Thursday, May 30, 2024

The Supreme Court just made gerrymandering easier- Brennan Center

 The Supreme Court just made gerrymandering easier- Brennan Center

By Michael Waldman

Last week, the Supreme Court’s supermajority of six highly conservative justices issued a ruling weakening voting rights laws in Alexander v. South Carolina NAACP. Consider it the opening bugle blast on what could be a dismal season of rulings from the high court. 

The case is dense with details and doctrine. Here it is in a nutshell: South Carolina’s Republican legislators drew congressional district maps in a way that diminished the influence of Black voters in choosing a representative. The state denied accusations of racial gerrymandering, which is still (theoretically) illegal. No, South Carolina said, this was good old-fashioned partisan gerrymandering, a quaint and cherished part of our political system. It’s the American way — the founding fathers did it! To this implausible argument, the Supreme Court assented. 

How to parse this ruling?

The first way to understand it, and I hope you’re sitting down: this ruling is good for Republicans. Increasingly that’s the surest way to forecast the Court’s output. Justice Samuel Alito, easily the most predictably partisan justice in recent decades, wrote the decision. 

Samuel Alito always flies the Republican flag right side up.  

But that’s not all. This ruling tilts governance and politics toward white voters. How so? The odd parsing of the difference between partisan and racial gerrymandering is more than lawyerly sophistry.

In a series of cases decided over decades, justices had struggled to craft a “judicially manageable standard” to redress partisan gerrymandering. In 2019’s Rucho v. Common Cause, the Court decided to abandon that effort altogether. Chief Justice John Roberts’s cynical majority opinion declared partisan gerrymandering claims “nonjusticiable,” meaning federal judges were barred from deciding them no matter how egregious the gerrymander. 

Inconveniently, it was still illegal to draw district lines with the intent to create a racial majority. This left judges in a bind. Racial gerrymandering can look a lot like partisan gerrymandering in places segregated by race where communities of color have distinct political preferences.

Last week’s decision in Alexander, with its broad safe harbor for partisan gerrymandering, effectively settles that problem at the expense of voters of color. Gerrymanderers only have to proclaim an unfair map partisan (yay!), not racial (boo!). If a gerrymander benefits white (Republican) voters, that’s illegal . . . but if the same map can be said to merely benefit (white) Republicans, then federal courts cannot touch it.

This ruling can be understood, too, as part of the Supreme Court’s 15-year campaign to prevent the strengthening of our democratic institutions. Often that involves undoing the work of elected lawmakers. Citizens United reversed a century of campaign finance laws and led to a flood of even bigger money in American politics. Shelby County v. Holder in 2013 and Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee in 2021 shredded the Voting Rights Act. This ruling further constrains the reach of that landmark law. 

We can pine for better doctrine and shout for better judges, but there’s a better solution: Congress should act. The Freedom to Vote Act, among its other robust provisions, would ban partisan gerrymandering in congressional elections nationwide. (It would thus avoid the tilt that comes when courts in Blue New York are far more aggressive about striking down maps than in Red Texas or Florida, for example.) The John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act would restore the strength of the Voting Rights Act. Voters, too, have power. In Ohio, citizens are poised to consider a ballot measure in November that would create one of the country’s strongest nonpartisan redistricting commissions. 

You know who blessed these efforts to redress the Supreme Court’s partisanship?  The Supreme Court itself. In Rucho, Roberts lauded Congress’s power to act. He pointed to the proposed Freedom to Vote Act as proof that “the Framers gave Congress the power to do something about partisan gerrymandering in the [Constitution’s] Elections Clause.” He also pointed to state ballot measures as another way to protect democracy. And we can reform the Supreme Court itself through measures including an 18-year term for justices.

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Justice Alito says the Supreme Court's fake ethics code lets him be unethical - Ian Millhiser - Vox



Justice Alito says the Supreme Court's fake ethics code lets him be unethical - Vox
By Ian Millhiser 
Ian Millhiser is a senior correspondent at Vox, where he focuses on the Supreme Court, the Constitution, and the decline of liberal democracy in the United States. He received a JD from Duke University and is the author of two books on the Supreme Court.

