Hours before ProPublica revealed new details about U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomasā relationship with the Koch network, a group of Democratic senators filed a brief on Thursday warning that Koch-backed entities are closely involved in an upcoming case that could further gut the federal governmentās regulatory powerāand enhance the strength of the conservative-dominated high court.
The case in question is Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, which stems from a New Jersey-based fishing companyās challenge to a law requiring certain fishing boats to carry federal compliance monitors to enforce regulations.
Loper Bright Enterprises specifically objected to an interpretation of federal law by the National Marine Fisheries Service, which said the Magnuson-Stevens Act allows the agency to require industry to pay the costs of the monitors.
The dispute over an obscure federal statute has since exploded into a matter of great interest to industry groups and environmentalists, with the latter warning that if the Supreme Court sides with the plaintiffs, it will be much more difficult for federal agencies to implement climate regulations.
Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) echoed that concern and spotlighted the attention the case has attracted from right-wing and corporate-funded groups.
āThis case is the product of a decades-long effort by pro-corporate interests to eviscerate the federal governmentās regulatory apparatus, to the detriment of the American people,ā the lawmakers wrote, noting that a number of groups connected to the Koch network and other powerful right-wing organizations have submitted briefs in support of the plaintiffs in Loper v. Raimondo.
āFor example, amici The Buckeye Institute, Cato Institute, Competitive Enterprise Institute, Landmark Legal Foundation, Mountain States Legal Foundation, National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, New Civil Liberties Alliance, and Pacific Legal Foundation have all received hundreds of thousands, and sometimes millions, of dollars from Donors Trust and Donors Capital Fundātwo donor-advised funds that allow ultra-wealthy interests to direct funding anonymously.ā
āThe Buckeye Institute, Cato Institute, Competitive Enterprise Institute, New Civil Liberties Alliance, and Pacific Legal Foundation have also received substantial funding from the Koch family foundationsāanother top-ten funder for the climate change counter-movement,ā the senators added.
At the center of Loper v. Raimondo is the so-called Chevron doctrine, a decades-old administrative law principle that says courts should defer to a federal agencyās āreasonableā interpretation of a statute when the lawās language is ambiguous.
The plaintiffs in the case and their corporate-backed supporters have called on the Supreme Court to either weaken the Chevron doctrine or overrule it entirely.
In its amicus brief in the case, the Cato Instituteāwhich was co-founded by billionaire oil tycoon Charles Kochādeclares that the Chevron doctrine is āunconstitutional and ahistoricalā and has āwreaked havoc in the lower courts upon people and businesses.ā
The Democratic senators counter in their brief that the Chevron doctrine has been critical in āallowing Congress to rely on agency capacity and subject-matter expertise to help carry out Congressā broad policy objectives.ā
āAdministrative regulations reined in dangerous industry activities,ā the senators added, āand our society became safer and more prosperous.ā
A ruling that effectively casts the principle aside, the lawmakers argued, āwould not just conflict with Congressā well-established policymaking desires; it would erode the separation of powers by shifting policymaking power from Congress and the executive to the unaccountable judiciary.ā
The brief was submitted a day before ProPublica reported that Thomas, one of the justices poised to rule on Loper v. Raimondo, has attended at least two donor events for the Koch network during his time on the Supreme Court.
ProPublica noted that Thomas used to support the Chevron doctrine but has changed his position in recent years amid a growing corporate onslaught against the regulatory principle.
The Democratic senators stressed in their brief that āthe assault in this case on the regulatory system is not an isolated effort.ā
"For years, regulated interests have funded a full-scale campaign to delegitimize and dismantle federal regulations,ā the lawmakers wrote. āThe court should proceed cautiously before contributing to their sought-for degradation of our American regulatory system.ā