Addendum to the Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.
The Commission's primary contention in its petition for rehearing is that we erroneously declined to defer to the Commission's interpretation of the statutory term "member" under Chevron. We did not do so because we perceived serious constitutional problems with the Commission's interpretation and we thought its interpretation was inconsistent with the Supreme Court's reading of the statute in NRWC. FEC v. National Right to Work Comm.,
We also said that we "would" hold the Commission's rule arbitrary and capricious-if we determined it was authorized by the statute-because it inexplicably excluded certain labor unions and farm and rural electric cooperatives from its membership requirements. We did not expressly determine the issue because petitioners had not squarely raised that argument. tipon review of the briefs, however, we see that although petitioners did not use the phrase "arbitrary and capricious," they argued that if we reached the second step of Chevron, we should hold that the Commission's construction of the statute was unreasonable, in part because of those exemptions. Petitioners also claimed that the Commission's treatment of certain unions undermined the rule's rationale. We have previously recognized that analytically our inquiry at the second step of Chevron, i.e., whether an ambiguous statute has been interpreted reasonably, overlaps with the arbitrary and capricious standard. See National Ass'n of Regulatory Utility Comm'rs v. ICC, 41 F.8d 721, 726-27 (D.C.Cir.1994). In this case we think petitioners' alternative argument was mislabeled; it was actually a claim that the Commission unreasonably applied the authority which the Commission claims it had under the statute. That is, of course, a garden variety APA arbitrary and capricious claim, and we should treat it as
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such.
See Arent v. Shalala,
