Last Updated : 18-06-2013 09:24


 
 

US Court rejects Obama move to fill posts

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In a ruling that called into question nearly two centuries of presidential “recess” appointments that bypass the Senate confirmation process, a federal appeals court ruled on Friday that President Obama violated the Constitution when he installed three officials on the National Labor Relations Board a year ago.

 The ruling was a blow to the administration and a victory for Mr. Obama’s Republican critics — and a handful of liberal ones — who had accused him of improperly asserting that he could make the appointments under his executive powers. The administration had argued that the president could decide that senators were really on a lengthy recess even though the Senate considered itself to be meeting in “pro forma” sessions.

But the court went beyond the narrow dispute over pro forma sessions and issued a far more sweeping ruling than expected. Legal specialists said its reasoning would virtually eliminate the recess appointment power for all future presidents at a time when it has become increasingly difficult to win Senate confirmation for nominees.

“If this opinion stands, I think it will fundamentally alter the balance between the Senate and the president by limiting the president’s ability to keep offices filled,” said John P. Elwood, who handled recess appointment issues for the Justice Department during the administration of President George W. Bush. “This is certainly a red-letter day in presidential appointment power.”

The Constitution, written at a time when it could take weeks for members of Congress to get to the capital, allows presidents to fill vacancies temporarily during recesses for positions that would otherwise require Senate confirmation. In recent years, as senators have frequently balked at consenting to executive appointments, that authority has served as a safety valve for presidents of both parties.

Mr. Obama has made about 32 such appointments, including that of Richard Cordray, as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. President Bill Clinton made 139, while Mr. Bush made 171, including those of John R. Bolton as ambassador to the United Nations and two appeals court judges, William H. Pryor Jr. and Charles W. Pickering Sr.

Nearly all of those appointments would be unconstitutional under the rationale of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. It ruled that presidents may bypass the confirmation process only during the sort of recess that occurs between formal sessions of Congress, a gap that generally arises just once a year and sometimes is skipped, rather than other breaks throughout the year. Two of the three judges on the panel also ruled that presidents may fill only vacancies that arise during that same recess.

Presidents have used recess appointments to fill vacancies that opened before a recess since the 1820s, and have made recess appointments during Senate breaks in the midst of sessions going back to 1867. But the three judges, all appointed by Republicans, said the original meaning of the words used in the Constitution clashed with subsequent historical practices.

Jay Carney, the White House press secretary, said: “The decision is novel and unprecedented. It contradicts 150 years of practice by Democratic and Republican administrations. So we respectfully but strongly disagree with the ruling.” Mr. Carney did not say whether the Justice Department would appeal it.

The ruling came in a lawsuit brought by a Pepsi-Cola bottler from Washington State that challenged a National Labor Relations Board decision against the company in a labor dispute. The bottler argued, and the court agreed, that the three Obama appointments were invalid and that the five-seat board lacked a quorum to take any action.

While the ruling’s immediate impact was to invalidate the decision in the bottler’s case, it could also paralyze the agency by raising the possibility that all the board’s decisions from the past year, involving about 300 cases, could also be challenged and nullified, as well as any future ones. The decision also casts a cloud over Mr. Cordray’s appointment.

Mark G. Pearce, the N.L.R.B.’s chairman, said the board “respectfully disagrees with today’s decision and believes that the president’s position in the matter will ultimately be upheld.” He noted that similar questions about the recess appointments had been raised in more than a dozen cases pending in other courts of appeals.

Among the decisions that could be vacated are three recent rulings in which the board has assumed a powerful role in telling companies that they cannot issue blanket prohibitions on what their employees can say on Facebook, Twitter and other social media.
Union officials voiced concern on Friday that if the federal court’s ruling denies the labor board a quorum, it could take years for the board to be able to act in legal disputes involving unionization drives, strikes or the firings of pro-union workers.
 The current dispute can be traced back to 2007, when Democrats took control of the Senate. Hoping to block Mr. Bush from making any more unilateral appointments, they did not formally recess before going home for Thanksgiving. Instead, they stayed in pro forma session, meaning a member came into the nearly empty chamber every third day and banged the gavel. The idea was that the novel tactic would legally break up the long recess into a series of short ones believed to be too brief for recess appointments.

Senate Democrats repeated the move for the rest of the Bush presidency, and Mr. Bush did not challenge it.

Under Mr. Obama, Republicans turned the tables by using the power of the House to block the Senate from adjourning for more than three days. But last January, Mr. Obama decided to challenge the new tactic by declaring the pro forma sessions a sham and appointing the three labor board members, along with Mr. Cordray.

The court rejected the Justice Department’s argument in brief but scathing language.

“An interpretation of ‘the recess’ that permits the president to decide when the Senate is in recess would demolish the checks and balances inherent in the advice-and-consent requirement, giving the president free rein to appoint his desired nominees at any time he pleases, whether that time be a weekend, lunch, or even when the Senate is in session and he is merely displeased with its inaction,” wrote Judge David B. Sentelle. “This cannot be the law.”

Republicans, who have portrayed Mr. Obama’s four appointments as a power grab, quickly celebrated the outcome. The Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky, said the ruling “reaffirmed that the Constitution is not an inconvenience but the law of the land.”

