Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

High court hears presidenti­al-power arguments

- JESSICA GRESKO

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court wrestled Tuesday with how much power the president should have to fire the head of an independen­t agency, a question important to future presidents of both parties.

The high court heard arguments in a case involving the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the agency Congress created in response to the 2008 financial crisis.

The agency was the brainchild of Massachuse­tts senator and Democratic presidenti­al candidate Elizabeth Warren.

Trump’s administra­tion argued that the president should be able to fire the bureau’s head for any reason. It was unclear from arguments how the court might come out, but the case seemed to divide the court’s liberal and conservati­ve members, with Chief Justice John Roberts’ vote key to the outcome.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh, Trump’s most recent appointee to the court, suggested existing restrictio­ns on the president’s ability to fire the head of the agency are “troubling” because they mean that a new president could be saddled with a bureau director appointed in the previous administra­tion.

“The next president in 2021 or 2025, or whenever, will have to deal with a CFPB director appointed by the prior president potentiall­y for his or her whole term without being able … to do anything about that difference in policy,” Kavanaugh said.

But Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg seemed willing to let the restrictio­ns stand, describing them as “modest.”

“It stops the president from at whim removing someone, replacing someone with someone who is loyal to the president rather than to the consumers that the bureau is set up to serve,” she said.

Under the Dodd-Frank Act that created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, its director is appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate to a five-year term. The president can remove a director only for “inefficien­cy, neglect of duty or malfeasanc­e in office.”

Defenders of the law’s removal provision say it insulates the agency’s head from presidenti­al pressure. But detractors say the restrictio­n is unconstitu­tional and improperly limits the power of the president.

The impact of the justices’ decision in the case could go beyond the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau because the heads of other so-called independen­t agencies have a similar restrictio­n on being fired. Those agencies include the Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n, Federal Trade Commission, Federal Communicat­ions Commission and Securities and Exchange Commission. Unlike the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, however, those agencies are headed by multi-member boards.

The case was brought to the court by the Orange County, Calif.-based consumer law firm Seila Law. As part of an investigat­ion, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau demanded informatio­n and documents from the firm, which is run by a solo practition­er. Seila Law responded by challengin­g the bureau’s structure. Two lower courts ruled against the law firm, upholding the restrictio­ns on the president’s power to remove the agency’s director. The fact that the dispute in front of the justices wasn’t the result of the president trying to fire the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s director weighed on at least one justice.

“Shouldn’t we do what we’ve done for over 200 years of this country and wait until there’s an actual dispute between the president and a director that he or she … wants to fire?” Justice Sonia Sotomayor asked.

A decision in the case is expected by the end of June.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States