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Cordray and NLRB Appointments Unconstitutional

Reagan Attorney General Ed Meese and Todd Gaziano, both with my employer The Heritage Foundation, have written an excellent piece in the Washington Post explaining why the installation of Richard Cordray as head of the newly created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and Richard Griffin, Sharon Block and Terence Flynn to be on the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) are unconstitutional acts.The president claimed to use the constitutional power of the president to make recess appointments.

As another Heritage colleague, Hans von Spakovsky, explains for Pajamas Media, Congress is not in recess. The Senate actually conducted some very important business during one of the “pro-forma” sessions the White House has called a “gimmick”: On Dec. 23, it passed the payroll tax extension that caused such a political uproar in Washington.

Congress has five options to respond to this power grab by the executive branch of the federal government:

  1. Filibuster all nominations and deny unanimous consent to the waiver of any rule with regard to nominations until these four unconstitutional appointments are rescinded
  2. Condition passage of all must-pass legislation on the rescission of these unconstitutional appointments
  3. Conduct vigorous oversight to demand the production of witnesses and documents supporting the president’s legal theory justifying this unprecedented power grab
  4. Make major cuts in funding of the NLRB and the Department of the Treasury where the CFPB was placed by its authorizing statute
  5. Pursue legal remedies to get those unconstitutionally appointed officials out of office. 

As Meese and Gaziano point out, “if Congress does not resist, the injury is not just to its branch but ultimately to the people.”Separation of powers exists to protect liberty and to protect the rights of democratically elected senators to participate in the nominations process.This is a “tyrannical usurpation of power” by President Obama, and Congress must act quickly to restore an appropriate balance between the executive and legislative branches of the federal government.

Meese and Gaziano write about a 1985 precedent for strong action by the Senate and the options on the table for Congress.

Senators could filibuster all presidential nominations, as Sen. Robert C. Byrd did in 1985 over a lesser recess appointment issue, until Obama rescinds these wrongful appointments. The House or Senate could condition all “must-pass” legislation for the remainder of 2012 on an agreement to rescind these appointments. The House also could require the attorney general to produce legal justification and testify at oversight hearings.

The legislative branch of government has the power to “Advice and Consent” to presidential nominations.  President Obama has violated circumvented that provision in the constitution by falsely claiming that the senate is out of session when they are in session.  Even the Senator Harry Reid (D-NV) of early 2009 would disagree with President Obama today.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in January of 2009 used pro-forma sessions to block President George W. Bush from making last minute recess appointments.

Senate Majority Leader  Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) accused Bush of slow-walking the Democratic picks for those commissions. In addition, Democrats grew fearful that Bush would use recess appointments to install nominees that Democrats had been rejecting for confirmation. So for a two-week break around Thanksgiving 2007, Reid ordered up the pro forma sessions, calling on Sen.  James Webb (D-Va.), who lives closest to the Capitol, to oversee the sessions.

Evidently, Reid has changed his position on this important constitutional issue.  Many lefties are cheering from the cheap seats the actions of President Obama by claiming that the current “pro-forma” sessions of Congress are the functional equivalent of a recess.  Ezra Klein of the Washington Post is one of those justifying this unprecedented exercise of executive power.

The Obama administration is taking the position that, legally speaking, pro forma sessions are recesses — the Constitution is very vague on what is and isn’t a recess — and is making recess appointments anyway.

Andrew Grossman of The Heritage Foundation points out that President Obama’s actions speak louder than words when he signed a bill passed in “pro-forma” session which commenced on December 17, 2011.

Proof is that on December 23, President Obama signed a two-month extension of the payroll tax cut.  He said that Congress passed the bill “in the nick of time” and that it was “a make-or-break moment for the middle class in this country.”  The compromise extension really did come through at the last minute, but in a different sense: most members of the Senate had already departed Washington, D.C.

According to the Obama Administration, the two month extension of payroll taxes was passed during a recess.  Does that mean that the law is invalid?  The Obama Administration is clearly trying to have it both ways by signing a bill that passed in what they would deem a recess, yet later claiming that a following pro-forma session is a recess. 

The President is not empowered by the Constitution to decree when the Congress is or is not in recess.  This tyrannical power grab must not stand. 

