This case arises from the dismissal of a petition to vacate an arbitral, award pursuant to section 10 of the Federal Arbitration Act (the “FAA” or the “Act”), 9 U.S.C. § 10. It requires us to reconsider the continuing viability of our Court’s precedent in
Greenberg v. Bear, Stearns & Co.,
We would not need to decide whether Greenberg remains good law if, as Appellant argues, federal-question jurisdiction exists on the face of the petition because of an arbitration panel’s alleged manifest disregard of a self-regulatory organization’s internal rule. But because the arbitration panel’s conduct implicates no federal law and thus cannot form the basis of jurisdiction, Greenberg’s continued viability takes center stage. We conclude that Greenberg cannot survive Vaden’s later-established precedent; accordingly, we vacate the order and the judgment of the District Court.
*374 BACKGROUND 1
In June 2013, Petitioner-Appellant Drew Doscher — the onetime co-head of sales and trading for The Seaport Group, LLC and Sea' Port Group Securities, LLC (together, “Seaport”) — commenced arbitration against his former employers; both are members of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA”). 2 Doscher also included the individual Respondents-Appellees — the two founders of Seaport and his former co-head of sales and trading — as well as the other three entity Respondents-Appellees. His initial statement of claim against his counterparties alleged breach of contract, retaliatory discharge, and unjust enrichment, but he later amended his statement to add a claim for securities fraud under' section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”), 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Rule 10b-5 of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5. Doscher sought more than $15 million in damages; ultimately, on October 22, 2013, the arbitral panel awarded him almost $2.3 million, with a potential additional commission.
On January 20, 2015, Doscher filed a § 10 petition to vacate and modify in part the award in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Furman, /.). His petition identified two grounds for vacatur: (1) the arbitration panel failed to ensure that documentary evidence was fully and timely made available to Doscher, thereby warranting vaca-tur under § 10(a)(3), and (2) the arbitration panel acted in manifest disregard of FIN-RA Rule 13505 requiring parties to cooperate in discovery. Doscher asserted that the District Court possessed subject matter jurisdiction because, first, FINRA Rule 13505 was a rule of federal law and the petition thus stated a federal question on its face, and, second, that his section 10(b) claim in the underlying arbitration conferred federal-question jurisdiction. On August 5, 2015, the District Court issued a memorandum opinion and order rejecting both arguments. First, it held that violations of internal FINRA rules do not present questions of federal law, and second, it held that Doseher’s reliance on his section 10(b) claim was “squarely foreclosed” by
Greenberg,
which the District Court concluded remained good law.
Doscher,
DISCUSSION
Both grounds for subject matter jurisdiction asserted by Doscher turn on questions of law, which we review
de novo. See Hachamovitch v. DeBuono,
I.
As explained in
Greenberg,
federal-question jurisdiction lies on the face of the petition where “the petitioner complains principally and in good faith that the award was rendered in manifest disregard of federal law.”
Greenberg,
Doscher argues that the internal rules of self-regulatory organizations (“SROs”) such as FINRA are federal law, because those rules are subject to SEC approval, abrogation, or modification, see 15 U.S.C. § 78s(b)-(c), and because SROs are obligated both to abide by and to enforce their own internal rules, see id. § 78s(g). He specifically alleges that the arbitration panel failed to enforce FINRA Rule 13505, which provides, in full, that “[t]he parties must cooperate to the fullest extent practicable in the exchange of documents and information to expedite the arbitration.”
In support of his argument, Doscher relies on a recent decision of our Court,
NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc. v. UBS Securities, LLC,
Doscher’s case is built on a distinctly different and, unfortunately for him, unstable foundation. As discussed above, the Exchange Act requires FINRA to subject its internal rules to SEC approval, abrogation, or modification. See 15 U.S.C. § 78s(b)(l), (c). 4 The Exchange Act also requires FINRA to comply with its own internal rules and to enforce compliance by its members and associated persons. Id. § 78s(g)(l)(B). While Doscher must allege that the arbitration panel manifestly disregarded a rule of federal law, federal law imposes obligations only on self-regulatory organizations — not on arbitration panels applying their rules. Moreover, the rule implicated here is one step further removed: it directs “[t]he parties [to] cooperate to the fullest extent practicable.” FINRA Rule 13505 (emphasis added). Doscher’s claim is, in essence, that the Exchange Act requires FINRA to require the arbitration panel to require the parties *376 to cooperate, and the parties did not cooperate. The only federal obligation is the one imposed by the Exchange Act on FINRA, and none of FINRA’s conduct is implicated by Doscher’s petition. Doscher’s asserted violation is simply too attenuated to constitute a colorable claim that any obligation or duty of federal law was manifestly disregarded. Thus, this case is wholly unlike NASDAQ, in which an obligation imposed by federal law on an SRO — to operate a fair and orderly market — was a necessary element of the state law actions.
