I write today to recommend two articles on interpretations of law text—Constitution or statute. Text interpretation is text interpretation. However, text interpretation by originalist/textualist leaning judges considers extra-text “history” leading to ratification of constitutional text in interpreting Constitutional text but reject such history (commonly called legislative history) for interpreting statutory text. (Why that difference I hope you ask?) For originalists in interpretation (often but not always textualists) the permissible tools are those that focus on the original public meaning or some variant of that to some imagined audience including as some fear “Joe the Ploughman” with arguably marginal reading skills generally or for law text. See Jack N. Rakove, Joe the Ploughman Reads the Constitution, or The Poverty of Public Meaning Originalism, 48 San Diego L. Rev. 575 (2011), here.
The first article addresses the effects of Loper Bright. Lindsay L. Clayton, Defending Agency Actions After Loper Bright: Sea Change or the Same Old Beach? 74 DOJ J. Fed. Law. & Prac. no. 2, 49 (July 2026), here. An Appendix for the article is here. Ms. Clayton is Assistant Director in the Civil Division’s Tax Litigation Branch. The article is quite good in assessing the effects of Loper Bright on DOJ’s civil litigation. One would have to assume that, prior to publication in the DOJ’s house organ, the contents were vetted and approved by at least some of the attorneys in DOJ responsible for positions before the courts.
Some comments on Ms. Clayton’s articles:
The article repeats (pp. 50-51) the Loper Bright claim:
The decision criticized Chevron for requiring courts “to ignore, not follow, ‘the reading the court would have reached’ had it exercised its independent judgment” and for “demand[ing] that courts mechanically afford binding deference to agency interpretations.”
I believe that Loper Bright claim was false or, in any event, overstated what Chevron actually did. My claim is that Chevron allowed judges to apply (not defer to) an agency interpretation only where they were interpretive equipoise (same as ambiguity) where they could not decide whether the agency interpretation or the opposing interpretation was best or not best. In that zone of equipoise, courts were simply applying the agency interpretation as a default rule, like the rule of lenity; there were not deferring to an agency not best interpretation. I develop my claim further in an article for publication in the ABA Tax Lawyer sometime in the near future. But consider:
- For a succinct statement addressing Chevron’s meaning of reasonable interpretation and the latitude it gave courts to apply their own best meaning. See Jon Newman (respected 2d Circuit Judge), On Reasonableness: The Many Meanings of Law’s Most Ubiquitous Concept, 21 J. App. Prac. & Process 1, 83 (2021), here (“It would probably be too cynical to suggest that [under Chevron] the courts are just accepting agency interpretations with which they agree and rejecting those they disfavor, but in some cases that almost seems to be what is happening. Clearly there is no one meaning of “reasonable” in the context of Chevron deference.”)
- Judge Newman’s insight is consistent with empirical research of large data sets of cases that commoted about Chevron but none said or reasonably implied that the court deferred to a not best agency interpretation. Rather, Judge Newman was saying that the court determined a best interpretation and applied that interpretation or were in interpretive equipoise. For my research, see Is Chevron on Life Support; Does It Matter? (Federal Tax Procedure Blog 4/2/22; 4/3/22), here; and Chevron Step Two Reasonableness and Agency Best Interpretations in Courts of Appeals (Federal Tax Procedure Blog 2/9/23), here.
- Following through on my claim, the question is what courts do after Loper Bright do when they face ambiguous statutory text where they cannot honestly say that the agency interpretation or the opposing interpretation is the best? I cover that issue in my article addressing interpretive equipoise in percentage ranges, but just think about that. Keep in mind that Loper Bright cannot responsibly command or be interpreted to command that there cannot be ambiguity after applying all the tools of statutory interpretation.