The Volokh Conspiracy

Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent | Est. 2002

The Volokh Conspiracy

Nondelegation

Can Trump v. Slaughter be Used to Challenge the Continued Legality of Executive Agencies Congress Intended to be Independent?

If the laws requiring such agencies to be independent are unconstitutional, it may be that very existence of those agencies is also now illegal.

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Donald Trump and FTC Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter.

 

In today's decision in Trump v. Slaughter, the Supreme Court ruled that laws protecting the heads of "independent" executive agencies from firing are unconstitutional, because they infringe on the president's constitutional removal authority. In my last post, I noted that the exact scope of this principle is unclear, given the exception the Court carved out for members of the Federal Reserve Board in Trump v. Cook, also issued today. But let's assume that, after Slaughter, protection against removal really is unconstitutional for the heads of all or nearly all previously "independent" federal agencies. If so, I would suggest that that renders the very existence of at least some of these agencies subject to legal challenge on the grounds that the removal protection provisions are not "severable" from the rest.

In his concurring opinion in Slaughter, Justice Neil Gorsuch rightly highlights that Congress might not have created many of the independent agencies in the first place (or at least not given them as much power) if they had known their leadership would be subject to the complete control of the president:

Today, independent agencies do not just exercise executive law-enforcement powers. Congress has also delegated to them vast legislative and judicial powers, effectively allowing these agencies to make laws and decide disputes under them. And, after today's decision, the President can effectively exercise all those powers too.

It's a development that raises important questions, not least these: Would Congress have delegated so much power, including legislative and judicial power, to independent agencies had it known that the President would come to control them? How will Congress respond now—if realistically it can? And what, if anything, will this Court do about it?

Gorsuch goes on to argue that this problem necessitates stronger judicial enforcement of constitutional nondelegation rules and the related "major questions" doctrine. I agree that these two doctrines are important and valuable constraints on executive power, and that courts should enforce them more aggressively.  But the end of agency head protection against removal doesn't by itself trigger stronger judicial review under these doctrines. Whether a claimed delegation runs afoul of nondelegation and major questions constraints depends on the scope and nature of the power delegated, not on whether it is granted to an agency or to the president, and not on the extent to which the agency heads are insulated from removal.

By contrast, the invalidation of removal protection does matter under the Supreme Court's "severability" precedent, which addresses the question of what to in situations where one part of a law has been invalidated as unconstitutional, but others have not. In such cases, does the rest of the law fall too, or does it remain in place.

The relevant precedent here is far from a model of clarity. But, as a general rule, it turns on how significant the invalidated provision is to the overall statutory scheme, and whether Congress would have enacted the law without the unconstitutional element. Much of that precedent is summarized in an amicus brief I filed along with a cross-ideological group of other legal scholars in California v. Texas (2021), the Obamacare severability case.

The right answer will likely vary from agency to agency. But I suspect that Justice Gorsuch is right to think that at least some of these agencies would not have been created in their current form if not for the expectation that their leaders would be insulated from removal by the White House. If so, now that these protections against removal have been invalidated, their existence can be challenged as "inseverable" from the unconstitutional anti-removal provision.

If the ensuing litigation results in the invalidation of the agencies, Congress could, of course, try to recreate them with new legislation. But the new agencies might not be granted as much power as their predecessors.

I will not here attempt to canvas the relevant agencies or the gauge the prospects of inseverability lawsuits challenging each one. As already noted, the legal viability of a challenge may vary from case to case. In addition, courts may be reluctant to invalidate some agencies because of accumulated reliance interests or because of their economic and political significance. But I urge public interest groups, industries, consumers, and others affected by these agencies' regulatory powers to give serious consideration to challenging them on this basis.

NOTE: For those keeping score, the position I tentatively advocate here is totally consistent with what I advocated in the Obamacare severability litigation referenced above. In various writings and amicus briefs during the course of that litigation, I argued that what was left of the Obamacare "individual mandate" after Congress largely neutered it in 2017 (by abolishing the penalty for noncompliance) was too insignificant to render it inseverable from the rest of the Affordable Care Act. By contrast, protection of agency heads from removal is a far more important part of the statutes establishing at least some of the regulatory agencies to which it applied until ruled unconstitutional in Slaughter.