In a development that should surprise absolutely no one, Justice Samuel Alito announced in a brief letter on Wednesday that he will not recuse himself from two cases involving the January 6 insurrection and former President Donald Trump’s attempt to steal the 2020 election.

Alito faced widespread calls for his recusal, including from many Democratic members of Congress, after the New York Times reported that flags associated with the movement to overturn President Joe Biden’s 2020 electoral victory flew outside his Virginia home and his New Jersey vacation home. His letter announcing that he will not recuse is addressed to many members of the US House who called for him to withdraw from the two cases.

Alito is the Court’s most reliable Republican partisan, and he routinely makes statements from the bench and in his published opinions that are far less ambiguously partisan than, say, the upside-down American flag that flew outside his house in Virginia.

Two things are still notable about the letter, however. One is that Alito blames both flags on his wife, Martha-Ann, (“My wife is fond of flying flags. I am not,” he wrote) and claims that he asked his wife to take down the upside-down flag, “but for several days, she refused.” 

The second is that Alito rests his legal argument on an almost entirely unenforceable code of ethics that the Supreme Court released in 2023. The recusal rules in that effectively nonbinding ethics code are far less stringent than a federal law governing judicial recusals, which applies to the Supreme Court.

Last November, when the Court released this ethics code, I described it as “worse than nothing.” The code is almost entirely unenforceable, and it codifies weak restrictions on justices accepting gifts.

Yet it turns out that I was not cynical enough. I did not anticipate that a justice would cite unenforceable provisions of the Court’s internal ethics code to effectively nullify the justices’ obligations under a more stringent federal law. But that’s exactly what Alito did.

Samuel Alito’s aggrieved letter to Congress tips his hand in the Jan. 6 cases.

Samuel Alito’s aggrieved letter to Congress tips his hand in the Jan. 6 cases.
By Dahlia lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern

Jamie Raskin | How to Force Justices Alito and Thomas to Recuse Themselves in the Jan. 6 Cases - The New York Times

Opinion | How to Force Justices Alito and Thomas to Recuse Themselves in the Jan. 6 Cases - The New York Times

Mr. Raskin represents Maryland’s Eighth Congressional District in the House of Representatives. He taught constitutional law for more than 25 years and was the lead prosecutor in the second impeachment trial of Donald Trump.

Many people have gloomily accepted the conventional wisdom that because there is no binding Supreme Court ethics code, there is no way to force Associate Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas to recuse themselves from the Jan. 6 cases that are before the court.

Justices Alito and Thomas are probably making the same assumption.

But all of them are wrong.

It seems unfathomable that the two justices could get away with deciding for themselves whether they can be impartial in ruling on cases affecting Donald Trump’s liability for crimes he is accused of committing on Jan. 6. Justice Thomas’s wife, Ginni Thomas, was deeply involved in the Jan. 6 “stop the steal” movement. Above the Virginia home of Justice Alito and his wife, Martha-Ann Alito, flew an upside-down American flag — a strong political statement among the people who stormed the Capitol. Above the Alitos’ beach home in New Jersey flew another flag that has been adopted by groups opposed to President Biden.

SCOTUS House: Can a Supreme Court Ethics Lawyer and Inspector General Help Get this Fraternity under Control by Richard W. Painter :: SSRN

SCOTUS House: Can a Supreme Court Ethics Lawyer and Inspector General Help Get this Fraternity under Control by Richard W. Painter :: SSRN

Abstract

In 2023, the United States Supreme Court is immersed in an ethics crisis of unprecedented proportions. Public confidence in the Court is at an all-time low and Congress is considering action. The Court is less likely to police itself than it was a generation ago when Justice Abraham Fortas resigned over a scandal that was probably less serious than that facing at least one justice today. This article discusses the Court’s recent scandals and explains multiple factors that make the Court prone to ethics lapses, perhaps more so than the other two branches of government. This Article then proposes that a partial solution to the Supreme Court ethics crisis would be to have a dedicated ethics lawyer and an inspector general for the Supreme Court. There are specific ways in which an ethics lawyer and an inspector general should help reverse the factors identified in this Article as obstructing a workable ethics regime at the Court. Congress has the power and responsibility to enact these and other reforms necessary to assure that the Court’s justices in their personal conduct uphold their duty to be faithful to the law while holding an office that gives them the power to interpret and enforce the law.

Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Justice Alito, in letter to Senators Durbin and Whitehouse, refuses to recuse in January 6 cases

 Source: letter-from-justice-alito-to-senators-durbin-and-whitehouse.pdf

Supreme Court Justice Alito's Beach ...AOC demands Senate Democrats ...

Last year the United States Supreme Court adopted a Code of Conduct for Justices, as reported and discussed in a memo by the Congressional Research Service.

Associate Justice Samuel A. Alito denies knowledge of any connection between the two flags flown at his homes and the January 6 2021 insurrection at the United States Capitol.

Mr. Alito asserts that as a joint tenant by the entirety his wife had the right to possession of their property .  As does he.

Alito writes that the Rule and the appearance of impropriety do not require that he abandon his duty to sit as a member of the high court.

The Code announced by the Court in   2023 declares these five broad principles referred to as "ethical canons':
1. A Justice Should Uphold the Integrity and Independence of the Judiciary.
2. A Justice Should Avoid Impropriety and the Appearance of Impropriety in All Activities.
3. A Justice Should Perform the Duties of Office Fairly, Impartially, and Diligently.
4. A Justice May Engage in Extrajudicial Activities that Are Consistent with the Obligations
of the Judicial Office.
5. A Justice Should Refrain from Political Activity

  • George Conk

The Colorblind Campaign to Undo Civil Rights Progress - Nikole Hannah Jones - The New York Times

The Colorblind Campaign to Undo Civil Rights Progress - The New York Times
By Nikole Hannah Jones

"When this country finally eliminated first slavery and then racial apartheid, it was left with a fundamental question How does a white-majority nation, which for nearly its entire history wielded race-conscious policies and laws that oppressed and excluded Black American, create a society in which race no longer matters?"

Monday, May 27, 2024

What’s New in the 2024 Supreme People’s Court report to the National People’s Congress? | Supreme People's Court Monitor





Leading Supreme People's Court observer Susan Finder has a lot to report about the annual report of 
China's high court''s report to the legislators at the National People's Congress.
But what struck me was the attention to housing, especially in light of the Evergrande bankruptcy.  That mega-developer's collapse left in the lurch thousands who had pre-paid for apartments never built.
And, of course, the pandemic lockdowns and demand spurred by relaxed birth control policies have created demand and construction slowdowns.
- GWC
What’s New in the 2024 Supreme People’s Court report to the National People’s Congress? | Supreme People's Court Monitor
By Susan Finder and Zhu Xinyue
III   Safeguarding and Enhancing People’s Livelihood through  Active Justice

The section title above replaces “The Path of Judicial Services for the People With Chinese Characteristics” in the 2023 report.

New themes introduced include “Supporting Guaranteed Delivery of Commercial Housing and Stable Livelihoods,” to deal with issues related to the ongoing crisis involving real estate developers.

  • Safeguarding Housing Rights: The financial collapse of many real estate developers has meant disputes along the real estate development supply chain. A 2023 SPC judicial interpretation prioritizes homebuyer rights, clarifying the order of claim repayment in disputes over unsuccessful delivery of sold commercial housing.
  • Strengthening Housing Pre-sale Supervision: The SPC issued Judicial Suggestion No. 1 to promote contract online signing and pre-registration, enhance pre-sale funds supervision for commercial housing, strengthen pre-sale information inquiries, and warn about home buying risks.  [These suggestions do not seem to have been made public.]
  • Restructuring the Financial Chain of Homebuying: In response to a financial chain rupture of a private real estate enterprise in Hunan Province, a court-facilitated restructuring revitalized 16.8 billion yuan, resolving housing delivery issues for 16,000 households by facilitating the merger and restructuring of 13 related companies.  This type of case was mentioned in a typical case that the SPC issued last year.

Friday, May 24, 2024

Thomas Edsall - A Consequential President for All the Wrong Reasons - The New York Times

Opinion | A Consequential President for All the Wrong Reasons - The New York Times
By Thomas Edsall

When historians and political scientists rank presidents from best to worst, Donald Trump invariably comes out at the bottom.

This year, to give one example, the 2024 Presidential Greatness Project released the results of a survey of 154 current and former members of the presidents and executive politics section of the American Political Science Association.

