Interestingly, the opinion was written by a Bush appointee who is the son of Ann Gorsuch, not someone likely to be a knee-jerk enviro. He was not amused by the arguments, writing the following:
Yes, the district court rejected all three arguments. But for reasons known only to it, [appellant] EELI has appealed just the district court’s disposition under Baldwin. So whether Colorado’s law survives the Pike or Philadelphia tests may be interesting questions, but they are ones that will have to await resolution in some other case some other day.and
EELI’s contrary position would also risk serious problems of overinclusion. After all, if any state regulation that “control[s] . . . conduct” out of state is per se unconstitutional, wouldn’t we have to strike down state health and safety regulations that require out-of-state manufacturers to alter their designs or labels? See supra at 9. Certainly EELI offers no limiting principle that might prevent that possibility or others like it. Instead, it seems to embrace such results and, in this way, it seems to call on us not merely to respect the actual holdings of the most dormant authorities in all of dormant commerce clause jurisprudence but to revive and rebuild them on the basis of dicta into a weapon far more powerful than Pike or Philadelphia. That’s an audacious invitation we think the Court unlikely to take up, especially given its remarks about the limits of Baldwin doctrine in Walsh, and it’s a novel lawmaking project we decline to take up on our own.
That second issue in particular is telling. If you're going to try to get courts to extend the law in a new direction, you're more likely to win if you can tell the court that it's just a wee extension, almost perfectly justified by precedent, and clearly limited from making a hash of prior decisions. If instead you have visions of grandeur, you can take a different route, but it didn't work so well here.
I went to the Schnare's web page to look at their litigation victories, and I guess we can say they've been industrious about filing FOIA requests.
One other thing: this type of litigation based on the dormant commerce clause is making use of classic judicial activism, but apparently that's no big deal.
Nice find, indeed a good blog.
ReplyDeleteHey Rabett, you should write lies about people. Of course, then you wouldn't write at all, would you?
ReplyDeletehttps://thelukewarmersway.wordpress.com/2015/03/04/there-is-a-consensus-on-climate-change-there-is-also-a-klimate-konsensus/comment-page-1/#comment-8393
Timmy Worstall? Eli knows about those libertarian economists http://jules-klimaat.blogspot.com/2015/03/report-tobacco-institutes-1-million.html”
1) I’m not an economist.
2) I’m not a libertarian.
3) I’ve never had any tobacco money.
4) I’ve been arguing for something like the Rabett plan (ie, let’s just have a damn carbon tax and get it done) for a decade now. As Eli knows, given that he knows that William Connelly argues for it and he comments there and has seen that Connelly argues for it on the grounds that I do.
Hell, I’ve argued at the Adam Smith Institute, Forbes and all those sorts of “right wing” places that the answer is to have that goddam carbon tax now.”
He's not even American. So every word you wrote was a lie.
ReplyDeleteIf Colorado killed off a far fetched attempt by Alec Baldwin to buy power out of state and stretch himself to Philadelphia then we see an audacious invitation to use a schnare to fill a foie gras within the commerce clause. Or something like that.
ReplyDeleteTom, wash your face and lie down for a while. Breathe deeply. Try to sleep.
ReplyDeleteObviously the denier meltdown is well under way, it's no wonder they are pouring over the law books to effectively resort to overt fascism.
ReplyDelete