Federal Communications Commission v. Consumers’ Research Again

So what is at issue?

The Funding Practice is Documented

Three of the justices believe the Universal Service Fund is illegal

Perhaps for this reason, Justice Clarence Thomas suggested a completely novel way to invalidate the Fund. Thomas suggests the nondelegation doctrine should apply with more force in taxing cases, limiting Congress’s power to determine how much a federal agency may raise.

However, one problem with Thomas’s approach is the Court held in Skinner v. Mid-America Pipeline Co. (1989) the Constitution does not “require the application of a different and stricter nondelegation doctrine in cases where Congress delegates discretionary authority to the Executive under its taxing power.”

Thomas’s preferred result would require the Court to overrule Skinner.

Meanwhile, Justice Samuel Alito followed his typical practice of peppering the side countering Republican orthodoxy with a series of unrelated questions. This in the hopes they would stumble over one of them. He was joined in this tactic by Justice Gorsuch. 

Over the course of the argument, Alito and Gorsuch complained the FCC created a corporation to advise it on how to set rates. Of which the taxing power can potentially be used to destroy companies. However, the FCC sought input from the same companies they are taxing. At one point, Gorsuch went off on a strange tangent about how the government’s decision to break up “Ma Bell” in 1982 created other telephone monopolies. 

None of these arguments are relevant to whether the Universal Service Fund is constitutional, at least under existing law.

Meanwhile, the Court’s other Republicans asked some skeptical questions of the two lawyers who defended the Fund, but they ultimately seemed to conclude that this particular nondelegation challenge is unworkable. 

Justice Brett Kavanaugh, for example, did ask acting Solicitor General Sarah Harris how to distinguish between a tax and a “fee,” a question that suggests that Kavanaugh has some sympathy for Thomas’s position, but ultimately seemed satisfied with Harris’s response that this distinction is “unbelievably murky in practice.”

Similarly, while Justice Amy Coney Barrett asked Harris to distinguish this law from other hypothetical laws that would raise more serious nondelegation questions, such as a law that merely instructed the IRS to raise enough money to provide “food for the needy,” she too seemed skeptical that this particular law is unconstitutional.

Notably, Barrett threw cold water on Thomas’s suggestion that there should be a special rule for taxes. Congress, she noted, could potentially solve the problem by imposing a cap as high as $3 trillion on the Fund’s ability to raise money, but that would be an empty requirement that amounts to nothing more than throwing “out a number for the sake of throwing out a number.”

The Court could still use this case to seize power

So, even if the Court rejects the exceedingly weak attack on the law at issue in this case, it could still use this case to achieve a power grab. Gorsuch’s framework would transfer a great deal of power from federal agencies, which are controlled by an elected president to a judiciary dominated by judges Republicans who serve for life. Such a transfer would mean the American people would have far less control over how they are governed.