Doscher’s position is not without some support. He directs our attention to
Sacks v. Dietrich,
In reaching this conclusion, the court relied heavily on a prior Ninth Circuit precedent,
Sparta Surgical Corp. v. National Ass’n of Securities Dealers, Inc.,
With due respect to our sister circuit, its reasoning is unpersuasive. There is a critical difference between cases like Sparta and NASDAQ involving allegations that the SRO breached its own internal rules and cases like Sacks and Doscher’s involving allegations that someone other than the SRO violated the internal rules. In the former, the SRO’s conduct may breach § 78s(g)(1), while in the latter, neither the cause of action nor any necessary element of it involves adjudicating any breach of a federal obligation.
More importantly, however, whatever force existed in the Ninth Circuit’s conclusion that any violation of internal SRO rules falls categorically within 15 U.S.C. § 78aa’s grant of “exclusive [federal] jurisdiction of violations of [Chapter 2B of Title 15] or the rules and regulations thereunder,” it is no longer tenable following the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. v. Manning,
— U.S. -,
Doscher’s petition does not present a facial claim of any manifest disregard of federal law. All that remains is to check Greenberg’s pulse for vital signs in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in Vaden.
*378 II.
It is a longstanding rule of our Circuit that a three-judge panel is bound by a prior panel’s decisipn until it is overruled either by this Court sitting
en banc
or by the Supreme Court.
See United States v. Wilkerson,
To qualify as an intervening decision, the Supreme Court’s conclusion in a particular case must have “broke[n] the link ... on which we premised our [prior] decision,”
Finkel,
A less-than-stringent application of the standards for overruling prior decisions not only calls into question a panel’s respect for its predecessors but also increases uncertainty in the law by revisiting precedent without cause. Nonetheless, a three-judge panel must answer a question
*379
squarely presented if no other avenue for resolution of the case exists.
See Sullivan,
A.
Section 4 of the Act provides, in relevant part:
A party aggrieved by the alleged failure, neglect, or refusal of another to arbitrate under a written agreement for arbitration may petition any United States district court which, save for such agreement, would have jurisdiction under Title 28, in a civil action or in admiralty of the subject matter of a suit arising out of the controversy between the parties, for an order directing that such arbitration proceed in the manner provided for in such agreement.
9 U.S.C. § 4 (emphasis added). By contrast, section 10 of the Act provides that “the United States court in and for the district wherein the award was made may make an order vacating the award upon the application of any party to the arbitration” if certain grounds for vacatur exist. Id. § 10(a) (emphasis added). 10 The critical question before us is whether the textual difference between § 4 and § 10 means that a look-through approach applies only to the former.
Westmoreland
rejected the look-through approach with respect to § 4 based on the decisions of a number of district courts in our Circuit, as well as the decisions of our sister circuits.
See
This distinction would truly be “bizarre,” because “[t]he interest of the federal court in determining whether the arbitration award was entered in manifest disregard of the federal law ... would seem to be far greater than the federal interest in seeing that the claims could be arbitrated.”
Id.
(alterations in original) (quoting
Valenzuela Bock,
*380
Four years later, a second panel of this Court was asked to determine whether it possessed federal-question jurisdiction over a § 10 petition. It rejected the look-through approach for such petitions squarely and exclusively on the basis of
Westmoreland. See Greenberg,
As with a motion under § 4, the only federal rights that a motion under § 10 necessarily implicates are those created by the FAA itself, which rights do not give rise to federal question jurisdiction. In both contexts, there is no necessary link between the requested relief and the character of the underlying dispute. For example, a petition to compel arbitration because the dispute falls within the scope of an arbitration clause, or to vacate an award because the arbitrators exceeded their powers under that clause, will turn on the interpretation of the clause, regardless of whether the actual dispute implicates any federal laws.