 

COMMENTS

  • vaaztx

    ?placed inside the Federal Reserve and is funded by the Fed precisely to keep us from defunding it as the Democrats knew we would.

    • vaaztx

      Ar. 2 ?3 ?1: [The President] may?convene both Houses, or either of them, and?he may adjourn them to such Time as he shall think proper.

      Whether you like what the President did or not, I find it offensive that you suggest the Constitution doesn’t say what it says. Because if we start ignoring the text of the Constitution who says the Democrats won’t just start ignoring things like the 2nd Amendment?

      • DerKrieger

        “adjourn” doesn’t mean recess.

      • Kyle-MI

        What, did you think no one would actually follow your link?

      • jakeofalltrades

        You’re looking for Article 1. Article 2 does not apply because the president did not first convene Congress, and if he did, they would not be in recess and his appointment would have to be approved.

        I have ONLY seen leftists make this argument. Who do you support for president in 2012?

        • vaaztx

          But I may have to rethink that before I get to cast a ballot in April.

          • jakeofalltrades

            without the House’s permission, which was declined. The House can sue the President and maybe the Senate for violating their right to keep Congress out of recess.

          • vaaztx

            ?that this is a political, not a legal question, and in the past the SCOTUS has declined to get involved in such issues. I just don’t see this as clear cut as the cheerleaders quoted in the article make it seem, which can lead to a major let down and disappointment. If we go to the mat and lose on this then Obama is a much stronger position.

            Also, I don’t think that politically that trying to decimate the CPFB is a winner. If the swing voters perceive that we’re trying to fuck them then Obama will get re-elected in a cakewalk. And none of us want that. It’s better to win an put our people in charge of the CPFB.

          • jakeofalltrades

            And I do not believe the political question doctrine applies here. That doctrine applies to disputes best resolved through the political process.

            Here, the House has the power to prevent adjournment of the Senate and has been defied by an unconstitutional recess appointment made while the House was exercising that power. The political process is over. It has been defied. It is now up to the judiciary to issue a declaratory judgment that any action by the affected agencies is without the force of law.

      • Brian Darling

        I should have been more careful with my last paragraph, but you are not being totally honest.
        Article II, Sec. 3 states in part “he may, on extraordinary Occasions, convene both Houses, or either of them, and 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.”
        This power is a means to allow one chamber to adjourn when the other chamber will not allow them to adjourn. That situation may be on point today, yet the President has not used that power to adjourn the Senate. The President can’t reinterpret the word “recess” to suit his ends in one case then disregard that same interpretation in another case.
        What I should have said in my last paragraph is the following:
        “The President is not empowered by the Constitution to interpret the word recess to decide when the Congress is or is not in recess.”

    • bornagainrealist

      Someone please tell me how running against a consumer protection agency will help in the fall?

      • jakeofalltrades

        Last I checked, the Constitution was more important to people than a consumer protection agency,

  • Ausonius

    Excellent article!

    Unfortunately, the 5 points depend upon a Congress with the will and courage – even among the putative opposition known as Republicans – to defend itself against this encroachment and mangling of the separation of powers of our Constitution.

    I see nothing but lapdogs “all the way to the sky,” and therefore MAObama will continue his power-grabbing with impunity.

    I pray that I will be wrong, and fear that I am right.

    • znjs

      6) Piss and moan and talk to the media about “possible” legal remedies you’ll look at, and then do nothing because you want this power when a Republican is President and you really don’t care about the how the President is getting more and more power and deteriorating the checks and balances that make this country great.

      • znjs

        I was thinking about piggybacking off your comment, but then decided to create a separate thread to focus on why they aren’t going to fight this, but must have messed it up somehow.

      • Ausonius

        the impeachment trial would already be organized and the MSM drumbeats would be thundering away 24/7.

        You are quite right: so-called “Big Government Conservatives” running for president would not mind expanded powers.

        Dictatorship is so much more efficient in accomplishing things!

        Does anyone remember Nixon’s tenure and his over-reaching?

        MAObama’s over-reaching will generate very little buzz among the Unwashed, because the MSM will be quiet about it or will shrug it away as nothing special.