The highest ranked included no surprises: on a scale of 0 to 100, Abraham Lincoln (95.03), Franklin Roosevelt (90.83), George Washington (90.32), Teddy Roosevelt (78.58) and Thomas Jefferson (77.53).

Dead last: Donald Trump (10.92), substantially below James Buchanan (16.71), Andrew Johnson (21.56), Franklin Pierce (24.6) and William Henry Harrison (26.01).

There are other ways to rank American presidents, however: How consequential were they?

By these standards, Trump no longer falls at the bottom of the pack. That’s not necessarily a good thing. My view is that Trump is a consequential president for all the wrong reasons.

After the nation rejected the presidential bids of George Wallace, Pat Buchanan and David Duke, Trump demonstrated that the contemporary American electorate would put a candidate who appeals to voters’ worst instincts in the White House.

Trump has capitalized on the anger, fears and resentments of a besieged but fundamentally decent working class to exacerbate ethnonationalist hostility to immigrants and minorities, creating a right-wing populist antidemocratic movement.

Thursday, May 23, 2024

Panel: Christian Supremacy, Antisemitism, and Racism ~ Magda Teter ~ Fordham

~ By Magda Teter

Panel:
Author: Prof. Magda Teter, Professor of History  and the Shvidler Chair in Judaic Studies,  Fordham University

 John Connelly, Department of History, University of California, Berkeley
 Jeannine Hill Fletcher, Professor, Department of Theology, Fordham University
 
Moderator: George W. Conk, Senior Fellow, Stein Center for Law  Ethics, Fordham Law School

 

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Election Countdown, 169 Days to Go: ‘Old Ghosts in New Garments.’ Fallows

Election Countdown, 169 Days to Go: ‘Old Ghosts in New Garments.’ James Fallows

Joe Biden may not be renowned as an orator. His lifelong stutter is one factor. I discussed some other reasons here, including the reality that he is most effective as a messenger when his language calls least attention to itself. But time and again, when the stakes are high, he has come through on big speeches as president. He has done so again.

His State of the Union address two months ago, soon after Robert Hur’s Comey-esque “elderly man with poor memory” pot-shot, was clear in writing and strong in delivery. His four-speech series of addresses on the fundamentals of democracy has been as good an example of sustained discussion of a single topic as we have seen from a modern president.

His commencement address yesterday to the graduating class of “Morehouse Men”—students at the all-male HBCU Morehouse College in Atlanta, brother institution to all-female Spelman College—was another example that deserves study. It showed care in craftsmanship and construction. Its phrasing matched Biden’s own style and diction. It navigated the political difficulties of the moment. And it represented Biden’s attempt to place those difficulties in a larger perspective. (The “as delivered” White House transcript here; a YouTube video from the White House is here.)

Like nearly all commencement speeches, this one was longer—27 minutes—than a warm-day crowd might have wished. The golden rule for commencement speakers is: The shorter, the better, with haiku as the ideal. But everyone cuts sitting presidents extra slack. Their appearances in commencement ceremonies are rarer than you might think. By tradition, a president speaks once each year at a service-academy graduation—the academies take turns on a four-year basis. But beyond that, a president typically makes only one or two additional commencement addresses per year.1 So when a university gets a president to speak, he is expected to offer more than mere bromides, and no one objects if he runs long.

The most interesting structural aspect of Biden’s address was its Saturday theme. Nine years ago, Barack Obama gave what I consider the most accomplished address of his public life. This was his “Amazing Grace” speech at the Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, in remembrance of the many parishioners shot to death there by a young white racist. Obama is remembered for bravely and unexpectedly ending that speech by singing the Amazing Grace song. He built up to that riveting moment with preacher-like but non-preachy recurring references to grace.

Biden’s hold on an audience will never be like Obama’s. But I admired the thread of Saturday that stitched together the parts of his political, personal, and spiritual appeal.


Friday, May 17, 2024

  

Alito’s Inverted Flag Epitomizes the Ethics Crisis at the Court

Image
Credit...Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

By Jesse Wegman

Thanks to Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s neighbors, Jodi Kantor of The Times was able to report a shocking bit of news on Thursday: In January 2021, shortly after the deadly Capitol assault incited by Donald Trump, Alito’s front yard openly displayed an upside-down American flag — an unmistakable pro-Trump symbol used by those who believed the 2020 election was stolen.

