Trump Fires Democratic FTC Commissioners
The removals challenge Humphrey’s Executor, a Supreme Court precedent that protects independent agency officials from political firings.

President Donald Trump fired Democratic Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Commissioners Alvaro Bedoya and Rebecca Kelly Slaughter on Tuesday. In so doing, Trump is ignoring a 90-year-old Supreme Court precedent that restricts the removal of commissioners to "inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office," which could make the terminations illegal.
After the firings, FTC Chair Andrew Ferguson said he had "no doubts about [the president's] constitutional authority to remove Commissioners," citing Trump's possession of "all of the executive power in our government." Bedoya disagreed, denouncing his firing as illegal in a post on X. He also shared a statement from Slaughter, who described the firings as "violating the plain language of a statute and clear Supreme Court precedent."
The relevant precedent is the 1935 Supreme Court case Humphrey's Executor v. U.S. and the statute is the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914. The Court found "it plain under the Constitution that illimitable power of removal is not possessed by the President" because the power of Congress to create quasi-legislative agencies like the FTC includes "power to fix the period during which they shall continue, and to forbid their removal except for cause in the meantime." The FTC itself was established and its commissioners were empowered to prosecute "unfair methods of competition…and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce," regardless of presidential administration.
Thomas Berry, director of the Cato Institute's Robert A. Levy Center for Constitutional Studies, tells Reason that Trump's firings represent "a direct challenge to the Supreme Court precedent Humphrey's Executor, which held that Congress may protect the heads of certain 'independent agencies' from removal at will by the president."
Berry argues that Humphrey's Executor was wrongly decided because "the president's duty to enforce the law requires the ability to fire executive branch officials who are in disagreement with the president's views on how the law should be enforced." He suspects that, while lower courts will hold Trump's actions as illegal according to the precedent, "the Supreme Court has the ability to overrule Humphrey's Executor [and] there is a good chance it will do so."
Geoffrey A. Manne, president and founder of the International Center for Law and Economics, shares Berry's prediction. In an email to Reason, Manne says Humphrey's Executor "is probably not long for this world, and thus, neither is the 'independence' of the FTC." Manne explains that the Federal Trade Commission Act requires that no more than three of the commissioners may be of the same political party. Accordingly, once Mark Meador, a Republican, is confirmed as FTC commissioner, "the Commission can just go on as is indefinitely." Manne also notes that "independent agency independence has always been more limited than people like to believe."
Ethan Yang, an adjunct research fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research and an antitrust law scholar, expresses skepticism about the independence of agencies. "There is nothing special about the FTC that suggests that employment protections are necessary or justified," he tells Reason. Moreover, Yang says that "firing the two Democratic Commissioners would only make official what has been the reality for decades": the inherent partisanship of the Commission. Yang points to both Democratic Commissioners voting "in lockstep with the former Chair Lina Khan" and "redact[ing] the dissenting opinions of the lone Republican, Commissioner Christine Wilson," under the Biden administration.
Whether Humphrey's Executor was decided rightly or wrongly, it is currently a binding precedent. Until the precedent is overruled by the Supreme Court, Trump's firings are illegal.
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The Court is wrong so Trump can ignore it. Besides, you didn't complain about Biden and Democrats you leftist hypocrite. That invalidates your criticism and excuses Trump.
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Holy fuck that's funny.
Not wrong. Congress has the power to regulate interstate commerce.
Where in the constitution is the power to create 'quasi-legislative agencies' found?
How is the FTC different from the ATF?
The Constitution gives Congress the power to regulate interstate commerce. Congress, not the President.
You've posted that twice now and it has no more sense or relevance than the first time.
Yes, congress has the power to write legislation to regulate interstate commerce. Nowhere in the constitution is there authority to delegate the legislation-making power. The constitution also vests all federal executive power in the president. Nowhere is there authority to create an executive function independent of the president. Humphrey's (which said the latter was allowable) was wrongly decided.
Congress can decide that they want to create a federal regulator that will be insulated from the whims of the president. There is nothing in the Constitution that even implies that they can't do that. The Imperial Presidency is based more on boot-licking fantasies than the actual text.
Article 2, Section 1. "The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America."
No, congress may not create an executive function independent of the president.
She must think constitutional scholars at the Cato Institute are fans of the imperial presidency...
Bootlickers like to use that line to justify any level of dictatorial power they dream the President has. It is a matter of interpretation. Bootlickers are shits who will destroy our country.
No, the executive branch's powers are still quite circumscribed by the Constitution. Or at least, they would be if congress hadn't been steadily delegating away all their authority for the last century in a vain attempt to avoid their responsibilities.
Executive overreach is a problem but it will not be solved by legislative overreach (or underreach).
You implying that Rossami is a bootlicker is almost the dumbest thing you've ever posted.
Every time I think you can’t possibly have a more brain dead take, you prove me wrong.
Article 2, Section 1. "The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America."
From Article 2, Section 3: "...he shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed..."
If you want the first of those to have some particular meaning, then the latter can't just be fluff.
How’s he supposed to do that if Molly’s bald assertion is true?
(Hint: if they create an agency that isn’t under executive authority, the president can’t faithfully execute the rules/regulations they come up with. Leaving aside the constitutionality of some agency usurping Congressional power to make laws.)
Oh, and he has a duty to not execute unconstitutional laws, just fyi.
Enumerated; to specify one after another.
The constitution is the enumerated powers of our government. If it isn't listed as a power they can't do it.
. I fucked this up.
Here, this is better.
I doubt he's ignoring it.