      • Michael Dugas

        to do the same thing during a Republican administration they are idiots. Democrats have no problem having their cake and eating it too. They used the same pro forma tool against Bush and logic would state that Republicans would also be able to use it but we see that is not so. If a Republican President did a recess appointment during a pro forma session it would not matter a bit to the Dems and they would yell, scream and use the courts and every other tool at their disposal to stop it. Hypocrisy means NOTHING to the Left. They would be proud of their deceit just as they are now.

    • boonerdan

      6) Piss and moan and talk to the media about ?possible? legal remedies you?ll look at, and then do nothing because you want this power when a Republican is President and you really don?t care about the how the President is getting more and more power and deteriorating the checks and balances that make this country great.

      Sounds like something ‘Tears’ Boehner and the Milk Toast Gang will adopt.

  • DerKrieger

    The Marxists will just attack the GOP as obstructionists to the “people’s” business and the Constitution itself as a hindrance to modern government.

    The GOP has to get out in front of this man on messaging. They continue to let him an the narrative.

    The Left is out of control and as I keep preaching in my diary, only the states have the reserve power to put a stop to this through the collective action (red states of course) of ignoring the federal government. How else is this to be stopped? We obviously can’t count on the GOP in DC.

  • kamiller42

    The GOP and conservatives can get all mad, but like Sean Connery asked Kevin Costner in The Untouchables…. “What are you prepared to do about it?”

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOvH-7lcjb0

    • DerKrieger

      Hoo Yah!

  • Kyle-MI

    Obama wants to use this to distract attention from his lousy economic policies. And he is trying to goad the GOP and conservatives into saying politically stupid things like uttering the word impeachment. Your points 1-4 fall into that trap.

    It still is unconstitutional and sets a very bad precedent. There is no choice but to quietly pursue legal remedies, i.e. point 5.

    • Brian Darling

      It is a trap if conservatives do nothing. Maybe defending the constitutional right of the Senate to “Advise and Consent” to nominees is “politically stupid” in your eyes, but not in my eyes. The politically stupid thing to do would be to do nothing and show the left that conservatives just don’t have the fight in the belly to do anything when the President violates the Constitution.
      If Congress sends out press releases calling this act unconstitutional and outrageous, then they do nothing to fight back, then they will be proven to lack the courage to lead in the next Congress.
      Actions speak louder than law suits and press releases.

      • Kyle-MI

        I am not advocating doing nothing. Someone does need to take this to court.

        Before we jump into a political battle, however, we need to carefully determine the lay of the political land. The problem is that this issue is inside baseball and any campaign against it is simply going to go over the head of most voters. They will not see this as a constitutional issue. The Dems will successfully portray this as another of those insignificant political insider games that has nothing to do with them. (This is not how I feel about it, but it will be how it is perceived.) In short, we will be battling uphill against Dems who hold the political (not moral) high ground.

        And in the mean time, we will be wasting valuable resources that could be fighting on the battleground that favors us. We hold the political high ground on the battle over jobs, spending, and the economy but it won’t do us any good if the Dems bait us into fighting elsewhere.

        It is important. This action does set bad precedent, but fighting against it is not a political winner. Campaigning against it is futile and impractical. The battle belongs in the courts.

  • http://www.doctor-bob.biz rsklaroff

    …so this should be pursued by the House.

    Perhaps, such an effort would provide a modicum of recompense for the lack of any real cuts in the budget, c/o the House leadership.

  • jtlfromfredmd

    will be chosen to send BO a message that he has gone too far? Eeney, meeney, miney, moe, catch a tiger by the toe – if he hollers, let him go – eeney, meeney, miney, moe. I predict that it will be option 6 – none of the above. What courage and fortitude they all possess!! No?

  • quill67

    The house could issue subponeas for each of the new “appointees” everyday to testify. If they try to take any action, they can suponea every person who followed the order of the illegal appointees. EVERYDAY. If they do not show, find them in contempt and throw them in jail!

    Play Hardball.

    • izoneguy

      And keep issuing subpoenas to Holder as well, so he cannot get anything done….

  • http://lazarusreport.blogtownhall.com/ Tom Lesser

    Article 1 Section 5: ?Neither House, during the Session of Congress, shall, without the Consent of the other, adjourn for more than three days, nor to any other Place than that in which the two Houses shall be sitting.?