Chief Justice Roberts (Likely) Ordered The Release Of Cook 30 Minutes Before He Announced It

Slaughter and Cook were bundled together, as the Chief (likely) instructed.

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I have a regular routine for Supreme Court decision days. On one monitor, I have the SCOTUSBlog liveblog. On a second monitor, I have the SupremeCourt.gov opinions page open. I keep Adobe Acrobat ready on a third screen. And the fourth screen is the FantasySCOTUS database, where I immediately score the cases.

Usually SCOTUSBlog announces the case name and the authoring justice a few moments before the PDF link pops up on the website. (Circa 2010, the PDF links were simply the [docketnumber.pdf], so I was able to access some PDFs early by anticipating what cases came down; that practice was changed after I wrote about it.) When a Justice announces a dissent from the bench, we have to wait some time until the next opinion is released.

Today, the release sequence was predictable, until it wasn't.

At 10:01, SCOTUSBlog announced the majority opinion in Watson. Justice Barrett tends to offer long-ish summaries. At 10:09 SCOTUSBlog announced Justice Kagan's opinion in Chartie. At 10:15, Amy Howe announced: "We have Slaughter and Cook, both from Roberts." Both PDFs were posted at that time.  I assumed that Roberts announced from the bench that he wrote the majority opinion in both cases, which is why the files were posted online. But we learn from Mark Walsh's indispensable reporting that the sequence was different:

Roberts announces that "I have the opinion of the court in two related cases." This could be the transgender sports cases, but he quickly adds, "I will start with Trump v. Slaughter."

Even though Roberts had not yet begun announcing the opinion in Cook, that opinion was still posted online immediately, and was distributed to the press room as a bundle.

At this moment, reporters in the Press Room are being handed copies of both Slaughter, about President Donald Trump's attempt to remove a member of the Federal Trade Commission, and Trump v. Cook, about his efforts to remove a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. In fact, the two lengthy opinions have rubber bands around them.

I cannot recall an instance where a Justice announces two related cases, and both PDFs are posted simultaneously.

For example, on May 28, Justice Barrett had the majority opinion in two related cases, Rutherford v. United States and Fernandez v. United States. SCOTUSBlog announced Fernandez at 9:02 and posted the PDF at that time. The Fernandez dissent referenced Rutherford, which, as a commenter pointed out, "currently does not exist." At 9:09, SCOTUSBlog announced the judgment in Rutheford, and the PDF came a minute later. This is the usual routine for as long as I can remember.

Indeed, Mark Walsh said that between Roberts's majority and Sotomayor's seventeen page dissent, approximately twenty-seven minutes would elapse.

But it will be quite a while before we get to Cook. . . .

Roberts, who has kept his reading glasses on during the dissent, offers no off-the-cuff retorts or rebuttals. He says, "I will now turn to the opinion in Number 25A312, Trump versus Cook."

It is 10:42, and the rest of the world, including the Press Room, the president, the markets, and the nation, have known the outcome of this case for a good half hour before most of us in the courtroom do (given it was already posted on the court's website and reported on in places such as SCOTUSblog).

Mark is wise to reference markets. A friend wrote, "Roberts was so spooked out about spooking out the stock market that he kept Cook for himself and then apparently had it released to the public before it was even announced in court." I believe it.

The Chief wanted to avoid nearly thirty minutes of suspense, while Sotomayor read her dissent, concerning the fate of the Federal Reserve. He remembers well the uncertainty that unfolded during the Obamacare handdown. The markets could have reacted negatively without knowing the fate of Cook. So the Chief Justice (likely) ordered the Court to post the PDFs and release the bundled opinions together. And of course, the Chief will hold birthright citizenship for the last moments of the term to signal to the public how nonpartisan the Court is.

I have finished reading the Slaughter majority, and will have a lot to say in due course. Here, I'll just offer an initial thought. The Chief Justice is very critical of the Humphrey's Executor majority, and suggests it was something of a political ruling to clap back at President Roosevelt. Roberts uses that background, at least in part, to justify overruling the decision. I wonder if Roberts had even a moment of cognitive dissonance. Virtually every major ruling he issued--even the timing of Slaughter itself--is based on Roberts's crude sense of politics. How will Roberts's political precedents be viewed once he is off the bench? I would wager they'll be treated with the same dignity that Humphrey's Executor was afforded. Whatever mishigas the Chief was trying to do with Trump will be forgotten, as well the ill-fated effort by the New Deal Court to thwart FDR.  Roberts's opinions cannot compare with a ruling like Justice Scalia's Morrison dissent, which stood the test of time and prevailed.