More like he (well, his lawyers) say it's inapplicable because the FTC has changed, or he thinks it was wrongly decided (IANAL but it looks more like judicial activism than sound legal principles),
And, in addition, since when does a libertarian rag write libertarian articles decrying government becoming less powerful? Since when does a libertarian rag thing government anti-trust is legitimate for either free markets or free minds?
Oh wait ... since never.
Fire KMW.
Get out of DC.
Start publishing libertarian articles.
The libertarian magazine that bellyaches when unaccountable, unelected, un-fireable federal officials are removed by an elected one.
Weird ain’t it?
Did a libertarian magazine bellyache about that? So far I've only seen it in Reason.
I suppose pointing out the fact that what Trump did violates current precedent is bellyaching to you. He should just accept that Trump can do what he wants. The law and current court precedent can just f off.
Do you really think that it weird for a writer at a libertarian magazine to be writing about how a President is defying the law? You really think that it isn't wrong for a President to do that if he is firing people in government instead of ignoring the law to exert more power? As if going against laws passed by Congress isn't exerting more power than the President constitutionally has...
Do you really think that it weird for a writer at a libertarian magazine to be writing about how a President is defying the law? You really think that it isn't wrong for a President to do that if he is firing people in government instead of ignoring the law to exert more power?
If current court precedent is wrong, as President Trump is in the best position to test that precedent. And to get Article III standing, a case or controversy must exist. Cries about these firings being "illegal" or "wrong" carry no weight, especially if SCOTUS ultimately reverses its precedent.
As if going against laws passed by Congress isn't exerting more power than the President constitutionally has...
But whether Congress has usurped powers the Constitution vests in the President is the very issue. And no, this matter is not settled law despite a 90-year-old SCOTUS precedent unless you're of the opinion that SCOTUS precedent can never be challenged or overturned, in which case you surely think Lochner v. New York needs to be rehabilitated...
I’m sure Jason thinks the Dredd Scott & Plessy decisions were sound legal theory.
The removals challenge Humphrey’s Executor, a Supreme Court precedent that protects independent agency officials from political firings.
Um... invoking the ghost of Tony Benn...
If any one of those 5 questions can't be easily answered, your democracy is in peril.
What in hell is this 'independent agency' crap?
It is not in the legislative branch.
It is not in the judicial branch.
All that is left is the executive branch.
If it is in the executive branch, the chief executive can fire them.
So the only option left, if the president can't fire them is that they are not in the federal government at all, and nobody has to do what the say.
AUX BARRICADES!
It is in the Legislative branch. The President administratively runs it, but that it all. Congress delegated their authority to the commissioners of the FTC.
Ah, this comment makes your prior comments more clear. You are, however, wrong. The FTC is not in the legislative branch.
While they have some limited rule-making authority (the quasi-legislative functions discussed above), they are no greater than any other administrative agency. They also have their own judges (therefore, a quasi-judicial function) but mostly they are charged to execute and enforce the law (clearly an executive function). The best logical argument is that congress tried to create a fourth branch of federal government independent of the other three - but that's something clearly not authorized by the constitution so no one actually argues that in court.
Instead, everyone says that it is an arm of the executive, albeit a "special" one with a few extra powers bolted on and subject to the APA.
This is just a trial run, for when Trump decides to fire the entire Federal Reserve when the economy turns south, and replace them with toadies who will turn on the money printer to BRRR status in order to prop up his team's fortunes.
Are you high?
Bedoya disagreed, denouncing his firing as illegal in a post on X. He also shared a statement from Slaughter, who described the firings as "violating the plain language of a statute and clear Supreme Court precedent."
Shoot him in the kneecap.
Why are we entertaining this nonsense?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3A0q36NOgdQ
the power of Congress to create quasi-legislative agencies like the FTC
does not exist in the enumerated legislative powers in the Constitution.
Ftfy
Let's get a couple of things clear:
1. It is not illegal. It would be unlawful. Those are very different things. (No member of the Trump administration can be prosecuted for this, afaict).
2. It is not unlawful, but *likely* unlawful. Humphrey's Executor is still good precedent, but it's only binding on the parties to the case. The current 'fired' commissioners will need to bring suit for the current action to actually be deemed unlawful, even if this outcome is likely. Precedent doesn't bind future action, just binds the courts to rule similarly in the future. (ie, Presidents could keep firing commissioners, and the courts should continue to find these actions unlawful, and then make rulings which bind the parties to those subsequent lawsuits. Humphrey's Executor itself only directly applies to the parties to that suit.)
First, anyone who commented describing the FTC as a legislative body should have read Humphrey's Executor v. United States first. The Supreme Court ruled that the Federal Trade Commission was a quasi-judicial body because it adjudicated cases and promulgated rules, and that therefore the President could be restricted from arbitrarily removing the members.
What's the Constitutional basis for Congress creating such a body? Perhaps it is the clause allowing Congress to create lower courts under the Supreme Court, but that seems like quite a stretch to me. That's one issue that Trump can ask the Court to review. The other is whether the FTC is factually a quasi-judicial body; things may have changed since 1935, or the court might have misunderstood the facts back then. I gather that no other body created by Congress has ever been found by the courts to be quasi-judicial enough to be shielded by Humphrey's, and there's a serious body of legal opinion that the Court erred with respect to the FTC.
Indeed +10000000000. The left insisting Trump can't dismantle the [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire because the Nazi-Empire itself is UN-Constitutional.
"Supreme Court precedent that restricts the removal of commissioners to "inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office,""
Wanna guess who has final authority on what constitutes "inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office,"?
Hint: It's not the duly elected head of the federal executive branch.
Were they Democratic or Democrat?