The Supreme Court gives the right a huge victory over expertise

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The Supreme Court gives the right a huge victory over expertise
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In rejecting the decades-long practice of deferring to government agencies, the conservative court gave the right a huge win in its push to sideline experts.

One of the defining characteristics of this moment in American politics is the widespread rejection of expertise and authority, particularly on the right., handed down Friday. It is certainly a victory for business interests seeking to avoid regulation, but one that sits on a foundational belief that everyone can be an expert, so no one really is., a weekly dive into the data behind the news.

“As if it did not have enough on its plate,” Kagan continued, “the majority turns itself into the country’s administrative czar.”means that businesses frustrated by regulations don’t have to appeal to scientists and bureaucrats but can, instead, hire lawyers and talk to judges — terrain where their odds of success are much higher in part because the judgesIt is also, of course, a reflection of the right’s long-standing effort to undercut the power of the federal government.

In 2022, YouGov asked Americans to whom the government should defer if expert opinions on a complex issue disagreed with majority opinion. A plurality of Democrats chose the experts. Republicans chose the Americans by a 2 to 1 margin.

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