Op-Ed: The Supreme Court must stop Louisiana’s retroactive lawsuits

Op-Ed: The Supreme Court must stop Louisiana’s retroactive lawsuits

Spread the love

On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in Chevron v. Plaquemines Parish on a threshold jurisdictional question. The Court’s answer could have sweeping consequences for the energy industry and all federal contractors, determining whether such cases belong in federal court when defendants acted under federal direction.

Central to the case is the federal officer removal statute. Congress updated this statute over the decades, as recently as 2011 under President Barack Obama, no longer requiring a direct line of control and thereby recognizing the importance that such disputes be heard in federal, not state, courts. Accordingly, the Court should rule that the case properly belongs in federal court.

The case’s historical background is that during World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt effectively nationalized America’s energy industry (as he did others). At the time, the Petroleum Administration for War dictated almost every aspect of production, from the rig to the refinery to the railroads. Federal officials decided, among other things, how much crude oil to extract from Louisiana (more, more, more), the refineries to process it, how to distribute it, and what resources and products were needed for Allied victory, especially Avgas, a specialized type of high-octane aviation gasoline that was critical to Allied air power and victory and depended on Louisiana crude oil. Moreover, the federal government had the power to seize products and raw materials, repeatedly enlarge capacity, and increase production quotas at will. Thus, the government made America’s energy producers into its instruments of wartime policy and production in direct service of national defense, under extraordinary federal direction and supervision.

Accordingly, it is wrong and unfair for Louisiana and its municipalities, 80 years later, to sue American energy producers in Louisiana state courts for alleged environmental damage, especially when the local governments are deeply entwined and in cahoots with the plaintiffs’ attorneys, so much so that, in a perturbing surrender of Louisiana’s sovereignty to the plaintiffs’ attorneys, their contract prohibits Louisiana from endorsing any substantive defenses, even if legally valid.

A traditional originalist approach shows that the statute’s plain text and Congress’s original intent of the statute and its 2011 amendment control, and that disputes involving private companies obeying federal government directives to produce critical wartime needs, are exactly what the statute intended to be heard in federal court. State or local governments cannot use their own state courts to second-guess or nullify federal policy and law, whether regarding defense, environmental, or something else. Additionally, the risk of conflict or bias in state court is too high because the state and local governments are parties to the litigation. For example, Louisiana Judge Michael Clement, Gov. Jeff Landry, and Attorney General Liz Murrill all received substantial campaign contributions from the plaintiffs’ attorneys and their associated PACs.

Thus, the Court’s decision will have ramifications not only for this case but also for environmental “lawfare” and other bogus lawsuits designed to bankrupt unpopular industries sprung from the unholy alliance of states, municipalities, and plaintiffs’ lawyers. This is especially true for any industry or company that touches upon national defense, which today is about half of all federal contracts. During World War II, the federal government conscripted many non-defense companies, in addition to the energy industry, to manufacture weapons and war equipment. Ford built almost half of all B-24 Liberator bombers, and Chrysler built tanks and B-26 Marauder and B-29 Superfortress bombers. General Motors, Underwood Typewriter, National Postal Meter, IBM, and Rock-Ola (jukeboxes and pinball machines) manufactured millions of M1 Carbines, and Singer Sewing Machine and Union Switch & Signal (railroad signaling equipment) manufactured 1911A1 pistols, among other things. Furthermore, this case will likely affect whether one state court’s rulings may effectively dictate other states’ and the nation’s policy choices, especially where Congress already spoke on the issue.

Paul Clement, the petitioners’ lawyer and former U.S. Solicitor General, correctly argued in his certiorari petition that the lawsuits against American energy producers are “an effort by local governments to obtain massive recoveries from companies that assisted the federal war effort long ago.” The Constitution created a federalist system precisely to prevent that kind of retroactive targeting. No one in 1942 thought that extracting, producing, refining, and transporting critical oil and petroleum products to win World War II would someday be alleged to be a violation of a state coastal statute for billions of dollars in damages.

