Administrative Law and Federal Regulatory Agencies
Administrative law governs the authority, procedures, and accountability of federal agencies — the bodies that translate broad congressional mandates into enforceable rules affecting industries, workplaces, financial markets, environmental conditions, and immigration status across the United States. This page covers the structural framework of federal administrative law, the mechanics of rulemaking and adjudication, the major agencies and their enabling statutes, and the boundaries between legitimate regulatory action and reviewable legal error. Understanding how agencies operate is foundational to navigating any area of federal law and its sources.
- Definition and scope
- Core mechanics or structure
- Causal relationships or drivers
- Classification boundaries
- Tradeoffs and tensions
- Common misconceptions
- Checklist or steps (non-advisory)
- Reference table or matrix
- References
Definition and scope
Administrative law is the branch of public law that defines how executive-branch agencies receive, exercise, and are held accountable for delegated governmental power. It sits between constitutional law — which sets the outer boundaries of governmental authority — and statutory law, which creates specific regulatory programs. The Administrative Procedure Act of 1946 (APA), codified at 5 U.S.C. §§ 551–559, 701–706, is the primary federal statute that controls how agencies make rules, conduct hearings, and are judicially reviewed.
The scope of administrative law reaches every cabinet department, independent regulatory commission, and executive agency operating under federal authority. The Office of the Federal Register publishes the daily record of agency activity: the Federal Register contained 95,894 pages of agency documents in 2016 alone, illustrating the volume of regulatory output that operates alongside congressional statutes. Administrative law also encompasses procedural rights — notice, hearing, and appeal — that constrain agency action and connect directly to due process rights in the US.
Core mechanics or structure
Federal administrative law operates through three primary mechanisms: rulemaking, adjudication, and enforcement.
Rulemaking is the process by which agencies promulgate legally binding regulations. The APA distinguishes between two types:
- Informal rulemaking (notice-and-comment): The dominant form, governed by 5 U.S.C. § 553. An agency publishes a proposed rule in the Federal Register, accepts written public comment for a defined period (typically 30–60 days), reviews comments, and publishes a final rule with a statement of basis and purpose. Final rules take effect no sooner than 30 days after publication unless the agency finds good cause for an earlier effective date.
- Formal rulemaking: Required only when the enabling statute demands a rule "on the record after opportunity for an agency hearing." It resembles a trial proceeding, with sworn testimony and cross-examination, and is rare in modern practice.
Adjudication resolves individual cases — license denials, enforcement actions, benefit disputes — through agency hearings. Administrative Law Judges (ALJs), established under 5 U.S.C. § 556, preside over formal adjudications. The Social Security Administration alone employs approximately 1,700 ALJs (SSA Office of Hearings Operations), the largest corps of federal adjudicators in the country.
Enforcement is the investigative and penalty-imposition function. Agencies may issue civil penalties, seek injunctions, revoke licenses, or refer matters for criminal prosecution. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) all maintain dedicated enforcement divisions with statutory penalty authority.
Judicial review of agency action is governed by APA § 706, which authorizes courts to set aside agency action found to be arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, contrary to constitutional right, or in excess of statutory jurisdiction. The Chevron doctrine — established in Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 467 U.S. 837 (1984) — historically directed courts to defer to reasonable agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes, though the Supreme Court's 2024 decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo overruled Chevron, shifting interpretive authority back to courts.
Causal relationships or drivers
Several structural forces explain why administrative agencies, rather than Congress or courts, perform the bulk of federal regulatory work.
Legislative incapacity: Congress lacks the technical expertise and bandwidth to specify detailed rules for industries as complex as telecommunications, pharmaceuticals, or nuclear energy. Broad enabling statutes — the Clean Air Act, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Telecommunications Act of 1996 — delegate standard-setting to agencies that maintain permanent expert staffs.
Speed and adaptability: Article III courts and the full congressional process operate on timelines incompatible with fast-moving technical or market conditions. Agencies can update regulations through notice-and-comment rulemaking faster than statutory amendment.
Specialized adjudication: Patent disputes at the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), immigration cases at the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR), and tax disputes at the United States Tax Court all benefit from adjudicators with domain-specific expertise unavailable in generalist federal courts.
Constitutional delegation: The nondelegation doctrine, rooted in Article I, Section 1, limits how much legislative power Congress may transfer to agencies, but the Supreme Court has applied this doctrine to strike down a statute only twice — in A.L.A. Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States, 295 U.S. 495 (1935), and Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan, 293 U.S. 388 (1935) — leaving broad delegation authority intact for most of the modern regulatory state.
Classification boundaries
Federal agencies fall into distinct structural categories with different accountability relationships:
Executive agencies sit within cabinet departments and are subject to direct presidential control. The Department of Labor (DOL), Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) operate through sub-agencies — OSHA, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), respectively — each with distinct enabling statutes and regulatory jurisdiction.
Independent regulatory commissions are insulated from direct presidential removal. Commissioners serve fixed terms and can be removed only for cause. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), Federal Communications Commission (FCC), Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), and National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) are the principal independent commissions. Their structural independence has been repeatedly litigated, with Humphrey's Executor v. United States, 295 U.S. 602 (1935), establishing the constitutional basis for for-cause removal protections.
Government corporations — such as the United States Postal Service (USPS) and Amtrak — operate under hybrid frameworks that blend governmental authority with commercial operation.
The line between these categories matters for constitutional law foundations, particularly regarding presidential removal power, which the Supreme Court addressed in Seila Law LLC v. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, 591 U.S. 197 (2020), where it held that the CFPB's single-director, for-cause-only removal structure was unconstitutional.