Id. It went on to conclude, however, that if a petition raised an argument “that the award was rendered in manifest disregard, of federal law, a substantial federal question is presented and the federal courts have jurisdiction to entertain the petition.” Id. at 27.
Nine years after
Greenberg,
the Supreme Court expressly overruled
West-moreland
in its
Vaden
decision. It began by reaffirming its longstanding conclusion that the Act “is something of an anomaly in the realm of federal legislation: It bestows no federal jurisdiction but rather requires for access to a federal forum an independent jurisdictional basis over the parties’ dispute.”
Vaden,
This rule was, the Court held, driven by the text of § 4:
The phrase “save for [the arbitration] agreement” indicates that the district court should assume the absence of the arbitration agreement and determine whether it “would have jurisdiction under title 28” without it. Jurisdiction over what? The text of § 4 refers us to “the controversy between the parties!,]” ... [which is] most straightforwardly read to mean the “substantive conflict between the parties.”
Id.
(first alteration in original) (citations omitted) (quoting § 4). The Court noted that a majority of the federal courts of appeals had rejected such an approach but concluded that the “ouster theory” explanation on which most relied was not persuasive: if any lingering ouster doctrine existed, section 2 of the Act, which declared all arbitration agreements valid and enforceable, “directly attended to the problem.”
Id.
at 64,
It would permit a federal court to entertain a § 4 petition only when a federal-question suit is already before the court, when the parties satisfy the requirements for diversity-of-citizenship juris *381 diction, or when the dispute over arbi-trability involves a maritime contract.
Id.
at 65,
B.
We think it clear that
Vaden
satisfies the standard for an intervening Supreme Court decision that “casts doubt on the prior ruling” in
Greenberg. Finkel,
Vaden provides us with three critical pieces of guidance. First, it reiterated the longstanding rule that the Act’s provisions do not bestow or enlarge subject matter jurisdiction. Second, it relied heavily upon the text of, and interaction between, the relevant provisions of the Act. Third, it identified the practical consequences resulting from the interpretive choices. The application of these three guideposts, however, is significantly more complicated.
Beginning with the most obvious point, § 10 lacks the textual “save for” clause contained in § 4. This distinction is not to be taken lightly, particularly in the face of the Supreme Court’s statement that “[t]he text of § 4 drives our conclusion” adopting the look-through approach.
Vaden,
Vaden
repeated the Supreme Court’s longstanding conclusion that the Act “bestows no federal jurisdiction but rather requires for access to a federal forum an independent jurisdictional basis over the parties’ dispute.”
The only reasonable reading of Vaden’s jurisdictional analysis thus makes clear two conclusions. First, the district court *383 possessed jurisdiction only by operation of § 1331. Second, the federal question required by § 1331 arose from the underlying dispute, not the face of the petition. These conclusions, however, pose a challenge to the proposition that no look-through approach is appropriate in § 10 petitions, based solely on the statutory text.
Pre-Vaden,
rejecting the look-through approach with respect to all of the Act’s provisions made sense, because a federal court simply compared its jurisdictional statutes to the face of the petition.
See Greenberg,
The inconsistency here is evident: if “§ 4 of the FAA does not enlarge federal-court jurisdiction,”
e.g., Vaden,
Thus, there is some tension between two controlling principles in
Vaden:
the first emphasizing § 4’s text in concluding that a court has federal-question jurisdiction over § 4 petitions based on the underlying substantive dispute,
see
This tension is further resolved when we examine the nature and function of the “save for” clause in § 4 and the language of the Act’s other remedies. To some degree, each of the Act’s sections contains some language identifying which courts are authorized to issue which remedies. The most consistent statutory interpretation is to read the “save for” clause as defining the availability of the remedy, rather than a court’s jurisdiction. Because Congress intended to ensure the broadest availability possible for compulsion of arbitration, § 4 authorizes it in the context of every dispute over which Title 28 confers jurisdiction. The lack of the “save for” clause and the presence of other text narrowing the availability of the remedies in the Act’s other sections similarly authorize particular remedies to issue in particular courts to serve important congressional interests. Specifically, the Act’s other sections largely ground their authorizing language by *385 reference to geography, not the jurisdiction of the issuing court.