    Article 2 Section 2: ?The President shall have Power to fill up all Vacancies that may happen during the Recess of the Senate, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the End of their next Session.?

    In a Constitutional context, is ?adjourn? the same as ?recess??

    Why did the framers of the Constitution use two different words?

    • jakeofalltrades

      That could be either a recess or the end of the Congress.

      • joffen1981

        It doesn’t matter whether the Congress looks like it’s in recess or not, the fact is the President has no authority to make this determination. Whether it’s confusing or not if Congress is in session, it is entirely up to the Congress to make this clear. The President has no legal standing.

    • DerKrieger

      In this context adjourn means to end a days session. It’s similar to adjourning a court session during a trial. They’re merely ending activities for a period even though the session itself is still in progress.

  • joffen1981

    I think punishing the NLRB and other solutions misses the point. There is a very strong case to be made that the President has violated the Constitution, and has done so deliberately. This constitutes “high crimes and misdemeanors”, and Congress would be foolish not to pursue this.

  • garythompson

    Obama is quite fond of linking the full year extension of the payroll tax cut (which the republicans already wanted to do but were blocked) to some magical economic engine and he is campaigning on the meme that the Republicans won’t pass it.

    Tie a full year extension of the payroll tax cut to Obama rescinding all four nominees. Then the Republicans can get out in front of the message and claim that Obama’s violation of the Constitution is preventing middle class tax relief. Watch him twist in the wind.

    • dvdmsr

      the house to refuse to not vote for the tax cut (their version) and the house will blink, fall in line, and pass their version.

      • dvdmsr

        nt

  • johnt

    psychopaths do that? Obama is at bottom a cheap hoodlum, a low hustler, who earned his creds with the vote stuffing ACORN mob, & Tony Rezko, & who hung out with American terrorists. Can anybody believe that elevation to the presidency would confer class?
    O looks at the Constitution as he would at a parking ticket that needs fixing. What’s good about this latest outrage is it flushes out the real venom and corruption of the left, paricularly the left media. They’re with this dangerous hoodlum all the way, for the full ride.
    The law means nothing to them either. Expect more and worse as we go into 2012.

  • plwinteregg

    …over whether the ‘pro-forma’ sessions are a recess or not. The issue is not whether the Senate declared a recess, or if the current sessions are valid.

    The Constitution is very clear that the two houses can only go into recess with the permission of the opposite house. Since the House has not given the Senate permission to go into recess, it simply can’t, and the pro-forma sessions are a way to fulfill this Constitutional requirement.

    Obama and the MSM will try to divert folks by arguing over the PF sessions in the Senate, believing that if framed correctly many folks will be fooled by the ‘reasoning’ that these sessions are but a sham. In doing so, they are avoiding the underlying Constitutional requirement, and the truth that the Senate cannot go into recess.

    The discussion of what Reid did during the Bush years is not a direct correlation, as that was done by choice of the Senate and specifically the leadership under Reid.

    The current situation is that the Senate–by the Constitution–cannot go into recess. How they deal with it is their choice, and the PF sessions are their choice.

    Obama has used the Constitution for nothing more than toilet paper on this one. It’s time to get really angry.

    • Brian Darling

      The Senate can’t go into recess, because the House will not let them.

      • plwinteregg

        …how we discuss/argue this. This is not about the PF sessions. This is all about Obama declaring the Senate in recess, something for which he clearly has no Constitutional authority to do. More to the point, due to the very clear separation of powers, he has no authority over the Senate at all.

        At most, he can complain openly about the PF sessions and request the Senate to return to DC. Theoretically, he could even go to the courts to have the PF session declared invalid, which would also force the Senate back to DC.

        But in no stretch of even imaginary Progressive interpretation of the Constitution can he declare the Senate in recess. Period.

        Even for all of the disregard for the Constitution of this administration, this is nothing more than open, blatant tyranny of the Banana Republic sort.

  • Marcus_Traianus

    Nothing. Nothing from the so-called leadership, no coordinated plan with the party. Zilch except a bunch of press releases.

