Understanding Recess Appointments as President Trump Returns to White House


Americans are hearing a lot about recess appointments as incoming President Donald Trump announces nominations to top government positions for his new administration, so understanding when and how the Constitution empowers presidents to make those appointments is key to grasping how the president-elect plans to implement a bold agenda to move the United States in a new direction and overhaul a deeply dysfunctional government.

Normally, under the Constitution’s Appointments Clause, senior positions in the federal government are filled by officers who are nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate. Congress creates federal offices by passing laws, and specifies for each officer whether or not they require Senate confirmation. These senior officials are called “principal officers” in constitutional law, and of the 4,100 or so political appointees in the executive branch, there are 1,200 such senior positions. Lower-ranking positions are “inferior officers” that do not require the Senate.

But the Framers who wrote the Constitution foresaw that the Senate would often not be in session. Their solution was that the Recess Appointments Clause in Article II, Section 2, Clause 3 of the Constitution empowers the president to fill high-ranking positions without Senate confirmation under certain circumstances.

These recess appointments last throughout whatever annual session Congress is currently in, plus the next session. So, for example, any recess appointments made at any point in 2025 would last until Congress finishes in 2026 session sometime in December 2026. In other words, a recess appointment can last for almost two years — which is half of a presidential term.

Recess appointments are in the news as President Trump weighs his options for staffing up his administration, including the possibility of recess appointments. This strategy is the predictable result of Democrat obstruction in recent years.

With few exceptions, there was a standard way that Senate confirmations worked all the way from the Constitution’s adoption in 1789 to 1986, when Justice Antonin Scalia was confirmed to the Supreme Court by a vote of 98-0. Everyone knew that Scalia was an archconservative, first as a law professor and later as a federal appellate judge. But Ronald Reagan had been elected as a conservative Republican, so every Senate Democrat acknowledged that Scalia was well qualified, and voted to confirm him to a lifetime seat on the Supreme Court. He served for just shy of 30 years.

But Democrats won control of the Senate in the 1986 midterms, then in 1987 voted down Robert Bork for the Supreme Court, despite Bork being every bit as well qualified as Scalia. Judicial confirmations have been broken ever since, plaguing the Bush 41 years, where Justice Clarence Thomas was narrowly confirmed 52-48, all the way to President Trump’s first term, where all three of his Supreme Court picks – Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett – were confirmed by similar margins.

Republicans tried to right the ship during the Clinton years. Liberal lion Ruth Bader Ginsburg was confirmed to the Supreme Court 96-3 in 1993, despite a long record as the ACLU’s top lawyer and a law professor, then an arch-liberal appeals judge on the federal bench. And liberal Justice Stephen Breyer was confirmed 89-9 the following year.

Yet when Republicans retook the White House in 2000, things got worse. Senate Democrats expanded their judicial obstruction to include federal appeals courts, and — relevant here — Democrats tried to systematically block or delay key executive nominations. Unquestionably qualified Republican nominees were slow-walked or scuttled.

Expanding this obstruction to the executive branch poses new challenges because it hampers governmental functions. Presidents serve 4-year terms. The rule of thumb is that political appointees have a shelf-life of 18 months or 2 years. So until recently, conventional wisdom was that a president is entitled to his choice for senior positions unless they are manifestly unqualified, and the major political parties acted accordingly.

When a president wins the support of the American people to claim the presidency, he wins with it the right to have very broad latitude in picking the people who will assist him in delivering what he promised to the voters. That is part of his mandate.

Bush 43 nominees endured that treatment for 8 years, so Republicans returned the favor to some degree when Barack Obama took the White House in 2008. That’s where recess appointments come in.

The Constitution says in Article I, Section 5, Clause 4 that neither house of Congress can “adjourn for more than three days” without the consent of the other house. So Senate Republicans adopted a plan during the Obama years to give Democrats a taste of their own medicine, whereby every three days a Republican senator would take the presiding officer’s chair, gavel the Senate into session, go through a couple formalities, then adjourn for another three days. These “pro forma” sessions blocked recess appointments.