Executive Power

Can the Supreme Court Slaughter Slaughter Without Cooking Cook?

Tensions between today's two major presidential removal power decisions.

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The Federal Reserve. (Steveheap/Dreamstime.com)

 

Today, the Supreme Court ruled that Slaughter gets slaughtered, but that Cook won't get cooked! In Trump v. Slaughter, a 6-3 Court divided along ideological lines ruled that the president generally has absolute power to remove the heads of executive branch agencies, even when Congress has enacted laws limiting that authority. At least as a general rule, those laws are - according to the Court - unconstitutional infringements on the president's executive power. Thus, Trump can give Democratic Federal Trade Commission member Rebecca Slaughter the axe.

By contrast, in Trump v. Cook, a 5-4 majority (including two of the justices who were also in the majority in Slaughter), ruled that Trump does not have unlimited power to fire members of the Federal Reserve Board. The Court ruled that the law allowing him to remove them only "for cause" is constitutional, and that "for cause" is a fairly high standard, compatible with maintaining the Fed's "independence." Moreover, if the president tries for fire board members for cause, he has to give them substantial due process. This doesn't definitively save Federal Reserve Board of Governors member Lisa Cook's job (Trump claims he can fire her due to accusations of mortgage fraud). But it certainly gives her and her colleagues strong protection against removal, and makes it clear that the president cannot simply fire them whenever he wants.

Elsewhere, I have outlined my reservations about unitary executive theory, which focus in large part on its application to agencies that wield powers the federal government was not supposed to have in the first place. I also agree with most of prominent originalist legal scholar Larry Solum's critique of the Court's opinions in Slaughter and Cook. Even if they are right about the bottom line in one or both cases, the majority's reasoning is far from air-tight.

 Here, I focus on the question of whether the two rulings are compatible with each other. It seems to me highly likely, though not certain, that the answer is "no." In addition, the tension between the two makes it possible that the Federal Reserve won't be the only exception to the rule in Slaughter. When it comes to presidential removal power, some federal agencies are more equal than others, and it is not entirely clear which ones are which.

In her dissent in Cook, Justice Amy Coney Barrett writes that "the Court's holding is in serious tension with Trump v. Slaughter, which we also decide today." She adds that, under the majority's approach it is not clear whether "the Federal Reserve [is] unique, or might history sanction other exceptions too?" Although I don't necessarily agree with all the other points she makes in her dissent, she seems right about this aspect!

Chief Justice John Roberts' majority opinion in Cook, explains the Federal Reserve Board's exception status as follows:

Justice Thomas [in his dissent] declares the statute "unconstitutional," an infringement on the President's power to "remove his subordinates at will,…"

We disagree, as did "the founders of our Government and framers of our Constitution" when they "were actively participating in public affairs." Myers v. United States, 272 U. S. 52, 175 (1926). They knew from experience (and Hamilton reminded them) of the calamities that could arise from even the "suspicion" of political manipulation of monetary policy. Report on a National Bank 331. So when they established the First Bank of the United States, they guaranteed its independence from Presidential control. Their successors did the same for the Second Bank. That enabled both banks to serve as the "great regulating wheel" of the early American financial system…. The Federal Reserve follows in this lineage….

It is true, of course, that this tradition has not stood still; as Justice Thomas notes, the Federal Reserve is more powerful than its predecessors, managing a vastly more complex economy in a vastly more complex world…. We see no reason, however, why our central bank ought to be "trapped in amber" any more than any other aspect of our constitutional scheme…. What matters is that the Federal Reserve remains "consistent with the principles that underpin" the First and Second Banks—namely, that monetary policy should not be subject to political interference…

This is far from satisfying. If the issue is simply that central bank independence is a longstanding tradition, the same is true of many other independent agencies, some of which - as the dissenters in Slaughter point out - have existed for a century or more.  I certainly agree - as  do monetary economists across the political spectrum - that central bank independence is important for ensuring the stability of the monetary system and curbing inflation. But that is a policy consideration of a kind that is not normally supposed to influence originalist legal interpretation. Moreover, there are policy arguments (occasionally perhaps even strong ones) for the independence of various other regulatory agencies.