    Boehner, McConnell, and, yes, Priebus should be embarrassed. They should be spitting mad and have their face on every news show and radio program.

    Instead, what do we get? The typical inside the Beltway, oh yeah nobody really cares about this, gee do we really want to call The President on this one sheepish bull****. Same as the debt ceiling and every other major issue they told us “we just don’t understand.

    What a collection of fools and losers we are if we continue to put up with this nonsense.

    I am starting to agree they are a “do-nothing” Congress, because they do nothing for use as a party. They are a bunch of pedestrians and caddies.

    It’s time to start talking seriously about primary challengers for Boehner, McConnell and anyone else in line for leadership behind them unless they agree to fight for us. Ditto Priebus and any other spokesperson for the GOP. Where the hell are these people as Obama does what he wants and laughs in their pathetic faces?

    • Common_Cents

      Its the DC elite political class vs. us when boiled down to its essence. Yeah, they fight a bit and throw some red meat, but when push comes to shove they are WWF staged, cave on big issues and all live the life in DC cocktail party circuit.

      I’m wondering if they don’t mind losing control of house/senate, as its easier to oppose, do a press conference, then go hit the links.

      They get their pensions, insider stock deals, primo benefits, plenty of time off.

      • lineholder

        the left might cook up if they don’t just go along with all of this. That doesn’t excuse it, I know, but I can’t see the Repubs wanting to our nation go so far to the left that Repubs become totally irrelevant. Far from it. I think they believe that if they just go along now, bide their time, then come Nov., everything will change, and they’ll be back in power again.

        The problem with that is that every time they just go along to get along, it decreases any respect that the general public has remaining for them, because very few Americans want to go further down the path of progressivism.

        • smagar

          if the House GOP responds forcefully.

          For most Americans, this is really inside baseball stuff. Most people can’t even name the VP, the Cabinet or their own Senators and Representative. You expect them to study the facts behind separation of powers and recesses fully enough to form an opinion?

          The average American isn’t stupid—but he isn’t worked up enough about this issue to bother about it.

          If we try to make the case, the Dems and the MSM (yes, I repeat myself) can sow enough confusion and misinformation that most people will get frustrated and give up.

          Look at today’s WaPo editorial. It doesn’t matter how strong the law is. If the answers don’t favor the Dems, the MSM will simply look the other way. And Obama knows it.

          By all means, sue and take other measures that will inflict some lasting damage on the Dems. For example, get a court ruling that what O did was unconstitutional. Maybe that ruling will show up around election time.

          But, unless we have a clear path to victory, let’s not stage an open, public fight. The best way to fix the CFPB and NLRB is to have a Republican president and Congress toss them aside in January 2013.

          • lineholder

            just in different words, LOL.

            I think Repubs are expecting the American people to come to their rescue in Nov. 2012 rather than taking on this fight themselves.

            Problem is that if people don’t see Repubs fight on something this significant now, why should they trust them enough to vote Repub in 2012?

            That’s where I think Republicans are really messing up. They should fight because it is the right thing to do to protect and preserve our Constitution, and prove to the American people that they can be trustworthy.

          • theericker

            They need to learn how to come up with powerful and catchy one liners that the casual observer will hear.

            For example “Most real Americans would prefer congress do nothing over going along with Obama’s crazy socialist agenda.”

            Regarding Boehner et al, I am inclined to support whoever challenges him in the primary and/or contribute to a democrat challenger in the general election if needbe. Losing 4 or 5 house seats will not likely change control, but will knock our inexcusably worthless leaders out of their roles. I imagine it would be damn near impossible to get them out of leadership as long as they hold office.

  • paulnashtn

    where are the calls for impeachment after a CLEAR violation of the constitution
    ???

    • Kyle-MI

      With Senator Reid going along with Obama’s actions, no Dem will break ranks. Without any Dem Senators there will be no chance of success. Without that no GOP politician is going to stick their head out.

      Besides it will be easier and faster to get rid of Obama with the election.

  • jakeofalltrades

    See this article.

  • johnt

    Dissolve a parliment, or in effect declare congress dissolved arbitrarily, a thuggish tradition. Note how the media defends him on this. To do so is to claim that Congress sits at the whim of the president. So much for co-equal branches of government.

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