Tradeoffs and tensions
Administrative law is contested terrain across at least 4 recurring axes:
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Agency expertise vs. democratic accountability: Specialized rule-setting improves technical quality but distances regulatory decisions from electoral accountability. Rulemaking by unelected officials on issues like carbon emission limits or pharmaceutical approval standards raises persistent legitimacy questions.
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Deference vs. judicial independence: The post-Chevron landscape, following Loper Bright (2024), requires courts to apply independent judgment to statutory interpretation rather than deferring to agency readings. This shifts power toward the judiciary but may introduce inconsistency across circuits.
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Regulatory speed vs. procedural completeness: Emergency or interim final rules bypass notice-and-comment requirements but face heightened APA challenge risk. Agencies that rush rulemaking to respond to market or public health events often face remand in federal court.
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Enforcement discretion vs. rule of law: Agencies possess broad discretion over which violations to pursue, but selective enforcement claims — alleging impermissible discrimination in targeting — are difficult to litigate under the standard set in United States v. Armstrong, 517 U.S. 456 (1996), requiring a defendant to show both discriminatory effect and discriminatory intent.
These tensions connect to broader disputes over civil litigation process and the scope of federal vs. state court jurisdiction when agency decisions face challenge.
Common misconceptions
Misconception 1: Agency regulations are less legally binding than statutes.
Corrections: Final rules promulgated through notice-and-comment under the APA carry the force of law equivalent to statutes. Violation of a properly enacted regulation can trigger civil penalties, license revocation, or criminal referral, depending on the enabling statute.
Misconception 2: Agencies can regulate any subject within their general policy area.
Correction: Each agency's authority is bounded by its enabling statute. An agency that exceeds that statutory grant acts ultra vires and is subject to invalidation under APA § 706(2)(C). The Supreme Court's "major questions doctrine," applied in West Virginia v. EPA, 597 U.S. 697 (2022), holds that agencies must point to clear congressional authorization for rules of vast economic and political significance.
Misconception 3: Administrative adjudications are informal and produce no binding precedent.
Correction: Agency adjudications can produce published decisions that bind future agency action within that agency's jurisdiction. The NLRB, FTC, and SEC all publish decisions that function as precedent in subsequent proceedings before those bodies.
Misconception 4: Judicial review always reverses agency action.
Correction: The arbitrary-and-capricious standard under APA § 706 is deferential. Courts set aside agency rules only when an agency has not considered relevant factors, relied on factors Congress did not intend, or offered an explanation that runs counter to the evidence. Agencies that build adequate administrative records and respond to significant comments succeed in most APA challenges.
Checklist or steps (non-advisory)
The following sequence describes the standard informal rulemaking process under APA § 553. This is a procedural reference, not legal guidance.
Standard APA Informal Rulemaking Sequence
- [ ] Agency identifies statutory authority in enabling legislation (e.g., Clean Air Act § 111, 42 U.S.C. § 7411)
- [ ] Agency drafts proposed rule and accompanying preamble explaining legal basis and policy rationale
- [ ] Proposed rule is reviewed under Executive Order 12866 by the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) if economically significant (annual effect ≥ $100 million, per OIRA guidance)
- [ ] Proposed rule is published in the Federal Register with a comment period (minimum 30 days; 60 days for significant rules)
- [ ] Agency collects, reviews, and responds in writing to all significant public comments
- [ ] Agency drafts final rule with a "Statement of Basis and Purpose" addressing comments
- [ ] Final rule undergoes second OIRA review if significant
- [ ] Final rule is published in the Federal Register; effective date set (minimum 30 days post-publication absent good cause)
- [ ] Final rule is codified in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)
- [ ] Rule is submitted to Congress under the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. §§ 801–808) for potential disapproval
Reference table or matrix
| Agency | Independent or Executive | Primary Enabling Statute | CFR Title | Key Regulatory Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EPA | Executive (within EOP structure) | Clean Air Act; Clean Water Act | 40 CFR | Environmental standards and enforcement |
| OSHA | Executive (within DOL) | Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 | 29 CFR Part 1900–1999 | Workplace safety standards |
| SEC | Independent Commission | Securities Exchange Act of 1934 | 17 CFR | Securities markets regulation |
| FTC | Independent Commission | FTC Act (15 U.S.C. § 41 et seq.) | 16 CFR | Antitrust and consumer protection |
| FCC | Independent Commission | Communications Act of 1934 | 47 CFR | Telecommunications licensing |
| FERC | Independent Commission | Federal Power Act; Natural Gas Act | 18 CFR | Energy infrastructure and rates |
| NLRB | Independent Board | National Labor Relations Act | 29 CFR Part 100–199 | Labor relations and union elections |
| FDA | Executive (within HHS) | Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act | 21 CFR | Drug and food safety approval |
| USCIS | Executive (within DHS) | Immigration and Nationality Act | 8 CFR | Immigration benefit adjudication |
| USPTO | Executive (within DOC) | Patent Act (35 U.S.C.); Lanham Act | 37 CFR | Patent and trademark examination |
References
- Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 551–559, 701–706 — Office of the Law Revision Counsel, U.S. House of Representatives
- Office of the Federal Register — Federal Register — National Archives and Records Administration
- Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) — Office of Management and Budget
- Code of Federal Regulations — eCFR — National Archives and Records Administration
- Environmental Protection Agency — Enforcement
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration — Enforcement
- Securities and Exchange Commission — Division of Enforcement
- Federal Trade Commission
- Social Security Administration — Office of Hearings Operations
- Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) — U.S. Department of Justice
- United States Tax Court
- United States Patent and Trademark Office
- Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 801–808 — Office of the Law Revision Counsel