Predictably, Obama had other plans. He responded to Senate Republicans by having his Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) issue a legal memorandum in 2012 saying that the president can declare the Senate to be in recess whenever there are too few senators on hand to conduct the Senate’s business. (OLC is essentially the general counsel’s office for the entire Executive Branch, including providing advice to the president on behalf of the attorney general.)

OLC’s claim was immediately seen by many as going too far. By 8:00 p.m. on most days there are no senators on the floor to do business, so taking the OLC opinion to its logical conclusion, most nights a president could make recess appointments right before going to bed. That would be absurd.

Nonetheless, Obama used his newfound power to make some recess appointments, including to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), which at that time lacked a quorum to conduct any business at all because there were too many vacancies.

Noel Canning was a company who got the short end of the stick from the newly revived NLRB, and promptly sued, arguing that Obama’s recess appointments to the NLRB were unconstitutional.

The Supreme Court in NLRB v. Noel Canning agreed, holding 9-0 that the Recess Appointments Clause did not empower Obama to make those appointments, splitting between two opinions on exactly what that constitutional provision authorizes.

Justice Stephen Breyer wrote the majority opinion for five justices. Surveying varying historical practices since 1789, that majority held that 3-day pro forma sessions are too short for recess appointments, but the president can make recess appointments whenever the Senate adjourns for at least 10 days.

The court’s opinion also includes a caveat that is unhelpful for everyone. Specifically, the majority added that recesses that are longer than 3 days but less than 10 days are “presumptively” too short to open the door for recess appointments, but did not go on to explain what sort of circumstances could overcome that presumption so that a president could make appointments during that window.

But the practical takeaway is clear: If you want to give a president a clear alternate path for nominees who are having difficulty getting confirmed, make sure you adjourn for at least 10 days. The president will take care of the rest.

So long as there are at least 51 senators willing to adjourn for at least 10 days — or 50 senators plus the vice president as a tie-breaker — a president can make recess appointments that last roughly as long as a typical political appointment. Although the House also must consent to the Senate adjourning for that long, House procedures allow for the Speaker of the House to get such a measure through the chamber with fewer obstacles than in the Senate, so as long as the Speaker supports the move, it is harder to block consent in the House.

It is worth noting that the Constitution adds that if the House and Senate cannot agree on how long to adjourn, then the president has the authority to adjourn the entire Congress and also to set the date that members will reconvene, specifically providing that “he may adjourn them to such Time as he shall think proper.”

So if one chamber is willing to adjourn for at least 10 days but the other is not, it is conceivable that the president could adjourn them for, let’s say, 11 days, and make recess appointments during that time.

President Trump won a historic victory this month, winning both 312 in the Electoral College and the popular vote in the modern version of a landslide, generating a Red Wave that also secured a 53-47 majority in the Senate and a slim majority in the House. And while it is possible that Republicans could have won a nominal majority in the Senate without Donald Trump, it is beyond debate that they would not have as large of a majority as they have were it not for the groundswell of public support for the forty-seventh president.

Senate Democrats took their obstruction to unprecedented heights during President Trump’s first term, attempting to block countless appointees, sometimes with the tired old cliché that they claimed Trump was illegitimate. (Democrats seem think the public would forget that Democrats likewise said George W. Bush was illegitimate and used that as a pretext for obstructing his appointees as well.) But Trump’s 2024 victory was so decisive that questions about legitimacy will fall on deaf ears today, leaving only those with acute cases of Trump Derangement Syndrome — TDS for short — making such claims this time around.

The Constitution provides a path both for Senate confirmation of the president’s top picks and for recess appointments if needed, and now all eyes will be on the Senate to see what senators have the political will to do as President Trump returns to the White House.

Breitbart News senior legal contributor Ken Klukowski is a lawyer who served in the Trump White House and U.S. Department of Justice. Follow him on X (formerly Twitter) @kenklukowski.

Ken Blackwell is former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Human Rights Commission and is the chairman of the Conservative Action Project and vice president of the Council for National Policy. Follow him on X (formerly Twitter) @kenblackwell.