If the claim is that the Federal Reserve is different because it has important non-regulatory functions, the same is true of many other agencies, too - including the FTC (at issue in Slaughter). As Justice Gorsuch notes in his concurring opinion in Slaughter, "Congress has also delegated to them vast legislative and judicial powers, effectively allowing these agencies to make laws and decide disputes under them. And, after today's decision, the President can effectively exercise all those powers too." Moreover, the Slaughter majority  emphasizes that "the President may remove his subordinates at will," at least when it comes to officials who wield any significant executive power at all. As the Cook dissenters point out, members of the Federal Reserve Board exercise various executive powers, such as regulating banks.

If majority's position rests on specifically on the importance of continuity with the First and Second Banks of the United States, it is somewhat strange that this particular continuity gets such exalted status. It is especially strange in light of the fact that many of the Founders - including James Madison, Thomas Jefferson, and Edmund Randolph (the first Attorney General) believed that the Bank of the United States was unconstitutional. That doesn't strike me as the kind of consensus that should lead originalists to elevate this institution's pedigree over that of others.

As Larry Solum notes, the Cook majority's approach to the Fed has much in common with the "history and tradition" test the Supreme Court has been using in Second Amendment cases, since the 2022 Bruen decision. In both cases, the Court looks to historical analogues to assess the constitutionality of modern laws and policies.  I would add that the criticisms I and others have raised against the Bruen test apply here too. While I favor strong protection for Second Amendment rights, the Bruen test is often amorphous, subjective, and too far removed from the actual text and original meaning. The same is true of the Court's use of similar reasoning in Cook.

All of this raises the prospect that it may be premature to declare the demise of all independent agencies other than the Fed. Perhaps the latter is not a unique exception, but one that can set a precedent for others. Justice Barrett raises this possibility in her Cook dissent. In his majority opinion in Slaughter, Chief Justice Roberts notes that "we have left open the possibility that some functions traditionally handled outside the Executive
Branch may not be encompassed by Myers's general rule [that the president must be able to fire subordinates]." He also emphasizes that the Court does not "determine the fate of officials not before us."

Cynics will say that what really matters here is that the justices know that central bank independence has enormous real-world significance to the stability of the economy, whereas they (or at least the conservatives) assign less value to the independence of other agencies. But I suspect at least some of the justices take the "history and tradition" approach seriously, and therefore will make at least some good faith effort to apply it elsewhere - just as they have tried to do in Second Amendment cases, including the 2024 Rahimi decision, where all but one conservative justice (Thomas) voted to uphold a gun control law. But even if the distinction is driven by policy concerns, it's possible the Court will find other agencies where such concerns loom large enough in the minds of a majority to make another exception to the rule.

For these reasons, I think today's decisions may not be as clear and definitive as they might seem. As is often the case, future rulings may shed more light on things. Perhaps the Court will give us a better explanation of why the Fed is different in a way that applies to few if any other agencies. Perhaps they will elucidate the exception in a way that encompasses a good many other agencies, too. There may be other possibilities, as well. We shall see.

 

Parental Rights

Court Will Hear Parental Rights Case Related to Minors Seeking "Gender-Affirming Treatment"

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The Question Presented from the petition, which the Court just granted:

The "interest of parents in the care, custody, and control of their children[] is perhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests recognized by this Court." Troxel v. Granville (2000). But that right is mere rhetoric if federal judges bar parents from court via a miserly interpretation of standing doctrine—a question, as three Justices recently recognized, that is of "great and growing national importance." Lee v. Poudre Sch. Dist. R-1 (Alito, J., statement).

It is certainly important to Petitioners, who are parents of gender-confused children (including one child who previously ran away) and who do not wish to affirm that confusion. They challenged Washington laws designed to give runaway minors "gender-affirming treatment" without parental notice or consent. But despite their being the challenged laws' target, and despite their alleging specific current harms and a substantial risk of specific future harms to their ability to parent, the Ninth Circuit held that Petitioners lacked Article III standing.

The question presented is:

Whether parents have standing to challenge a law or policy that deliberately displaces their decision-making role as to "gender transitions" of their children, and in so doing creates present and likely future impediments to their ability to parent their children as they deem best for them.

And from the State's response, which urged the Court not to grant review:

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Recap of Today's Opinions and Predictions For The Final Four Cases

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My predictions from last Thursday panned out well.

