In a refreshingly candid article, Chief Judge Wald of the D.C. Circuit noted in 1986: The flow of membership in the D.C. Circuit . . . is more like what one would expect in Congress with elections every few years, or in the Executive, shifting its key policymakers with each administration. 1 Eleven of the twelve D.C. Circuit judges were appointed by President Reagan or President Carter within the last nine years. Most served previously in policymaking positions in either the legislative or executive branches of government. Based on their record of decisionmaking with respect to judicial review of agency actions, the new members of the D.C. Circuit seem to be experiencing a difficult, and as yet incomplete, transition from their prior acti...