Monthly Archives: September 2010

DCCC Poll Has Garcia Way Ahead (Thanks to the Tea Party)

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) has a new poll out that looks good for Joe Garcia. He's ahead by much more than the margin of error. The Garcia campaign sent this out:

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee today released a new Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research poll that shows Joe Garcia leading Republican challenger David Rivera by 7 points.

In the initial head-to-head in the race for Florida?s 25th congressional district, Garcia leads Rivera 40 percent to 33 percent. Whig Party candidate Craig Porter and Tea Party Candidate Roly Arrojo each received 2 percent and 7 percent respectively. Conducted September 12-19, the poll surveyed 404 likely voters and has a 4.9 percent margin of error.

Two caveats. Partisan polls tend to lean a bit in favor of the paymaster. And it's notable Garcia's lead is equal to the 7% garnered by the Tea Party candidate. It's possible that some of those voters will come home to the GOP by November. It's also possible that they won't. Or, that as people get unhappier with Rivera, that 7% for the Tea Party might even grow…

Minor note: is it smart for the campaign to refer to Rivera as his “Republican challenger”? Does sounding like an incumbent help this year?

Posted in Politics: FL-25/FL-27 | 3 Comments

Stuff to Read

Posted in Linkorama | Comments Off on Stuff to Read

Swedish Video on Health Care

It would be an exaggeration to say that this video — Emelie behöver inga fler skattesänkningar — is the biggest issue in the upcoming Swedish election. Rather, this video illustrates what has all of a sudden become a defining issue in the election, the undermining of Sweden’s national health care system. Watch it — and be patient because when the audio starts it is in English, with Swedish subtitles.

Somehow, I doubt the technique would work here, though.

Posted in Politics: International | 8 Comments

Post-hoc Rationalizations and Executive Orders

It is a truism of administrative law that an agency must give reasons for a regulation at the time it is promulgated. Whether or not they are the agency's real reasons, they must be good reasons; among other things the reasons must fit the enabling statute's requirements, and comport with the facts reasonably relied on by the agency.

Moreover, if the agency's regulation is challenged in court, it is (in the main) not open to the agency (or its lawyers from Main Justice) to come up with a new and better set of reasons in a reply brief. The court (with a still quite small list of exceptions) will dismiss justifications that make their first appearance in a brief as “post-hoc rationalizations”. Admittedly, the penalty may not be that steep if the court remands the matter to the agency, which is then free to substitute the new, better reasons for the old, inadequate ones. But agencies dislike remands — they are embarrassing, they consume resources as the docket must be restarted, and they frequently reset the clock, thus requiring the agency either to enter the retroactivity thicket or only make the revised regulation effective from the date of re-promulgation. (This last reason is why clients can be quite happy with a remand, even if it is clear they will eventually lose. There's a lot of money being made in the interim.)

All that is hornbook law. Important. Contested a bit 'round the edges perhaps. But pretty settled otherwise.

But what if the regulation at issue isn't an APA rule but rather an Executive Order pursuant to a power delegated directly to the President in a statute? The ban on post-hoc rationalizations traces to Justice Marshall's brilliant opinion in Overton Park which roots the requirement firmly in the APA.

Besides Overton Park, the other great modern case where the Supreme Court articulates an agency's duty to give reasons, and the Court's unwillingness to consider different reasons, is SEC v. Chenery Corp. The case arose just before the APA was promulgated, so the decision technically wasn't an interpretation of the APA but rather of general principles of administrative law that were codified in the APA; the tradition is to read SEC v. Chenery as both consistent with and explicative of the APA. The decision seems based on fundamental principles of administrative agency review, a system informed by Due Process (and by the non-delegation doctrine), but not directly rooted in it any more than Overton Park.

The source of the rule on post-hoc rationalizations matters because the APA doesn't apply to the President; the APA applies to agencies, and the President is not, the Supreme Court has told us in an application of the Ashwander avoidance canon, an agency for APA purposes. Therefore, if Congress wishes to find out whether it can cram the APA down the President's throat, it will have to do so more explicitly than it has done in the definitions section of § 551. So far Congress has yet to accept that invitation.

Thus the question becomes whether something in the Due Process Clause (or something in the act relied on to issue the Executive Order), can be interpreted to impose an Overton Park-like requirement on the Presidency when the President issues an executive order pursuant to statute.

I suspect that the answer may be No, at least as far as the Due Process clause is concerned. If the President issues a conclusory EO explictly referencing the statute on which he relies, he may have no obligation to give reasons until his action is challenged in court unless the statute empowering him imposes that obligation (and I suspect that they don't, although it would be good if they had hooks that would allow courts to say they do). Once in court, some explanation tying Executive Order's action to the statute's purposes and empowerments is clearly due under any notion of Due Process. In the APA regime, though, that could be the dreaded “post hoc rationalization” — or a straight up violation of Overton Park — since nothing came sooner. But as we know, the APA gives you much more than Due Process does, especially since — courts preferring to do statutory analysis rather than Constitutional exegesis (Ashwander again) — the APA's existence often forestalled the extension of the Due Process revolution to matters covered by the APA regime.

(All this is sparked by a discussion with a colleague about a cursory EO issued pursuant to a statute he is writing about. If anyone knows of an article on the subject, please share.)

[Revised from the original version.]

Posted in Law: Administrative Law | Comments Off on Post-hoc Rationalizations and Executive Orders

Jotwell Needs Your Help

The ABA Journal is asking for blog recommendations. It would be great if someone or someones could recommend Jotwell.

Here's the promo from the ABA Journal:

We're working on our list of the 100 best legal blogs, and we'd like your advice on which blawgs you think we should include.

Use the Blawg 100 Amici form to tell us about a blawg — not your own — that you read regularly and think other lawyers should know about. If there is more than one blawg you want to support, feel free to send us more amici through the form. We'll be including some of the best comments in our Blawg 100 coverage. But keep your remarks pithy — you have a 500-character limit.

Some additional tips:

  • We're not interested in “occasional” blawgs — blawgs you name should be updated at least weekly.
  • Editors make the final decisions about what's included in the Blawg 100; this isn't a scenario in which the blawgs that receive the most amici are the ones that make the list.

Friend-of-the-blawg briefs are due no later than Friday, Oct. 1.

Thanks in advance for your insight. Keep posting!

I'd do it myself, but that's against the rules.

Posted in Jotwell | Comments Off on Jotwell Needs Your Help

Kudos to Microsoft

Wait long enough, you can find yourself saying anything.

But this deserves to be said twice: Kudos to Microsoft for this new policy — Microsoft Changes Policy Over Russian Crackdown.

By giving a blanket license to human rights groups and newspapers, without them even having to ask for them, Microsoft has just removed a weapon from the Russian state. Under the guise of copyright enforcement, Russia was taking computers from opposition groups, thus disabling the opposition and getting the groups' most private information all at once.

Microsoft's quick and inspired response just might put an end to it. At least it removes the fig leaf.

See the full Microsoft statement.

And while I'm at it, yes, Win7 is much better than Vista.

Posted in Law: Copyright and DMCA | Comments Off on Kudos to Microsoft