The Chief Justice wrote the majority opinion in both Cook and Slaughter. There was't much of a surprise here. Yet, I still cannot believe I lived to see the day that Humphrey's Executor was overruled. Somewhere, Justice Scalia is smiling.

I predicted that Justice Kagan would write Chartie. Justice Alito still seems upset about Carpenter.

I also predicted that Justice Barrett would write Watson, though I wasn't sure how she would vote. It turned out she voted opposite the conservatives.

Back in June 2022, I think I was the first person to write about the so-called 3-3-3 Court, though other have picked that term up. Yet, that framing didn't hold very long, if it ever did. This term has fractured that idea.

There are four remaining cases.

The Chief Justice clearly has birthright citizenship. He will save it for the last hand-down of the term, so he can rule against the President and signal to the world how non-political the Court is just in time for Independence Day.

I have long thought Justice Alito would write NRSC v. FEC. From the December sitting, only Alito and Sotomayor have not yet written. I think it extremely unlikely Sotomayor has this majority opinion.

Given that the Chief wrote Cook, I think it is unlikely that he also wrote both transgender athletics cases from January. They could go to Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, or Barrett. However, Gorsuch and Barrett both already have seven opinions for the term. I doubt they have these two huge cases. Justice Kavanaugh only has four opinions for the term, so I think he gets them both, bringing his total to six. The wildcard is that Kagan hasn't written for January, and has only six for the term. If Kagan swung right, maybe the Chief assigned her the case. I'm doubtful. Coach Kavanaugh has the sports cases.

Supreme Court

Supreme Court Ends Agency "Independence," Save for the Federal Reserve

As expected, the Supreme Court overturns Humphrey's Executor, but reaffirms the independence of the Federal Reserve.

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Today the Supreme Court issued its long awaited decisions in Trump v. Slaughter and Trump v. Cook, two cases concerning the ability of the President to remove agency officials. The Chief Justice wrote for the Court in both cases, and the results in each case were what was generally expected.

In Slaughter the Court overruled Humphrey's Executor, and held that the heads of agencies exercising significant executive power must be removable at-will by the President. This means the President can remove members of the Federal Trade Commission and other multi-member agencies previously considered to be "independent agencies." The vote was 6-3 along ideological lines. Justice Sotomayor wrote the dissent.

In Cook, the Court denied President Trump's application for a stay preventing him from removing Cook from the Board of the Federal Reserve for cause. In the process, the Court rejected the argument that the President's allegation of cause was unreviewable and concluded that the statutory requirements for removal were not satisfied. Even though the underlying constitutional question was not presented to the Court, it went on to hold that the for-cause protections for members of the Federal Reserve are constitutional. Tjhe Court split 5-4. The Chief was joined by Justices Sotomayor, Kagan, Kavanaugh, and Jackson. Justices Thomas, Alito and Barrett each authored dissents (with Gorsuch joining Justice Alito). Justice Thomas was alone in arguing that the removal protections for the Federal Reserve are unconstitutional.

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Free Speech

Still Just Two Votes (No Evidence of More) for Overruling "Actual Malice" Test in Defamation Cases

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From today's dissent from the denial of certiorari in Dershowitz v. CNN, Inc., written by Justice Thomas, joined by Justice Gorsuch:

Alan Dershowitz sued respondent, a major news network, alleging that it defamed him. Because Dershowitz is a "public person," our precedents required him to prove not only the elements of common-law defamation, but also that the network acted with "actual malice." See Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc. (1974). Predictably, Dershowitz did not prevail under that exacting standard, which this Court created in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan. Dershowitz now asks this Court to overrule Sullivan and related precedents.

The "actual malice" standard for public figures "bears 'no relation to the text, history, or structure of the Constitution.'" Berisha v. Lawson (2021) (Thomas, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari); see also Gertz (White, J., dissenting); case below (Lagoa, J., concurring). Instead, the founding generation believed that, if anything, public figures had stronger claims for damages when they were defamed. See McKee v. Cosby (Thomas, J., concurring in denial of certiorari). I and others have thus called for reconsideration of the actual-malice standard for public figures. See, e.g., Berisha (Gorsuch, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari); Tah v. Global Witness Publishing, Inc. (D.C. Cir. 2021) (Silberman, J., dissenting); Gertz (White, J., dissenting). I would have granted certiorari to do so in this case.

