More Power to the President?  The U.S. Supreme Court is Poised to Restrict Congress’ Power to Create Independent Agencies

Since 1887, (and arguably before that), the United States Congress has created regulatory agencies with a certain degree of independence from the President. The Supreme Court unanimously upheld that model as constitutional in 1935 and again in 1958, but the current Court began to chip away at it in the last two decades. The Trump Administration has now declined to defend independent agencies and the President has fired members appointed by Democratic Presidents. Now the issue is back at the Court and its conservative majority appears to be ready to overrule its precedents and declare many or most independent agencies unconstitutional. This would transfer more power to the Presidency, at Congress’s expense, at a time when many think that office has already become too powerful.

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