The Review Layer Doesn't Fix It — Three Things Agency Review Does Instead
In 2018, Attorney General Jeff Sessions reached into a single immigration case, certified it to himself, and overruled the precedent that had let domestic violence survivors qualify for asylum. In 2021, Garland certified it back. In 2025, Bondy certified it away again. Three reversals on the same doctrine in seven years — no statute changed, no rulemaking happened. One signature each time.
In this episode — the second in a three-part series on how agencies actually produce outcomes — Gwen and Marc move up a level from the hearing room and ask whether internal appellate review fixes the variation E13 documented. The textbook answer is yes: that's what review is for. The real answer is that "internal review" describes three very different machines, and none is primarily in the business of producing consistency.
* The APA baseline is permissive. 5 USC 557 gives the reviewing body "all the powers which it would have in making the initial decision" — including the power to redo credibility findings from a cold transcript. The ALJ who sat three feet from the witness gets reversed; the federal court then defers to the agency under substantial evidence review. The one person who actually saw the testimony is the one whose findings get displaced.
* Three agencies, three pullbacks. Social Security walks the default back via 20 CFR 404.970 — the Appeals Council acts only on legal error or want of substantial evidence. Immigration walks it back furthest via 8 CFR 1003.1 — IJ fact findings get clear-error review. The SEC operates closest to the default, where "all the powers" actually bites.
* Model 1 — Social Security: review mostly doesn't happen. The Appeals Council grants review in roughly 15-20% of cases. The rest get a one-paragraph denial. That denial opens the 60-day window to federal court, but reads to a lay claimant like a final rejection — because in ordinary English "denied" means you lost, while in admin-law English it means you've exhausted and the clock is running. Represented claimants know this. Unrepresented claimants miss the window and lose by default.
* Model 2 — Immigration: review is a policy instrument. The BIA designates decisions as precedential, binding every IJ in the country. Under 8 CFR 1003.1(h), the Attorney General can pull any case — pending or decided — and write a precedential opinion on it. Matter of A-R-C-G (2014), Matter of A-B- (2018), Garland's vacatur (2021), Matter of S-F-M (2025): the same doctrine swung four times across four administrations through a single referral mechanism. That isn't error correction. It's substantive policymaking through the review channel.
* Model 3 — Enforcement (SEC, FTC, NLRB): review is automatic and institutionally tilted. Every ALJ decision goes up. About three-quarters of SEC reversals favor the enforcement division — finding violations the ALJ didn't or raising penalties the ALJ imposed. The Commission supervises the enforcement staff, sets priorities, allocates their budget, and then sits as the appellate tribunal reviewing whether that same staff proved its case. No bad faith required; the incentives only run one way.
Three failure modes, one conclusion: SSA fails by not reviewing; immigration fails by reviewing through a politically directed mechanism whose priorities shift with administrations; enforcement fails by reviewing through a body with an institutional stake in the result. Review corrects some errors and generates precedent where precedent gets designated. What it does not do — anywhere — is pull similar cases toward similar outcomes.
Next episode: agencies don't shape outcomes by correcting decisions. They shape the conditions under which decisions get made.