For example, the remedy permitting a federal court to compel the attendance of witnesses limits its authorization to “the United States district court for the district in which such arbitrators, or a majority of them, are sitting.” 9 U.S.C. § 7.
18
Section 9 uses the same geographical hook, only linked to the district “within which such award was made” and also expressly establishes personal jurisdiction over the parties; §§ 10-11 are similarly geographically connected to the location of the arbitration. The identification of district courts by geography in §§ 7 and 9-11 performs functions more analogous to venue or personal jurisdiction than to subject matter jurisdiction.
19
These sections signal nothing about jurisdiction, suggesting — consistent with
Vaden
— that they do not affect the ordinary jurisdictional inquiry, which is focused on the underlying dispute. There is thus no reason to construe the “save for” clause — or its absence from the other remedies — as governing the predicate question of whether a federal court possesses jurisdiction over the dispute at all.
20
Construing the language of these sections as authorizing the availability of the remedies, rather than controlling jurisdiction over the dispute, is therefore a more consistent interpretation of the statute as a whole,
see King,
It is worth pausing briefly to consider the purposes for which Congress passed the Act. The Supreme Court has repeatedly stated that the Act, particularly § 2, “is a congressional declaration of a liberal federal policy favoring arbitration agreements” whose effect “is to create a body of federal substantive law of arbitrability, applicable to any arbitration agreement within the coverage of the Act.”
Moses H. Cone Mem. Hosp.,
A construction of the Act’s provisions as lacking jurisdictional impact is not only consistent with but also well suited to these congressional purposes. Under this approach, if a federal court would possess federal-question jurisdiction over the dispute when pleaded in a complaint, the federal courts are also able to enforce Congress’s narrow and defined remedies in the same controversy. The Act thus favors arbitration by constraining the role of the federal courts where arbitration agreements exist, without displacing their ability to enforce the remedies Congress created in disputes in which they would otherwise be the determinative forum.
See Moses H. Cone,
Finally, we note that applying a look-through approach to the entire Act also prevents absurd and illogical discrepancies, the final animating principle we identified in
Vaden.
As detailed above, absurd or bizarre inconsistencies in jurisdiction among the Act’s provisions were a central concern in both our prior decisions.
See Greenberg,
We have just recently held that § 3’s mandatory “shall” language requires a federal court to stay, rather than dismiss, a case if it is referred to arbitration and a stay is requested by a party.
See Katz v. Celico P’ship,
Likewise, there is a certain absurdity to an interpretation that permits parties to file motions to compel arbitration in any case where the underlying dispute raises a federal question but precludes them from seeking the same federal court’s aid under the Act’s other remedial provisions related to the same dispute. Our sister circuit has posited an argument why there may be a disparity between congressional interests in § 4 and in § 10 — specifically, that “[t]he central federal interest was enforcement of agreements to arbitrate, not review of arbitration decisions” and therefore “once the arbitration agreement is enforced, there exists no compelling need for the federal courts to be involved.”
Minor v. Prudential Sec., Inc.,
If enforcement were Congress’s only goal, however, it would have had no need to pass §§ 10 or 11 at all. Merely enacting §§ 2 and 3 — declaring arbitration agreements enforceable and providing for a stay and referral to arbitration of disputes in federal court governed by such an agreement — would suffice to ensure that federal courts did not sidestep arbitration agreements.
See Hall St. Assocs.,
The bizarre jurisdictional tangle resulting from a look-through approach to § 4 and a face-of-the-petition approach to the other remedies will produce the exact opposite of the Act’s goals. Intelligent practitioners who wish to preserve access to federal courts for later disputes over arbitrators, subpoenas, or final awards will attempt to “lock in” jurisdiction by filing a federal suit first, followed by motions to compel and a stay of proceedings. In other words, it will increase the number of parties “seeking federal adjudication of the very questions [they] want[] to arbitrate rather than litigate” — again, the same perverse incentive and procedural incongruity identified by the
Vaden
Court.
