[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 6 (Wednesday, January 18, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H38]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WHAT WE HAVE LEARNED ABOUT THE CONSTITUTION FROM THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH,
PART I
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Poe) for 5 minutes.
Mr. POE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, the United States Constitution is the
law of the land. It must be followed in the spirit and in the letter of
the law.
Article II, in section 2, gives the Executive authority to appoint
certain public ministers with advice and consent of the U.S. Senate.
When the Senate is in recess, the Executive can make temporary
appointments until the end of that legislative session.
See, the Constitution envisions cooperation by the Executive with the
Senate over naming persons to offices that rule over the people of
America. Both the Executive and the Senate must agree prior to an
official appointment.
The Senate, within their legal prerogative, has been blocking three
NLRB appointments and the appointment of the head of the new Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau.
However, ignoring the Senate, the Executive appointed these people
anyway. He declared the Senate was in recess when he made such
appointments. But was it?
Well, constitutional experts disagree. The Senate was in a pro forma
session. One reason they were in pro forma session was to prevent
recess appointments by the executive branch. During pro forma sessions,
the Senate can do business and meet another constitutional requirement
to not be in recess without permission of the House of Representatives.
More from the Constitution. Article I, section 5 says no Chamber, the
House or the Senate, can recess for more than 3 days without the
approval of the other Chamber. The House did not and even could not
agree to a recess of the Senate because the Senate was in session, not
in a recess.
The Executive's claim that the Senate was in a recess is flawed
because the House did not consent to any Senate recess. Thus, the
Senate legally had to still be in session until the House agreed to a
recess under our Constitution.
Furthermore, Congress determines when it's in recess, not the
executive branch.
There is more evidence the Senate was in session. The Executive says
the pro forma session was not a real session but a recess, so, thus,
the recess appointments. However, during this pro forma session, the
Senate passed legislation. The controversial payroll tax extension law
became law signed by the Executive.
If the Senate was in recess, as the Executive claims, then it seems
the payroll extension law is null and void. Why? Because Congress
cannot pass legislation unless it's actually in session.
However, the opposite is true. Since the payroll tax law was passed
during this pro forma session, and the appointments were made during
this pro forma session, the appointments are null and void. They
violate the letter and spirit of the Constitution. They were made
without confirmation of the Senate. These were not recess appointments
because the Senate was in session.
The Executive cannot have it both ways. The Executive cannot use
linguistic gimmicks to redefine the words ``recess'' and ``session'' to
his own liking, just so he can have it his way. The letter and spirit
of the Constitution have been bruised and violated by his actions.
The Constitution must be followed, whether one agrees with what it
says or not. Even if the Executive wins his argument, which is legally
and logically flawed, he has ignored the framework of the Constitution,
which is built on Executive cooperation with Congress.
The Executive went his own way. And that's just the way it is.
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