Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • U.S. Supreme Court overturned two-step rule in Chevron, upending 40 years of judicial deference to agency interpretation of statutory authority
  • FDA will likely face variety of institutional and legal challenges in coming months and years as it grapples with how to handle Supreme Court’s decision
  • Industry stakeholders must be prepared for potential impact of decision and understand what it means for future of FDA regulation

On June 28, 2024, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the Chevron doctrine in its highly anticipated opinion in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, No. 22-451, 603 U.S. ___, marking what is arguably the most significant doctrinal shift in federal administrative law in the last half-century.

In 1984, the Supreme Court held that in cases involving judicial review of administrative agencies’ statutory interpretation, courts should apply a two-step framework. First, courts were to determine whether Congress had “directly spoken to the precise question at issue.” If the answer was no, then courts were required to uphold the agency’s decision unless the decision was not a “reasonable” construction of the statute. As post-Chevron jurisprudence developed, judicial deference to agencies’ statutory interpretations deterred companies from challenging agencies in court. And although the Chevron two-step framework does not require that courts always agree with an agency’s statutory interpretation, agencies almost always prevailed in cases where a statute was susceptible to different meanings so long as a court could find that the agency’s interpretation was “reasonable.”1

Now, the Supreme Court challenges this assumption. In Loper Bright, the Court departed from its long-standing doctrine and held that judicial review of agency action under the Administrative Procedure Act “may not defer to an agency interpretation of the law simply because a statute is ambiguous.”2 Rather, courts “must exercise their independent judgment.”3