But wait: It turns out this wasn’t Alito’s fault. “I had no involvement whatsoever in the flying of the flag,” he told The Times, explaining that the flag was “briefly placed” there by his wife, Martha-Ann, in an escalation of a neighborhood spat that included “objectionable and personally insulting language” on yard signs.

For a guy who earns his paycheck evaluating the quality of arguments, Justice Alito is remarkably bad at coming up with ones in his own defense. Even if he had no role in raising the flag, what stopped him from taking it down immediately and apologizing profusely for his wife’s intemperance? Doesn’t his failure to do so suggest tacit agreement if not outright support — not only for a violent insurrection based on a demonstrable lie but also for one of the litigants who was at that time before his court arguing over the election?

This disregard for the appearance of bias is in line with how Alito and Justice Clarence Thomas, in particular, have long approached their job and the enormous power they wield. (You may recall that Thomas’s wife, Ginni, cosplayed as a legal insurrectionist who tried to overturn the 2020 election.) That disregard extends to the institution of the Supreme Court and to the American people forced to live under its edicts. How are we expected to respect a court that has so little respect for us?

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It’s Time To Amend How We Amend The Constitution: Legal Scholars Call For Limited Constitutional Convention - Yale Journal on Regulation

It’s Time To Amend How We Amend The Constitution: Legal Scholars Call For Limited Constitutional Convention - Yale Journal on Regulation

Our Constitution is not and never was perfect. The Framers intended for it to undergo amendment as required to maintain the spirit of the Revolution and to prevent the recurrence of the weaknesses that saddled our government under the Articles of Confederation. Yet, amending the Constitution has become nearly impossible in our current political environment. Our “frozen” Constitution now ranks among the most difficult to alter the world over.

This status quo cannot persist if our constitutional order is going to withstand threats to its core principles–such as federalism, the separation of powers, and the sovereignty of the people–arising from modern developments. Built-up pressure to amend the Constitution has stressed other political institutions and actors: Congress arguably delegates too much of its legislative power to agencies–power that is then exercised with insufficient oversight; successive presidential administrations have increasingly turned to executive orders to fill in legislative gaps better suited for congressional attention; and the Supreme Court has swung from narrowly interpreting the Constitution to effectively amending it via pathbreaking decisions.

The undersigned call for a Constitutional Convention with a single agenda item: amending how we amend our Constitution

What Israel’s Netzarim Corridor in Gaza reveals about its postwar plans - The Washington Post

October 2023 - April 2024




What Israel’s Netzarim Corridor in Gaza reveals about its postwar plans - The Washington Post

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Christian Supremacy - May 22, 2024 - - Fordham University


Christian Supremacy - May 22, 2024
A conversation with Magda Teter, John Connelly and Jeannine Hill Fletcher
Reckoning with the roots of anti-semitism and racism

RECENCY BIAS AND THE SUPREME COURT: THE PROBLEM IS THE INSTITUTION, NOT THE PEOPLE WHO SIT ON IT Eric J. Segall

 
By Eric J. Segall* [Georgia State]

You seem to consider the judges as ultimate arbiters of all constitutional questions; a very dangerous doctrine, indeed, and one which would place us under the despotism of an oligarchy. The constitution has erected no such single tribunal. –Thomas Jefferson

I. INTRODUCTION 

There is rampant and substantial despair on the political left (and maybe in the center as well) about the Supreme Court’s six-three conservative majority. In just a few years, the Court has decimated women’s reproductive freedoms, enlarged gun rights, essentially ended affirmative action, read the Free Exercise Clause broadly, deleted the  Establishment Clause from the Constitution, and is dramatically cutting back the ability of the administrative state to handle difficult national problems.  The dread is justified. 

This new ultra-conservative Court, after Senator Mitch McConnell’s norm-breaking manipulation of the confirmation process, led to President Biden’s Supreme Court reform commission, which has had no lasting effect and is now just a blip from the past. Additionally, the new “ethics code” the Justices signed on to has no enforcement mechanism and does not count as meaningful reform....

