Justice Alito, as a longtime advocate of the
theory, would put the Court’s right-wing faction on the verge of having
a majority committed to embracing this constitutional argument that
would strip regulatory agencies, such as the Securities and Exchange
Commission and the Federal Communications Commission, of their
independence.
If that happens, George W. Bush and his successors
would have the power to instruct these agencies what to do on
regulations and enforcement, opening up new opportunities to punish
enemies and reward friends. The “unitary” theory asserts that all
executive authority must be in the President’s hands, without exception.
The Supreme Court's embrace of the “unitary
executive” would sound the death knell for independent regulatory
agencies as they have existed since the Great Depression, when they were
structured with shared control between the Congress and the President.
Putting the agencies under the President’s thumb would tip the balance
of Washington power to the White House and invite abuses by letting the
Executive turn on and off enforcement investigations.
For instance, if the “unitary executive” had
existed in 2001, Bush might have been tempted to halt the SEC accounting
investigation that spelled doom for Enron Corp. and his major financial
backer, Enron Chairman Kenneth Lay. As it was, the relative independence
of the SEC ensured that the accounting probe went forward and the
fraudulent schemes propping up the Houston-based company were exposed.
Direct presidential control of the FCC would give
Bush and his subordinates the power to grant and revoke broadcast
licenses without the constraints that frustrated Richard Nixon’s
attempts to punish the Washington Post company for its Watergate
reporting. Bush also would be free to order communication policies bent
in ways that would help his media allies and undermine his critics.
The Federal Election Commission, which oversees
political finances, is another agency that would fall under presidential
control. Hypothetically at least, influence-peddlers like Jack Abramoff
who spread campaign contributions to corrupted lawmakers could get a
measure of protection if the President didn't want the agency to pursue
their violations.
War Powers
The “unitary executive” applies as well to the
President’s authority to interpret laws as he sees fit, especially in
areas of national security where right-wing lawyers argue that the
commander-in-chief powers are “plenary,” which means “absolute,
unqualified.”
So, when Alito assured the Senate Judiciary
Committee that no one, not even the President, is “above the law,” that
palliative answer had little meaning since under the “unitary” theory
favored by Alito the President effectively is the law.
Since his days as a lawyer in Ronald Reagan’s White
House, Alito has pushed this theory. At a Federalist Society symposium
in 2001, Alito recalled that when he was in the Office of Legal Counsel
in Ronald Reagan’s White House, “we were strong proponents of the theory
of the unitary executive, that all federal executive power is vested by
the Constitution in the President.”
In 1986, Alito advocated the use of “interpretive
signing statements” by presidents to counter the judiciary’s traditional
reliance on congressional intent in assessing the meaning of federal
law.
Under Bush, “signing statements” have become
commonplace and amount to his rejection of legal restrictions especially
as they bear on presidential powers. A search of the White House
Internet site finds 101 entries for the word “unitary” in Bush’s
statements and other official references.
In December 2005, for instance, Bush cited the
“unitary” powers of the Presidency when he signed the McCain amendment,
which prohibited cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment of detainees in
U.S. custody. In a “signing statement,” Bush reserved the right to
bypass the law by invoking his commander-in-chief powers.
“The Executive Branch shall construe [the torture
ban] in a manner consistent with the constitutional authority of the
President to supervise the unitary Executive Branch and as Commander in
Chief and consistent with the constitutional limitations on the judicial
power,” the signing statement read.
In other words, since Bush considers his
commander-in-chief authority boundless, he can choose to waive the
torture ban whenever he wants, much as he ordered wiretaps of American
citizens without getting a court warrant as is required by the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act.
“The signing statement is saying ‘I will only
comply with this [torture ban] law when I want to, and if something
arises in the war on terrorism where I think it’s important to torture
or engage in cruel, inhuman, and degrading conduct, I have the authority
to do so and nothing in this law is going to stop me,’”
said New York University law
professor David Golove.
Founding Fathers
Alito has argued that a powerful executive is what the
Founding Fathers always intended. In a speech in 2000, he said that when
the U.S. Constitution was drafted in 1787, the framers “saw the unitary
executive as necessary to balance the huge power of the legislature and
the factions that may gain control of it.”
Scholars, however, have disputed Alito’s historical
argument by noting that the framers worried most about excessive
executive powers, like those of a king, and devised a complex system of
checks and balances with the Legislature in the preeminent position to
limit the President’s powers. [WSJ,
Jan. 5, 2006]
Yet, with Alito seemingly advancing toward
confirmation, the next question may be how many other justices on the
nine-member Supreme Court agree with him about the “unitary executive.”
For one, Chief Justice John Roberts, Bush’s other
appointee to the Supreme Court, has been a longtime supporter of broad
presidential powers.
During the Reagan administration in 1983, Roberts
said it was time to “reconsider the existence” of independent regulatory
agencies, such as the Federal Communications Commission and the Federal
Trade Commission, and to “take action to bring them back within the
Executive Branch.”
Roberts called these agencies a “constitutional
anomaly,” which should be rectified by putting them under direct
presidential control.
Roberts’s deference to presidential power has been
a strand that has run through his entire career – as special assistant
to Reagan’s attorney general, as a legal strategist for Reagan’s White
House counsel, as a top deputy to George H.W. Bush’s solicitor general
Kenneth W. Starr, and as a federal appeals court judge accepting George
W. Bush’s right to deny due-process rights to anyone deemed an “enemy
combatant.”
Another “unitary executive” vote is likely to come from
Justice Antonin Scalia, who is considered the court’s most scholarly
right-wing member. He has been associated with the drive to expand
presidential powers since the mid-1970s when he headed President Gerald
Ford’s Office of Legal Counsel and served as assistant attorney general.
Justice Clarence Thomas would appear to be a reliable
fourth vote, having cited the theory of the “unitary executive” in
arguing in 2004 that the Supreme Court had no right to intervene in
granting legal protections to detainees at Guantanamo Bay.
So, how far the court’s right wing can go in
implementing its concept of the “unitary executive” may depend on how
Justice Anthony Kennedy votes. Kennedy, who drafted the opinion in the
Bush v. Gore case that handed the White House to George W. Bush, is
considered a less ideological conservative than Scalia, Thomas, Roberts
and Alito.
But it is unclear whether Kennedy has the strength of
will to resist the rip tide that is pulling the U.S. Supreme Court
toward a historic surrender of political power to the “unitary
executive.”