Thursday, July 27, 2023

Major Questions, Common Sense? by Kevin Tobia, Daniel Walters, Brian G. Slocum :: SSRN

Major Questions, Common Sense? by Kevin Tobia, Daniel Walters, Brian G. Slocum :: SSRN  https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4520697 

Major Questions, Common Sense?

62 Pages Posted:

Kevin Tobia

Georgetown University Law Center; Georgetown University - Department of Philosophy

Daniel Walters

Texas A&M University School of Law

Brian G. Slocum

Florida State University, College of Law

Date Written: July 26, 2023

Abstract

The Major Questions Doctrine (“MQD”) is the newest textualist interpretive canon, and it has driven consequential Supreme Court decisions concerning vaccine mandates, environmental regulation, and student loan relief. But the new MQD is a canon in search of legitimization. Critics allege that the MQD displaces the Court’s conventional textual analysis with judicial policymaking. Textualists have now responded that the MQD is a linguistic canon, consistent with textualism. Justice Barrett recently argued in Biden v. Nebraska that the MQD is grounded in ordinary people’s understanding of language and law, and scholarship contends that the MQD reflects ordinary people’s understanding of textual clarity in “high stakes” situations. Both linguistic arguments rely heavily on “common sense” examples from philosophy and everyday situations.

This Article tests whether these examples really are common sense to ordinary Americans. We present the first empirical studies of the central examples offered by advocates of the MQD, and the results undermine the argument that the MQD is a linguistic canon. Even worse for proponents of the MQD, we show that the interpretive arguments used to legitimize the MQD as a linguistic canon threaten both textualism and the Supreme Court’s growing anti-administrative project.

Keywords: textualism, interpretation, ordinary meaning, statutory interpretation, Supreme Court, major questions doctrine, jurisprudence

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