Monday round-up

Last week the Court issued its decision in Environmental Protection Agency v. EME Homer City Generation, upholding the agency’s regime to regulate interstate air pollution.  Jeremy P. Jacobs of Greenwire reports on some of the legal issues that remain unsettled after the decision, while at Federal Regulations Advisor Leland Beck highlights two points regarding the case’s contribution to administrative law.  At his Election Law Blog, Rick Hasen discusses Justice Antonin Scalia’s recent mischaracterization, in his dissent, of an earlier case that he authored; Hasen then uses the mistake as a jumping-off point from which to discuss “another kind of mistake: where a Court opinion mischaracterize[s] the law in a way that changes the law in a major way, perhaps through inadvertence.”  And at Jost on Justice, Kenneth Jost contends that, although “[s]ome legal observers dismissed the mistake as a mere typo, . . . it was more than that. Scalia fixed in his mind an image of the EPA as an out-of-control bureaucracy and misremembered the past to align with his view of the world.”  And Beverly Mann discusses the mistake and the case at Angry Bear.

The Wall Street Journal’s Jess Bravin interviewed Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who once again reiterated that she has no plans to retire.   More excerpts from the interview are available here.

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Posted in: Round-up

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