Finally, we note that, in a twist of irony, a post-Vaden conclusion that § 10 requires a federal question on the face of the petition ■ seems oddly to mimic the kind of “ouster” that concerned the Westmoreland and Greenberg panels and, to a lesser degree, the Vaden Court. In other words, if the substantive dispute between the parties is otherwise cognizable before a federal district court, the limitation to the face of the petition seems to restrict the federal courts not on the basis of principles like res judicata or enforceability of arbitration agreements — which are rules of decision— but on the basis of a lack of jurisdiction. Thus, federal courts have been “ousted” of jurisdiction over a substantive dispute between the parties that they would otherwise be empowered under § 1331 to hear, merely because of the presence of an arbitration agreement. By contrast, if we conclude that federal-question jurisdiction arises from the underlying dispute, the arbitration agreement limits the remedies a federal court may employ but does not affect the court’s jurisdiction. This result seems to us the more internally consistent approach, given the current state of Supreme Court precedent.
Returning to where we began, we have confronted the difficult task of reconciling the guiding principles that the Supreme Court has handed down — principles which are admittedly in some tension. To read Vaden’s text-driven analysis as a jurisdictional inquiry would, on the surface, lead us to reject the look-through approach. But that result would require us, as a matter of internal consistency, to conclude that § 4 did exactly what the Supreme Court says it does not do: enlarge a federal court’s jurisdiction. Further, it would produce anomalous discrepancies in the administration of the Act that both we and the Supreme Court have consistently rejected as impermissible results. We think the only way to reconcile this tension is to adopt the following principles:
First, the existence of féderal-question jurisdiction over an FAA petition turns on whether the district court would possess jurisdiction over the underlying dispute under the standards of § 1331;
Second, the “save for” clause in §4 evinces congressional authorization for the remedy of compulsion of arbitration in any district court with jurisdiction; and
Third, the Act’s other 'sections similarly authorize particular courts with jurisdiction to issue particular remedies but do not affect the jurisdictional inquiry.
Having conducted this analysis, we must now conclude that
Vaden,
as an intervening Supreme Court decision, has rendered
Greenberg’s
result fundamentally inconsistent with the Act’s statutory context and judicial interpretations. We are therefore obliged to overrule it and adopt the rule that a federal district court faced with a § 10 petition may “look through” the petition to the underlying dispute, applying to it the ordinary rules of federal-question jurisdiction and the principles laid out by the majority in
Vaden.
Because the District Court concluded below that a look-through approach was foreclosed by
Greenberg,
it did not conduct an analysis of the underlying dispute. We think the proper disposition is therefore to vacate the order and the judgment and remand for consideration of that question in the first instance.
See Schonfeld v. Hilliard,
CONCLUSION
In summary, we reject Doscher’s argument that his § 10 petition alleges, on its face, a manifest disregard of federal law, because the petition does not necessarily *389 present a substantial question of any violation of a federal duty or obligation. Thus, squarely faced with the question of Green-berg’s continuing validity, we conclude that Vaden not only cast doubt on our precedent but rendered its holding fundamentally inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s analysis of jurisdictional inquiries under the Act. Accordingly, we overrule Green-berg and conclude that federal courts may “look through” § 10 petitions, applying the ordinary principles of federal-question jurisdiction to the underlying dispute as defined by Vaden. The order and the judgment of the District Court are VACATED, and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The facts here are drawn from the District Court’s August 5, 2015 memorandum opinion and order.
See Doscher v. Sea Port Group Sec., LLC,
No. 15-CV-384 (JMF),
. FINRA is a "self-regulatory organization” registered under section 15A of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78o-3, and subject to oversight under section 19 of the same act,
id.
§ 78s.
See Fiero v. Fin. Indus. Regulatory Auth., Inc.,
. After the Supreme Court held that § 10 provides the exclusive grounds for vacatur of an arbitration award,
see Hall St. Assocs., L.L.C. v. Mattel, Inc.,
. Internal rules must be approved by the SEC if the rule "is consistent with the requirements of this chapter and the rules and regulations issued under this chapter that are applicable to” the SRO. § 78s(b)(2)(C)(I). The rule is also deemed approved by default if the SEC fails to approve or disapprove the rule within the deadlines provided by the Exchange Act. See § 78s(b)(2)(D).
. NASD was the predecessor organization to FINRA.
