with Zack Cooper, Melanie Marlowe, and Christopher Preble
Zack, Melanie, and Christopher reviewed the Council on Foreign Relations’ annual
Preventive Priorities Survey, which asked foreign policy experts to rank 30 current and possible future conflicts relative to their likelihood and impact on U.S. national interests.
Ronald A. Cass | National Affairs
Arguments over deference rules are not merely disputes over a technical issue of administrative law. Deference rules—Chevron most of all—have become newsworthy because the choice among deference rules is consequential. The fight over deference is a proxy for the contest over the size, shape, and nature of government—especially administrative government significantly freed from the constraining influences of Congress and the courts. It is one battleground in the larger struggle of group control versus individual freedom, coercive regimentation versus autonomy, and collectivism versus free enterprise.
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