Supreme Court won't hear challenge to structure of Consumer Product Safety Commission
CBSN
Washington — The Supreme Court on Monday turned away a challenge to the structure of the Consumer Product Safety Commission and a restriction on the president's ability to remove its five commissioners, leaving in place a lower court ruling that upheld that protection.
The dispute followed the Supreme Court's 2020 decision invalidating the structure of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which was led by a director who could only be removed by the president for "inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office." The court's conservative majority ruled that violated the separation of powers, and its director had to be removable by the president at will.
It's also the latest in a series of cases that have challenged the power of federal agencies, which the Supreme Court has sought to rein in through a string of decisions. The most significant of those rulings came in June, when the conservative majority overturned a 40-year-old decision that said courts must defer to an agency's reasonable interpretation of an ambiguous law passed by Congress.
After midnight on July 6, Sonya Massey called 911 to report a prowler. When sheriff's deputies responded, she answered the door in her nightgown, thanking and welcoming them into her home in Springfield, Illinois. But two minutes later, Sangamon County Deputy Sean Grayson took aim at Massey's face and fired a fatal gunshot, killing her in her kitchen. The morning prior, her mother Donna had warned police that her daughter was in the middle of a mental health crisis.
It is a typical election year scene: A Congressional candidate working the crowd at a college football game. But Sarah McBride's simple act of shaking hands at Delaware State University could lead to a turning point in American history. If elected, she would become the first trans member of the U.S. House of Representatives.