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Free Speech

Christian Flight Attendants' Religious Discrimination Case Against Union Can Go Forward

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As I noted this morning, on Wednesday the Ninth Circuit allowed a religious discrimination claim against Alaska Airlines to go forward. The plaintiffs (Marli Brown and Lacey Smith) were Christian flight attendants who were fired for objecting on a company-run intranet to the company's statement in favor of a federal ban on sexual orientation and gender identity discrimination. (The case is Brown v. Alaska Airlines, Inc., written by Judge Daniel Bress and joined by Judge Kenneth Lee and, in large part, by Judge Morgan Christen.)

But the plaintiffs also sued their union, the AFA (the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA AFL-CIO), for religious discrimination. And the panel also unanimously allowed that claim to go forward. First, a bit of the factual allegations:

While drafting the company's response [to the two plaintiffs' posts], Andy Schneider, Alaska's Senior Vice President of People, coordinated with AFA Master Executive Council President Jeffrey Peterson. The AFA Master Executive Council is the main governing body for AFA's membership at Alaska. As Master Executive Council President, Peterson was the executive officer in charge of administering the collective bargaining agreement between Alaska and AFA. Peterson had substantial communications with Alaska about plaintiffs' posts on Alaska's World as the company was contemplating its response and disciplinary actions against the plaintiffs….

Peterson, the AFA Master Executive Council President, separately sent an email to his AFA colleagues expressing dismay about Smith's post. Referencing Smith, he wrote, "Employees get to be bigots in their private lives and to express their bigoted and misinformed opinions while not at work—as horrifying as that may be." He added that "the post is reprehensible and there should be repercussions." Peterson also told others at AFA that "this will be an ongoing and evolving conversation with management over the next couple weeks."

Peterson separately texted "I hate her" (referring to Smith) to a friend who was an Alaska pilot. He also texted Toni Monroe, an Alaska employee, that Smith's post was "bullshit" and that "Mngmt needs to send [Smith's] bigoted ass packing for a variety of reasons." Still, Peterson informed his AFA colleagues that the union would "represent [Smith] through the grievance process fairly, in good faith, and without discrimination." …

That same day, Peterson flagged Brown's comment to Alaska management in a text chain that included Alaska's Carmen Williams and Michaela Littman, the Managing Director of Flight Operations. Peterson texted these Alaska executives to "[c]heck out Marli Brown's post on [Alaska's World] re: Equality Act. Definitely lighting up social media tonight, as if Lacey [Smith] wasn't enough." Peterson then lamented, "I wish fewer people would struggle so much with unifying their faith with inclusivity." Peterson later confirmed that it was unusual for him to get involved with Alaska's internal response to disciplinary incidents.

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Environmental Law

A New Name for ENRD at the Department of Justice

The division will be renamed the "Energy and Natural Resources Division."

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ENRD at the Department of Justice is getting a new name. According to an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal by ENRD's Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Adam Gustafson, the Environment and Natural Resources Division will be renamed the Energy and Natural Resources Division.

From the op-ed:

Over the past two decades, the division has played a central role in the responsible production and use of energy, driven by technological advances from the shale revolution to AI. To recognize this evolution, we will now rename it the Energy and Natural Resources Division.

The division's charge to steward America's environment responsibly is unchanged. The environment is our nation's greatest natural resource, and the new name captures that priority. We're proud of the results we've achieved over the past 17 months against air and water pollution, lead poisoning, ozone depletion and radioactive waste. Our achievements include last week's landmark multistate settlement to address forever chemical pollution and a $100 million penalty secured at trial for industrial air pollution near Detroit. The division continues to enforce environmental laws, punish fraudsters and smugglers, honor our nation's treaty and trust obligations to tribes, and defend federal agencies' efforts to protect and develop responsibly our wildlife and natural resources.

At the same time, we will fight to ensure that the U.S. remains energy dominant for the next 250 years.

This is hardly the first name change for ENRD. It was founded as the Public Lands Division in 1909. It became the Lands Division in 193, and then the Land and Natural Resources Division in 1965. It did not become the Environment and Natural Resources Division until 1990. In each case, the change was made by order of the Attorney General.

Civil Liberties

Should the Clergy-Penitent Privilege Be Abolished in Child Sexual Abuse Cases?

