcement actions without juries — a practice the court’s conservative supermajority said violated the Constitution.
More from The Wall Street Journal
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The Wall Street Journal - World
Fed's Powell, U.S. Data Could Weaken Dollar
The dollar is at risk of falling if Jerome Powell points to slowing inflation in a speech at the Sintra Forum in Portugal, while data could show another decline in U.S. job openings, ING said. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
Eurozone Short-End Government Bonds Look Supported
Short-end eurozone government bonds look supported by an expected decline in flash estimate eurozone inflation and ECB policymakers’ comments at the symposium in Sintra, Portugal, Commerzbank Research said. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
Sainsbury's Backs Outlook After Sales Rise
Sainsbury’s reiterated its guidance for fiscal 2025 after benefiting from a robust and sustained momentum in grocery sales. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
Nikkei Rises 1.1%, Led by Financial Stocks
Japanese stocks ended higher, led by gains in financial stocks thanks to expectations for Bank of Japan potential rate increases. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
Richemont Taps Louis Ferla as Cartier CEO
Ferla will succeed Cyrille Vigneron, who decided to retire after eight years as head of the division.