El Dorado News-Times

Senate Republican­s Are Blocking Trump Appointmen­ts

- PHIL KERPEN Mr. Kerpen is the president of American Commitment and the author of "Democracy Denied. " Kerpen can be reached at phil@ americanco­mmitment.org.

President Trump has hundreds of unfilled presidenti­ally-appointed positions because Democrats have stalled the nomination­s process out as much as their diminished power in the post-nuclear Senate has allowed.

But it is the Republican majority that has placed a total blockade on the usual safety valve for temporary appointmen­ts - the recess appointmen­t power - by refusing to go on recess for the last two years. And with Democrats set to take the House and be in position to deny the Senate consent to recess starting January 3, there is a real possibilit­y that President Trump will go an entire presidenti­al term without being able to make recess appointmen­ts.

It has been nearly eight years since the United States Senate officially recessed - a streak aided by the practice of holding so-called pro forma sessions every three days throughout every adjournmen­t. Those sessions - which consist of nothing but gaveling in and out and where, by unanimous consent, no business is conducted - serve a single purpose: to deny the president of the United States the recess appointmen­t power, which is a constituti­onally authorized power to temporaril­y install nominees to executive and judicial posts without Senate advice and consent.

President Bill Clinton used the recess appointmen­t power 139 times, including 96 full-time positions. President George W. Bush used it 171 times, including 99 full-time positions. But recess appointmen­ts under Bush screeched to a halt in his final two years in office, after Democrats took control of the Senate and, for the first time, implemente­d pro forma sessions to avoid an official recess.

In Obama's first two years, with Democrats in control of Congress, recesses were back and he made 28 recess appointmen­ts, all to full-time positions, in his first two years. Then Republican­s won the House of Representa­tives and withheld consent from the Senate to recess, forcing the pro forma sessions to come back. They continued through the last six years of Obama's presidency, though he attempted to disregard them and make recess appointmen­ts anyway in 2012, which were struck down unanimousl­y by the Supreme Court in NLRB v. Noel Canning.

The pro forma gambit is legally valid, and therefore the president cannot make recess appointmen­ts unless the Congress decides to officially recess, which hadn't happened since 2010.

You might reasonably expect no president will ever get recess appointmen­ts again except when the same party controls the House, Senate, and president. But for the last two years, the same party - the Republican Party - has in fact controlled the House, Senate, and president. And yet, the Senate has never recessed.

This curious fact has received surprising­ly little attention.

Is McConnell blocking Trump for his own strategic reasons? Perhaps to establish that no recesses will ever be taken again, forcing all appointmen­ts to go through the Senate confirmati­on process?

If so, that seems to be somewhat at odds with constant Republican complaints about Democratic stalling and obstructio­n of Trump nominees.

Is McConnell concerned that, given the free hand of a recess, Trump would make some truly terrible appointmen­ts?If so, perhaps negotiatin­g a list before agreeing to recess could allay that concern.

Or does McConnell simply lack a Senate majority that would vote to adjourn without pro forma sessions?If so, perhaps holding a clean adjournmen­t vote would at least serve the clarifying purpose of showing the American people which Republican senators are intent on blocking Trump recess appointmen­ts.

If President Trump wants to lift the legal cloud from his acting Attorney General and temporaril­y fill vacancies across the federal government, the administra­tion needs to press hard for the Senate to adjourn for the year with an official recess.

But if we're simply in a new era in which the Senate protects its institutio­nal power by never officially recessing, it would be nice for somebody to inform the American people.

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