Originally Posted At www.breitbart.com


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    Mad At The Election? Blame Obama

    Mad At The Election? Blame Obama

    Authored by Josiah Lippincott via American Greatness,

    Liberals who are in the throes of capitulation and despair after Donald Trump’s crushing electoral and popular vote win can lay blame for their disastrous loss at the feet of one man: Barack Hussein Obama.

    Obama built the Trump wave. His failure to live up to the promises of his populist 2008 run has cursed the Democratic Party, probably for a generation. The Washington DC establishment in just two short months is going to get “scholonged” by an angry and vengeful Trump, ready to rain executive hellfire on the bureaucrats and institutions that have spent the last nine years fighting him tooth and nail.

    All of this could have been prevented. In 2008, Obama swept into power with a crushing electoral college and popular vote majority. He won Iowa, Florida, Ohio, and North Carolina. He even won Indiana. Democrats swept into power in Congress with a 74-seat lead in the House, nearly 59% of seats, and were gifted with a magical 60-seat filibuster-proof supermajority in the Senate.

    This was a generational victory, a sign that voters were fed up with politics as usual and the failures of the GOP and the Washington and Wall Street establishment as such. This victory wasn’t just about electing the first Black president, though that was important: The policies and platform at stake appealed deeply to voters.

    It is worth remembering what exactly those policies were.

    Obama promised to end the war in Iraq, end the Afghanistan war with honor, help the economy by reducing health care costs (prioritizing “Main Street” over Wall Street), and bring about a new era of racial harmony. Moreover, Obama explicitly eschewed radical leftist politics. He explicitly defended traditional marriage. In his DNC nomination speech, he condemned employers who “undercut American wages by hiring illegal workers.”

    Obama ran a campaign on bringing “change” to DC. He made much of his status as a newcomer who lacked the “typical pedigree” of a candidate for the nation’s highest office.

    Put another way, Obama won a decisive victory in 2008 by campaigning as a Washington outsider bent on ending foreign wars, boosting the economy by helping ordinary people, and being a moderate on social issues like abortion and gay marriage. Does this message sound familiar? It should.

    In broad measure, it is the same formula that brought Donald Trump to power in 2016 and has given him, like Obama, unified control over the executive and legislative branches after a crushing electoral and popular vote win.

    Obama’s hubris is the reason the Democratic Party stands here today—powerless in the face of “Orange Hitler.”

    Obama did not close Guantanamo Bay, he ended the Iraq War only to get sucked back in, killed Osama Bin Laden but kept troops in Afghanistan, started wars in Libya and Syria, and, most damningly, inflamed racial tensions when he had a chance to calm them.

    Far from being a moderate on social issues, Obama was the president whose picks for the Supreme Court rammed gay marriage down Americans throats after it had suffered numerous state-level electoral setbacks, including in California of all places in the very election that brought Obama to power!

    Obama’s pledge to reduce health care costs in 2008 did not come with an individual mandate to purchase health insurance. The final bill that snaked its way through Congress and was signed into law did contain such a penalty. Instead of lowering health care costs, Americans watched as their premiums went up.

    Instead of fewer foreign wars, we got more. Instead of declaring victory after the death of the mastermind behind 9/11, we got eight more years of war. On every front, Obama didn’t just fail to follow through on his mandate, he actively worked for the opposite outcome.

    Obama lacked the strength of character and will to follow through on his promises and to deliver the shake-up in Washington that he promised. He was more concerned with hanging out with celebrities and being cool than facing down his own Party’s bosses to deliver on the promises he made to the American people. Nancy Pelosi, 16 years later, still remains one of the most powerful figures in the Party.

    Americans sent a refined, urbane, grassroots college professor to do their bidding in DC. When he failed, they decided to send their message in a language that no one could misunderstand. They sent Trump.

    Trump is everything Obama is not: loud, dominating, and brash. There is none of Obama’s snark in his demeanor. And, unlike Obama, Trump has proven durable and faithful. Unlike Obama, Trump has built on his popular vote total with each successive election.

    Nothing can stop him: not the GOP leadership class (compare Paul Ryan and Nancy Pelosi’s careers), not the bureaucracy, not the media, not even an assassin’s bullet. Trump is the avenging angel of American populist rage. The post-1945 world order—especially after the fall of the Soviet Union—was supposed to deliver peace and prosperity on an untold scale.

