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Cato Podcast

The Infuriating Five of Administrative Law (Part One)

Cato Podcast

Cato Institute

Immigration, News, News Commentary, Peace, 424708, Markets, Government, Libertarian, Policy, Politics, Cato, Defense

4.5979 Ratings

🗓️ 1 March 2022

⏱️ 12 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Will Yeatman details some of the worst cases in American administrative law history.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is the Cato Daily Podcast for Tuesday, March 1st, 2022.

0:06.3

I'm Caleb Brown.

0:07.3

In administrative law, a few big cases stand out.

0:10.6

And for Cato's Will Yeateman, the worst offenders when it comes to the size and

0:14.4

scope of government ought to be called the infuriating five. So in administrative

0:19.2

law what cases made this list and why.

0:23.0

We're going to go back in time a little bit here

0:26.2

and talk about some infuriating cases,

0:29.8

cases that have upset, perturbed, infuriated Will Yeatman on the subject of

0:39.0

administrative law. So before we get to all of that as a prelude, what kind of cases are administrative

0:47.0

law cases? What separates them from other cases that might go before the US Supreme Court.

0:53.4

Administrative law and it's also known as public law is the law of people challenging

1:02.4

governmental action if you will.

1:05.0

You know, we've got this vast and varied administrative state

1:09.0

encompassing well more than 150 odd regulatory bureaucracies,

1:16.4

many of which have the power

1:18.4

to issue regulations with the force and effective law.

1:22.3

Administrative law is the sum of doctrines

1:28.2

that control judicial review,

1:30.6

how courts oversee this administrative policymaking and the extent to which the

1:35.4

regulated parties that regulated entities individuals can challenge state

1:40.2

administrative policymaking. Okay, so number five on your list.

...

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