Monday, May 13, 2024

Skidmorizing Chevron: Cabining but Keeping Chevron, by Brittani Randall and Linda D. Jellum - Yale Journal on Regulation


This reasonable sounding approach to avoiding grave wreckage at the Supreme Court is not as moderate as the headline suggests.  In kisor - a case involving VA benefits, Neil Gorsuch took the occasion to launch a full scale attack on deference to agency determinations,  He urged that the Court go "directly back to Skidmore, liberating courts to decide cases based on their independent judgment and “follow [the] agency’s [view] only to the extent it is persuasive."

That's a prescription for judicial marauding through the Code of Federal Regulations.
- GWC

Skidmorizing Chevron: Cabining but Keeping Chevron, by Brittani Randall and Linda D. Jellum - Yale Journal on Regulation
By Brittani Randall is a law student at The University of Idaho College of Law, and Linda D. Jellum is a Professor of Law at The University of Idaho College of Law.

As the Supreme Court ponders what to do with Chevron in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and Relentless Inc., et al. v. Department of Commerce, Idaho’s Simplot test might provide a way to keep but cabin deference.

In 1991, in J.R. Simplot Co. v. Idaho State Tax Comm’n, the Idaho Supreme Court crafted a unique approach to agency deference in a case involving conflicting tax statutes. In J.R. Simplot, the court extensively reviewed the federal and states’ approaches to agency deference. Chevron was at its height in federal court, but states were all over the map. Some—like Utah, Alaska, and Nevada—had rejected the “traditional rule giving great weight to an agency’s interpretation,” while others—like California, Colorado, and Kansas—had continued to invoke the traditional rule, even if they did not always follow it.

After carefully considering the reasons for deferring to agencies, the Idaho Supreme Court developed a four-step test that we will call the Simplot test. Spoiler alert: turns out, the Simplot test is no more than a Chevron/Skidmore mashup!

At Simplot step one, a court must determine whether the agency has in fact been delegated the power to administer the statute. Simplot’s first step is Chevron step zero, answering the question of whether this is the correct agency to interpret the relevant statute.

At Simplot step two, the court must determine whether the agency’s interpretation is reasonable. Simplot’s second step is also Chevron’s second step, answering the question of whether the agency’s interpretation is fair and sensible.

At Simplot step three, the court must determine whether the language at issue in the statute already expressly answers the precise question before the court, because the agency’s interpretation cannot contradict what the legislature has clearly expressed. Simplot’s third step is a textualized version of Chevron’s first step, answering the question of whether the legislature has already spoken to the precise question at issue. Oddly, the Idaho Supreme Court reversed the order of Chevron’s first and second steps without explanation.

But at step four is where things get interesting, and we find vestiges of Skidmore. If after determining that an agency with authority to administer the statute has made a reasonable interpretation of statutory language to answer a question not directly addressed in the statute, then the court moves to step four. At step four, the court must ask whether any of the five rationales used to justify deference are present. If some or all the rationales are missing, then their absence may present “cogent reasons” for the court to adopt an interpretation that differs from the agency’s interpretation. Here are the five rationales:

(1) deference is appropriate when deferring to an agency interpretation would protect important interests that have developed in reliance on a certain interpretation that has existed for many years;

(2) deference is appropriate when an agency interpretation is a “practical” interpretation of general language;

(3) deference is appropriate when the legislature does not alter the statutory text following an agency’s interpretation because a court may presume that by not altering the text, the legislature acquiesced in the agency’s interpretation;

(4) deference is appropriate when an agency interpretation is formulated contemporaneously with the passage of the statute at issue, because this timing may indicate that the agency had insight into the legislative intent behind the legislation;

(5) deference is appropriate when an agency interprets a statute in its area of responsibility because of the agency’s expertise.

These factors may sound familiar. In Skidmore v. Swift & Co., the Supreme Court held that an agency’s interpretation was entitled to deference when it was persuasive. The Court specifically identified three factors that made an agency’s interpretation persuasive: consistency, thoroughness, and validity. Importantly, the Court added a catch-all of persuasive factors: “all other factors which might persuade the court to defer to the agency’s interpretation.” All of the Simplot deference factors are reminiscent of Skidmore’s power-to-persuade factors, such as consistency of the interpretation, practicableness of the interpretation, legislative acquiescence to the interpretation,