    Instead, we’ve gotten more war, more debt, and more of our economy shipped overseas. Americans, even those who are successful, live in a world increasingly pockmarked by obesity, homelessness, crazed radicalism, and a flood of foreigners looking for a hand-out.

    This was not what we were promised! Looking back on the last two decades of war in the Middle East, what can anyone say we won in these places? Peace? Stability? The region is as broken and violent as ever. The 9/11 hijackers all came in legally. No one has ever solved that problem or even acknowledged that it existed.

    Moreover, the wars never end. Trump is the only president in my lifetime not to get us engaged in any new conflicts, but even he wasn’t able to bring the troops home from Afghanistan in his first term. Biden did, but then immediately hauled the nation back into war in Europe.

    We are never allowed to be neutral, never allowed to focus on ourselves, never allowed to rest. Millions of migrants invade our southern border and flood our communities with drugs that kill more than a hundred thousand Americans yearly and not one politician in DC blinks. They care infinitely more about Ukraine’s border than our own. Americans are fed up with this attitude.

    Obama’s failures on race were the most striking feature of his presidency and have done the most lasting damage. Race relations have hit an all-time low. Obama could have put a lot of the turmoil to rest, using his position as the first Black president as a way to shore up confidence in our institutions. He could have brought the Civil Rights movement to an end, insisting that our work now was not to gain equality but to preserve the hard and painful work we’d already accomplished. But no. Instead we got George Floyd and the 2020 Summer of Love, in which a dozen major American cities burned because a career criminal died in police custody from an overdose.

    And every year, some new cause gets added to the pantheon of aggrieved minorities demanding social justice. First, it was gay marriage; now it is transgenderism. God only knows what will come next. Furries? Polycules? Worse? With each new wave of leftist radicalism has come vicious shrieking from activists aimed at ordinary Americans. The latest cause—the post-COVID explosion of transgenderism—has touched ordinary Americans’ lives in a way that even homosexuality did not.

    The LGBT wave has finally hit upon children and teens with its full force. The loss of community and the social upheaval of the COVID period has resulted in a generation of youth particularly susceptible to the promises of transgender identity.

    Speaking of COVID, the American medical establishment worked for two whole years to end normal life, destroy free association, and impose draconian measures on the population.

    Once the COVID paranoia died down, the regime immediately turned to trying to put the opposition leader into prison for made-up crimes. That all-out media and legal blitz ended with two attempted assassination attempts, one that nearly blew the president’s head off on live television.

    The supposedly “apolitical” military, medical, media and legal establishments have shorn themselves of any pretense of neutrality. They have thrown their lot in with the Democratic Party and its most radical wing.

    None of this had to happen.

    Obama had a golden chance in 2008 to lock in Democratic rule for a generation. All he had to do was follow through. He had to keep his word and he needed to stand up to his own party when they sought to drag him back into their moribund consensus. But Obama chose wealth and respectability over doing the right thing.

    He chose to divide the country further instead of rallying it around a new multi-racial coalition dedicated to peace abroad and prosperity at home. Trump has inherited that mantle. Here, in his second term, Trump finally has the full, unquestionable mandate that once rested on Obama’s shoulders.

    If he succeeds, the GOP can expect decades of political and cultural dominance. The Trump era will last far beyond Trump’s actual death. There is reason to hope, as well. Trump’s first term and his years in the wilderness have armed him with a better knowledge of DC and a clearer understanding of the qualities and allies he needs to advance his goals.

    His slate of cabinet picks is hated by the DC chatterati. This bodes well. Clean house. Go to war. Trump has nothing to lose and everything to gain.

    All he needs to do is deliver. He needs to give the voters what he promised them: mass deportations, increased election security, and no new wars. Do those things on Day 1 and the Republicans have 2026 sewn up. Get us out of Ukraine and deliver real economic growth and JD Vance is a lock for 2028. It really is that simple.

    Trump has everything he needs. Now all that remains is to act.

    Tyler Durden
    Mon, 11/18/2024 – 23:25

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