See Fiero,
.
Sparta's
interpretation of the scope of § 78aa did not necessarily make sense prior to
Manning
either. Section 19 of the Exchange Act, for example, requires compliance by an SRO with “the provisions of this chapter, the rules and regulations thereunder,
and its own rules,"
§78s(g)(l) (emphasis added). The Act thus clearly distinguishes between "rules and regulations thereunder” and internal SRO rules, and "[glenerally, identical words used in different parts of the same statute are presumed to have the same meaning,”
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. v. Dabit,
Concluding that the Exchange Act’s phrase "rules and regulations thereunder” includes internal SRO rules would also have the necessary result under § 78(g)(1) of requiring each individual SRO to comply with the rules of
every other
SRO. This interpretation not only produces absurd results but would turn the requirement of compliance with an SRO’s "own rules” in § 78s(g)(1) into surplusage, thus running contrary to two canons of construction at once.
See Duncan v. Walker,
. Although it is unnecessary to decide conclusively, we nonetheless note that
Manning's
second category is identical to the basis asserted for jurisdiction in
NASDAQ. See NASDAQ,
. We have not been particularly clear whether this latter situation is merely an application of the rule, recognizing that the Supreme Court may “implicitly” overrule the “rationale” of one of our precedents, e.g.,
United States v. Santiago,
. In addition, this opinion was circulated to all judges of this Court prior to filing, and we received no objection.
See In re Zarnel,
. Sections 9 and 11 of the Act contain substantially identical language to § 10; all three lack the italicized clause in § 4. See 9 U.S.C. §§ 9-11.
. In fact, two non-precedential decisions of our Court have suggested — if not directly stated — that
Vaden
may now permit a look-through approach in the § 10 context.
See Giusti v. Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, LLC,
. It is primarily for this reason that several district courts have declined to apply
Vaden
to the Act’s provisions other than § 4.
See Doscher,
. The five-Justice majority concluded that the substantive dispute was the recovery of past-due charges by a card-issuing bank, and the cardholders’ counterclaims alleging that the charges were preempted by the Federal Deposit Insurance Act could not, under the well-pleaded complaint rule, constitute the required federal question.
Id.
at 66-67,
. Although
Greenberg
staled that "[j]urisdiction would plainly lie if, among other things, ... the claim arose in admiralty,”
. A possible counterargument would say that § 4 does not actually enlarge federal-question jurisdiction under § 1331, it merely applies those rules to one dispute, instead of another. We think this argument is a distinction without a difference. While the standards for
pleading
jurisdiction may remain the same, construing § 4 — but not § 10 — to reach the substantive "dispute” for purposes of ascertaining § 1331 jurisdiction is functionally identical to extending § 1331’s reach over the class of disputes over which it has cogni
*384
zance. A court’s "jurisdiction” — also called its competence — is its "power to decide a case or issue a decree.”
Jurisdiction,
Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014);
see also Rhode Island v. Massachusetts,
.
See also Vaden,
. This is effectively an argument
reductio ad absurdum,
demonstrating that the result of rejecting the look-through approach is incompatible with a controlling Supreme Court rule.
See, e.g., Corley v. United States,
. This geographical limitation would have made particular sense at the time of the Act’s passing. Prior to the 2013 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, a federal district court’s subpoena power was generally limited to within the district or within 100 miles of the place of compliance. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(b)(2) (2007) (amended 2013).
. One remedial provision contains no identifiers as to a particular court’s jurisdiction and simply refers to "the court.” 9 U.S.C. § 5. However, in context, this omission also makes sense: § 5 operates as a kind of “add-on” remedy to a § 4 petition to compel arbitration and merely provides default rules for appointing an arbitrator in the event an arbitration agreement is silent.
.That is not to say § 4’s "save for” clause had no role at all in Vaden’s jurisdictional analysis. If anything, it indicated that Congress understood and intended for § 1331 jurisdiction to be considered on the basis of the underlying dispute. But there is also no indication that Congress intended something else to govern jurisdiction in petitions under the rest of the Act, and — to the contrary — Supreme Court precedent precludes us from so holding.
. Like we do here, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia expressly noted this discrepancy and identified it as the same artificial distinction rejected in
Vaden. See Crews,
