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Refrigerant ruling over AIM Act could tests limits of EPA authority

1 articles / 1 outlets / spread 0.00

Refrigerant ruling over AIM Act could tests limits of EPA authority
justice23 hr agoCoverage Gap

Refrigerant ruling over AIM Act could tests limits of EPA authority

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1 articles1 outletsSpread 0.000 claims
Coverage Gap Analysis
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The story has meaningful coverage, but the source mix is thinner than expected. Broader source coverage is still thin.

Broader source coverage is still thin.
Few medium or high-quality sources are covering this yet.
Few local sources are represented.

Confidence

25%

Gap score

0/100

Sources

1

Usual mix

Private

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From the Left

0 outlets

No coverage from this perspective yet.

From the Center

1 outlet
  • The Washington Times·May 3

    Refrigerant ruling over AIM Act could tests limits of EPA authority

    OPINION: Should a federal agency have the power to take and grant market share across a multibillion-dollar market for reasons of its own choosing? Should an executive agency have the unfettered ability to pick winners and losers for a market that supplies products to nearly every building and vehicle? If someone you have never had the opportunity to vote for has the power to make substantive laws that take away or limit your rights to give them to others — maybe in the name of “equity” — is that consistent with liberty? America’s Founders didn’t think so, and neither does Choice Refrigerants, a small business in Georgia that makes refrigerants used in refrigerators, air conditioners and other cooling machines. Choice Refrigerants has filed a petition for writ of certiorari asking the Supreme Court to take up its case and confirm that Congress gave away its rights-affecting legislative power and violated the nondelegation doctrine when it passed the American Innovation in Manufacturing Act of 2020. The nondelegation doctrine theoretically prevents Congress from divesting itself of legislative power, but in practice, it has been a dead letter for roughly 90 years. Recently, several justices have evinced an interest in resuscitating the doctrine

From the Right

0 outlets

No coverage from this perspective yet.

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Outlets covering this story

The Washington Times

First seen

May 3, 2026

Latest

May 3, 2026

Outlets

1

Diversity

100/100