The Supreme Court should reverse the Fifth Circuit and reaffirm what every generation of Congress and every prior Court has always understood: that when the federal government calls, those who answer deserve federal court protection from “state court proceedings that may reflect local prejudice.” The justices should ensure that logic and the law, not local politics, have the final word and that local courts may not rewrite America’s national interests generations after the fact.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: New Lenox School District 122 Board for Nov. 2025

New Lenox School District 122 Board Meeting | Nov. 2025 The New Lenox School District 122 Board of Education met on Tuesday, November 18, 2025, at the Haven Administration Center....
Will County Board Graphic.02

County Board Approves Women’s Residential Treatment Center in Joliet

Will County Board Meeting | December 18, 2025 Article Summary: The Will County Board unanimously approved zoning changes to allow the Existential Counselor Society to open a women’s residential treatment...
White business owners are biggest share of Illinois' diversity-preferred contract group

White business owners are biggest share of Illinois’ diversity-preferred contract group

By Jared Strong | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois' initiative to boost the amount of state contract money it awards to businesses owned by racial...
Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: New Lenox Village Board for December 15, 2025

New Lenox Village Board Meeting | December 15, 2025 The New Lenox Village Board on Monday, Dec. 15, 2025, met for a regular session focused on infrastructure upgrades, public safety...
new-lenox-township.2

Township Abates $285,000 in Taxes for Senior Housing Bonds

New Lenox Township Board Meeting | Nov. 13, 2025 Article Summary: The Board of Trustees passed a resolution to abate taxes related to the 2002 Senior Housing Bond payment. The...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board for December 18, 2025

Will County Board Meeting | December 18, 2025 The Will County Board held its regular meeting on Thursday, December 18, 2025, focusing heavily on land use, transportation infrastructure, and public...
2025 illegal entries in Texas: Nearly half the gotaways reported in previous years

2025 illegal entries in Texas: Nearly half the gotaways reported in previous years

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square In President Donald Trump’s first year in office, illegal border crossers in one year in Texas totaled nearly half of gotaways reported in previous years...
Nashville speaker maker plans to move overseas to avoid tariffs

Nashville speaker maker plans to move overseas to avoid tariffs

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The owner of a storied Nashville speaker company says he'll pay lower taxes by moving overseas, rather than trying to build in the U.S. It's...
Supreme Court could redefine 14th Amendment application

Supreme Court could redefine 14th Amendment application

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court will decide a case in 2026 challenging President Donald Trump’s authority to end birthright citizenship. Trump v. Barbara challenges Trump’s executive...
Missouri year in review: capital gains eliminated, Medicaid increased

Missouri year in review: capital gains eliminated, Medicaid increased

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square In 2025, Missouri lawmakers passed legislation to eliminate its capital gains tax, phase out the state income tax and expand Medicaid legislation. The Club for...
2025 in review: Historic border security actions taken by Trump

2025 in review: Historic border security actions taken by Trump

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square On the first day of his second term in office, President Donald Trump issued multiple executive orders, followed by multiple policy changes, that in one...
Free speech under fire nearly 300 times in 2025 on campus

Free speech under fire nearly 300 times in 2025 on campus

By Tate MillerThe Center Square Two hundred seventy-four incidents involving interference to free speech have taken place so far on college campuses in 2025, according to FIRE data, an increase...
IL rep: As if Bears 'had a plan to rob the bank' before considering Indiana

IL rep: As if Bears ‘had a plan to rob the bank’ before considering Indiana

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois state rep whose district includes Soldier Field says the Chicago Bears are bluffing by suggesting...
New-Lenox-School-122.5

Ten New Lenox Schools Rated “Commendable” as State Changes Testing Metrics

New Lenox School District 122 Board Meeting | Nov. 2025 Article Summary:Assistant Superintendent Dr. Peggy Cucci presented the annual student achievement report, noting that all ten eligible district schools received...
Screenshot 2025-12-20 at 12.27.17 PM

Lincoln-Way High Schools Maintain Top State Rankings; EL Progress Jumps

Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 Meeting | December 18, 2025 Article Summary: The 2025 Illinois Report Card data reveals that Lincoln-Way Central and East have maintained "Exemplary" status, while...