Mr. Elwood, the former Bush administration lawyer, said the reasoning could also disrupt other seemingly settled actions, like cases reviewed by appeals courts in which a judge had received such an appointment.

“You know there are people sitting in prisons around the country who will become very excited when they learn of this ruling,” he said. (NY Times)


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Comments  

 
-3+69 # Rushan Hameed 2013-01-26 05:30
Dear Obama.............plase change the cheif justice just like we SRILANKANS did.........
- via DM Android App
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-0+31 # Perumal 2013-01-26 12:30
Ignore the appeal court ruling just as our president and his brother did!
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-14+8 # Fusion 2013-01-26 14:51
Unlike Pres. MR, Pres. Obama does not have enough numbers in the congress. Oh and FYI, in US supreme court judges and other critical positions are selected by the president. US judiciary is NOT as independent as several other developed nations.
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-2+4 # krishan 2013-01-27 06:01
FYI: oh remember, senate have to confirm the nominees. Well obama's bank account is way smaller that some of our leaders
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-0+3 # Fusion 2013-01-27 08:26
And it'll only be blocked by the senate with sufficient numbers. Otherwise the partisan choice will be selected. This is why you get liberal/conservative supreme-court judges, pro-life/pro-choice supreme-court judges, anti-gay judges etc. US supreme court is very partisan and manipulated by both parties. Thats not a sign of a truly independent judiciary. There are many other developed nations with lot more independent judiciaries. Many are European countries.
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-2+66 # kane 2013-01-26 08:50
We always critisize US. What the judiciary does in US cannot be even dreamed in Sri Lanka. So much for the decmocrazy in SL.
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-0+16 # misunderstood 2013-01-26 10:40
Minister of plug removal, please note the above comment!!
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-1+25 # MalcomX 2013-01-26 08:56
this is how we call the mireacle of Asia
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-0+59 # KC Sampath Perera 2013-01-26 09:03
Why cant Mr.Obama buy some senators to make a majority, impeach Chief Justice & bring an amendment to the constitution ?
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-24+10 # Budhist 2013-01-26 09:13
What a third class third world thinking!!!!!
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-0+33 # DN 2013-01-26 09:07
Mr. Obama, impeach the federal appeals court.
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-0+12 # Bandara 2013-01-26 10:35
Exactly, the Sri Lankan way. Obama has to learn a lot from MR
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-0+3 # krishan 2013-01-27 06:02
Please appoint Mr Wimal as an advisor. P.S need a language translater
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-0+12 # meenavan 2013-01-26 09:45
Mr Obama visit Srilanka and take tution and get the advice from our president
Reply
 
 
-0+8 # Mutu 2013-01-26 09:47
"Obamata enna kiyamu,

Apen igena ganna Kiyamu"

"Lankawe, ape Lankewe"
Reply
 
 
-0+9 # buruwa 2013-01-26 10:03
This is a very good time MR can strengthen relations between Sri Lanka & US.

Dear President MR , please send Prof GL foreign minister to USA to give advice to Obama on how to win this situation. No body else in the world except our president & foreign minister will be able to advice Obma to overcome this issue.
Reply
 
 
-1+4 # michael 2013-01-26 10:03
SL is One Man Rule for everything, US is not a One Man Ruled Country. Thats the difference.
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-7+1 # kevin-sl 2013-01-26 11:19
The administration had argued that the president could decide that senators were really on a lengthy recess even though the Senate considered itself to be meeting in “pro forma” sessions???????????? US officers condemed the sl move.....now wat? no one is their to condem obama's move?...........u have to do ur own work first....rather than interfering to others politics.
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-0+5 # Simon Templer 2013-01-26 12:02
Mr. Obama should have known better. This is USA, not Sri Lanka, for goodness sake!
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-0+5 # Namal 2013-01-26 12:30
Get Thugish supporters to cry out-"Janadhipathy Uththareetharay i!" Hic Hic
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-0+5 # mervyn perera 2013-01-26 13:53
President Obama, please get in touch with Mr and get some tution to over come this situ. He will give u some dead ropes to ruin your country .
Reply
 
 
-0+8 # jayampathi 2013-01-26 14:01
Obama, you can't do the things like in Sri Lanka because you do not have uneducated ministers and threewheel thugs.
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-0+7 # Sumudu Fernando 2013-01-26 14:28
Dear Mr. Obama. you have lot of choices. You can impeach the Chief Justice or threaten the Appeal Court Judges or, you can make a protest by paid people against the judgement or simply ignore the judgement saying that you are supreme and judiciary can't interfere in your work or else spend couple of millions offer some posts and bribes and buy senators.
Reply
 
 
-0+3 # Nimal 2013-01-26 17:37
Why people compare and talk about USA with Srilanka............majority of Americans even they don't know what Srilanka is ? where ? believe me.
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-0+2 # MSM 2013-01-26 18:09
Send Mervyn to US in support of Obama, now that he has no electorate.
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-0+2 # Yuri 2013-01-26 21:39
wHY nOT VIMAL WITH MERVYN
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-0+5 # Calistus Jayatilleke 2013-01-27 11:02
"Amerikawe eheme wunath, Lankawe ehema wenne ne" There are a lot of things Obama can learn from our President, but then Obama is a decent gentleman who follows the rule of law and would not even think of coming down to the low level of a thug.
Reply
 

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