Recess appointments could put Trump at odds with conservatives on the
Supreme Court
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[December 02, 2024]
By MARK SHERMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans will control the White House and both
houses of Congress come January. But President-elect Donald Trump's
intent to nominate loyalists to fill key Cabinet posts has set up a
possible confrontation with the Senate, which has the constitutional
responsibility for “advice and consent” on presidential nominees.
Trump and his Republican allies are talking about going around the
Senate and using temporary recess appointments, which last no more than
two years.
Invoking that authority could result in a fight that lands at the
Supreme Court. Trump might also have to claim another, never-before-used
power to force the Senate into a recess, if it won't agree to one.
Supreme Court has decided only one recess appointment case
In its 234 years, the Supreme Court has decided only one case involving
recess appointments. In 2014, the justices unanimously ruled that
Democratic President Barack Obama's recess appointments to the National
Labor Relations Board were illegal.
But they disagreed sharply over the reach of the decision. Five justices
backed a limited ruling that held the Senate wasn't actually in recess
when Obama acted and, in any event, a break had to be at least 10 days
before the president could act on his own.
Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for the other four justices, would have
held that the only recess recognized by the Constitution occurs between
the annual sessions of Congress, not breaks taken during a session. That
would have ruled out the appointments Trump may be considering after the
new Congress begins in January and he is sworn into office.
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Conservatives' previous rulings may offer clues
Just two justices, Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor, remain from the
five-justice bloc that took the view that preserved the president's
power to make recess appointments during a session of Congress. Three
others, John Roberts, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, joined the
Scalia opinion that would have made it virtually impossible for any
future president to make recess appointments.
The rest of the court has become more conservative since then, a result
of Trump's three high court appointments in his first term. Justices
Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett have no record on
this issue, which rarely arises in the courts. Nor does Justice Ketanji
Brown Jackson, a 2022 appointee of Democratic President Joe Biden.
There is tension between respect for precedent and original meaning
A more conservative Supreme Court might come out differently today,
though it’s by no means certain. Once the court decides a case, the
ruling is regarded as precedent that is not lightly discarded. So even
some justices who initially dissent from a ruling will go along in later
cases on a similar topic.
Scalia, an icon of the right, applied his originalist approach to the
Constitution to conclude that there was little doubt what the framers
were trying to do.
The whole point of the constitutional provision on recess appointments,
adopted in 1787 in the era of horse and buggy, was that the Senate could
not quickly be summoned to fill critical vacancies, he wrote.
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The Capitol is seen on Nov. 14, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam
Zuhaib, File)
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Reading a summary of his opinion aloud in the courtroom on June 26,
2014, Scalia said the power to make recess appointments “is an
anachronism.”
The Senate always can be convened on short notice to consider a
president’s nominations, he said.
“The only remaining practical use for the recess appointment power
is the ignoble one of enabling presidents to circumvent the Senate’s
role in the appointment process, which is precisely what happened
here,” Scalia said.
How could the issue return to the high court?
It's not likely to happen quickly. Only someone who has been
affected by an action taken by an official who was given a recess
appointment would have the legal right, or standing, to sue. In the
NLRB case, Obama made his recess appointments in January 2012.
The board then ruled against Noel Canning, a soft drink bottling
company in Yakima, Washington, in a dispute over contract
negotiations with a local Teamsters union. The company sued,
claiming that the NLRB decision against it was not valid because the
board members were not properly appointed and that the board did not
have enough members to do business without the improperly appointed
officials.
The Supreme Court's ultimate decision came nearly 2 1/2 years later.
Who's who among recess appointments
Among the most prominent people who were first given recess
appointments and later confirmed by the Senate are Chief Justice
Earl Warren, Justice William Brennan and Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan. Among those who left office after failing to win a
Senate vote is John Bolton, who was given a recess appointment as
U.N. ambassador under Republican President George W. Bush.
Trump could try to force a congressional recess
A separate novel legal issue could arise if Trump were to invoke a
constitutional provision that his allies suggested would allow him
to force the Senate to adjourn, even if doesn't want to, and enable
him to make recess appointments.
Article II, Section 3 of the Constitution includes a clause about
congressional adjournments that has never been invoked. Trump's
allies read it as giving the chief executive the power step in when
the House and Senate can’t agree on when to adjourn. The provision
reads that “in case of disagreement between them, with respect to
the time of adjournment, he may adjourn them to such time as he
shall think proper.”
But some scholars, including conservative ones, argue that the House
has no power to force the Senate to adjourn, and vice versa.
Congressional adjournments are spelled out in Article I, which
requires one chamber to consent when the other wants to take a break
of more than three days. Under this view, the president could
intervene only when one house objects to the other's adjournment
plan.
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