My new law review article defends long-standing principles: The privilege is not only constitutionally required, but it also helps to protect abuse victims by bringing sexual abuse to light.

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The clergy-penitent privilege has been recognized in American law for more than two hundred years and is now widely enshrined in law across the country. In a recent article in Law and Psychology Review, however, my law school colleague Amos Guiora and co-authors Diana Pogosyan and Matylda J. Blaszczak argue for carving out a significant exception to the privilege. Their article—"Sacred Secrets Enabling Child Sex Abuse"—claims that the privilege "enables" child sexual abuse by allowing clergy to "turn[] a blind eye" to abuse disclosed in a confession. They propose that, to protect children, clergy should be compelled by threat of criminal punishment to immediately call the police whenever a parishioner confesses child sexual abuse, even if doing so violates sincerely held religious belief.

In my response article in the same journal, I take on Sacred Secrets' arguments and defend the privilege. I argue that the privilege should apply in all cases—including those involving child sexual abuse. From my article's introduction:

Sacred Secrets fails to make a persuasive case for its extreme position. Its argument focuses on situations where an abuser has confessed to clergy under the protection of the privilege. But the article neglects to consider whether the abuser would have confessed without the privilege. As this article explains, victims will suffer more if the privilege does not exist. Metaphorically, child sexual abuse occurs in a room behind closed doors— with doors that open only from the inside. Abuse can only come to light if the victim or the perpetrator opens those doors and lets someone else in, whether it be a parent, teacher, peer, policeman—or member of the clergy. Because of age, fear, or the perpetrator's manipulation, many victims are unable to open the doors for themselves. But occasionally a perpetrator opens the doors to confess to his pastor. Sacred Secrets argues that, in such situations, the clergy-penitent privilege should be abolished and the pastor required by law to immediately call the police. But this conclusion begs the question: If the privilege were abolished, why would a perpetrator ever open the doors and confess in the first place? Sacred Secrets' fundamental flaw is its failure to seriously consider that obvious competing concern about its recommendations. Common sense, lived experience, and the available empirical evidence all show that perpetrators will not typically voluntarily confess to a mandatory reporter. Changing the law to conscript clergy listening to confessions into the ranks of mandatory reporters will not serve to bring abuse to light; instead, it will further incentivize concealment.

On the other hand, protecting the clergy-penitent privilege incentivizes disclosure and creates the opportunity for valuable interventions. Clergy can help perpetrators to see the enormous harm from their crimes on their victims, to accept responsibility, and to make changes that will protect children. Clergy can urge perpetrators to self-report, or to notify others (such as a spouse) who can protect victims from further abuse. Notably, clergy can capitalize on the disclosures for the same reason abusers came forward to their pastor in the first place—the abusers feel guilty and want to stop their sinful behavior. To be sure, recognizing the privilege may be a frustratingly imperfect response to disclosures of child abuse. But the decisive point is that this imperfect response is better than the blunderbuss alternative Sacred Secrets proposes—an alternative that is, in any event, likely unconstitutional under the First Amendment's Free Exercise Clause and related doctrines. Thus, the current privilege regime found across this country is the true "victim-centric" approach.

One of the problems in Sacred Secrets is that it fail to situate its arguments in the discussion about privileges more broadly. Read More

Free Speech

"Employees Actually Do Not Have the Right to Believe That LGBTQ Rights Are 'Immoral'"

The Ninth Circuit allows a religious discrimination claim against Alaska Airlines to go forward, based on its firing of Christian flight attendants who objected on a company-run intranet to the company's statement in favor of a federal ban on sexual orientation and gender identity discrimination.

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Some excerpts from Wednesday's long Ninth Circuit opinion in Brown v. Alaska Airlines, Inc., written by Judge Daniel Bress and joined by Judge Kenneth Lee and, in large part, by Judge Morgan Christen:

Alaska … maintains an internal intranet communication network that it calls Alaska's World. Alaska's World is visible to all Alaska employees, with the company describing it as a "key vehicle for employee communications."

Alaska posts messages on Alaska's World, and employees are invited to reply and comment. Alaska explained to employees that the "[c]omments are here for us to openly and constructively share ideas, ask respectful questions, and understand one another and our company." According to Alaska's employee guidance on posting, "[w]e're a big team, inclusive of many people and perspectives," and "[o]ur differences make us better when we support and respect each other, allowing each of us to be who we are." The company has expressed its commitment to providing "a safe space culture where employees feel empowered to have open and critical dialogue with their peers and leaders." …

On February 25, 2021, Alaska posted on Alaska's World to announce the company's support for the Equality Act. The Equality Act is proposed federal legislation that would extend certain federal nondiscrimination requirements to cover discrimination involving sex, sexual orientation, and gender identity in various contexts…. As was typical for Alaska's World posts, Alaska allowed its employees to comment on the company's Equality Act announcement.

Plaintiffs Marli Brown and Lacey Smith are Christians who worked as flight attendants at Alaska Airlines for eight and six years, respectively…. Shortly after Alaska posted about the Equality Act on Alaska's World, Smith posted in response: "As a company, do you think it's possible to regulate morality?" Smith's comment prompted responses on Alaska's World from other commenters, some of whom expressed disagreement…. Alaska did not initially remove Smith's post but instead decided to respond to it on Alaska's World, [writing] …:

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Coffee Shops and Political Combat

A controversy in Brooklyn

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A recent controversy involving Congressman Dan Goldman and a Brooklyn coffee shop seems to me to illustrate a problem that goes beyond public accommodations law, narrowly understood.

According to reports, Goldman visited Poetica Coffee with his young daughter. The shop later posted on social media that, had staff recognized Goldman, they would not have served him. The post objected to Goldman's support for Israel, reportedly refunded his purchase, and told him not to return. Goldman, who is Jewish and known as a pro-Israel Democrat, has since lost his Democratic primary in New York's 10th congressional district to a more progressive candidate. That result does not decide the legal issue, of course, but it does help explain the political context. Israel and Gaza have become intensely divisive issues, especially within the Democratic coalition.

The Department of Justice has announced that it is looking into whether the coffee-shop incident violated federal civil-rights law. The legal question is not straightforward. Public accommodations laws do not require businesses to serve everyone in every circumstance. They prohibit discrimination only on specified protected grounds—one of which is religion. Some jurisdictions protect political affiliation or political ideology in public accommodations as well, but federal law, New York State law, and New York City law do not.

So the legal question, if the matter ever became one, would be how to characterize the refusal. Was the coffee shop objecting to Goldman's political views about Israel and Gaza? Or was it objecting to him as a Jew?Was this political hostility, antisemitism, or some mixture of the two? Those are not always easy distinctions. Views about Israel and Gaza often overlap with Jewish identity, but they are not the same thing. Many Jews disagree sharply about Israel. Many non-Jews strongly support Israel. Criticism of Israel is not itself antisemitic. But sometimes criticism of Israel does cross the line into hostility toward Jews as Jews.

The controversy also raises a broader civic issue. At their best, public accommodations laws reflect an important social norm: ordinary commerce should not become a place where every political and moral dispute gets fought to the end. A customer who enters a coffee shop is not asking the owner to endorse his views. He is asking to buy coffee. Ordinary commerce, in other words, depends on a certain bracketing of disagreement.

One way to think about this is through the old idea of doux commerce— gentle commerce—associated with Montesquieu and the French philosophes. The thought was that commerce could soften manners. It would not make people friends, but it might habituate strangers to deal with one another peacefully despite deep differences.

That norm has been tested in recent years in controversies involving LGBTQ rights and religious liberty. In cases like Masterpiece Cakeshop and 303 Creative, progressives generally emphasized equal access to the commercial marketplace, while religious conservatives argued that the issue was not status but message—not a refusal to serve gay customers as such, but a refusal to participate in expression celebrating a same-sex wedding. The Supreme Court has tried to preserve that distinction: public accommodations laws may prohibit status discrimination in ordinary goods and services, but the state lacks power to compel expression.

That distinction matters here. A coffee shop selling a cup of coffee is not creating a custom wedding cake or website. Selling someone coffee does not endorse his politics, religion, foreign-policy views, or anything else about him.

That, it seems to me, is the deeper point. Public accommodations law is not only a set of technical rules, though the rules matter. It also points toward a norm of civic peace. If every transaction becomes a chance to denounce, exclude, or punish, commerce loses its civilizing function. The coffee shop becomes another arena for total politics. And if ordinary service is reserved only for those whose views we approve, public life becomes impossible.

I discuss the controversy in a new Legal Spirits Short Take.

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