[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 17 (Thursday, February 2, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S286-S287]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECESS APPOINTMENTS
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, last week we Republican Senators had an
extraordinary experience that millions of Americans have had and will
have in the future: We spent a day at Mount Vernon, George Washington's
home, which is not more than about 40 minutes from the Nation's
Capital.
Even in the middle of winter, it is a beautiful, historic setting. It
is hard to imagine why George Washington and Martha Washington would
ever want to leave the place.
Touring the rooms, we could imagine what life must have been like
then. There are many things that impress any of us when we visit there.
One thing that especially impressed me was the fact that, despite the
beauty of the place and Washington's love for farming, he was gone from
Mount Vernon for 8\1/2\ years during the Revolutionary War. He never
went home; he was always in the war. Even when he was President of the
United States for 8 years, he was only at Mount Vernon 10 times during
those 8 years; and after the Presidency, of course, he soon died. So he
gave up quite a bit to be President of the United States.
There were other things that impressed me about our visit to Mount
Vernon. One was the reminder that our Revolution was a revolution
against a King. George Washington, as commander in chief of the
Continental Army, led a fight for independence from a King whom the
signers of the Declaration of Independence stated, had a ``History of
repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the
establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States.''
Those were our Revolutionary Founders talking. As President of the
Philadelphia Convention, George Washington presided over the writing of
the U.S. Constitution which emphasizes, if it emphasizes any one word,
the idea of ``liberty'' in creating the system of government we enjoy
today.
Then there was another aspect to George Washington of which we were
reminded which would be good for us to think about today and that was
his modesty and restraint.
George Washington must have had remarkable presence. He never had to
say very much, apparently, to command the attention and respect of his
countrymen. He likely could have been general of the Army as long as he
wished and President of the United States as long as he wished, but he
chose not to do that.
It was he who first asked to be called simply Mr. President, rather
than some grand title. It was Washington who gave up his commission
when the war was over, and it was Washington who stepped down after two
terms and went home to Mount Vernon. In fact, that aspect of his
character was imprinted upon the American character, that modesty and
restraint on the part of the executive branch and a recognition that
our system depends absolutely on checks and balances.
I am struck by that attitude and the different attitude I see in the
administration of President Obama, which has shown disregard for those
checks and balances and the limits on Presidential power that our
Founders and George Washington felt were so important.
This administration, over 3 years, has been arrogating more power to
the executive branch of government and upsetting the delicate balance,
which the Founders created for the purpose of--what? For the purpose of
guaranteeing to each of us as individuals the maximum amount of
liberty.
I remember Senator Byrd saying time and time again that the purpose
of the Senate, more than anything else, was a restraint upon the
tyranny of the executive branch of government. That is our purpose as a
Senate.
This President's Executive excesses were first illustrated by the
creation of more czars than the Romanovs had.
We have always had some so-called czars in the White House--the drug
czar, for example. But now we have approximately three dozen of them.
These czars duplicate and dilute the responsibilities of Cabinet
members; they make it harder for the Congress, us, to have a
supervisory role over exactly what they are doing. It is not only
antidemocratic, it is a poor way to manage the government.
Equally disturbing to me has been this administration's use of
regulation and litigation to bypass the Congress and the will of the
people when the Congress has a different point of view.
For example, this was the case with the National Labor Relations
Board and their decision in the Boeing case; which has now been
apparently resolved but which was an enormous--an enormous abuse of
power, in my opinion.
Then the President is taking to blaming almost everyone for the
problems we see in our lives today: First, it was President Bush, then
it was the banks, then it was business, then it was the insurance
companies, then it was Wall Street, then it was 1 percent of us, and
now it is the Congress, which of course is in a government that is
primarily run by the President's own political party.
The President has taken to saying in his campaign speeches and his
State of the Union Address the other day, ``If Congress won't act, I
will,'' and he has begun to show that is no idle threat.
Because now, on top of these other abuses, with his recent
appointments to the National Labor Relations Board and the Director of
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to head a new and
unaccountable agency, the president has undermined the checks and
balances that were placed in our Constitution and that George
Washington so respected.
This Senate has always been the place--whether it was a Democratic
Senate arguing about the appropriateness of President Bush using war
powers, this Senate has always been the place that has insisted upon
checks and balances and the liberty of the people as guaranteed by
those checks and balances.
The President's recent actions have shown disregard for possibly the
best known and possibly most important role of the Senate and that is
its power of advice and consent of executive and judicial nominations
as outlined in Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution.
These actions, four appointments during a period of time when the
Senate, in my opinion, was in session, fly in the face of the principle
of separation of powers and the concepts of checks and balances against
an imperial President.
Let's look for a moment at the history and precedents of recess
appointments. The exact length required for a
[[Page S287]]
recess is not defined in the Constitution, but according to the
Congressional Research Service ``it appears that no President, at least
in the modern era, has made an intra-session recess appointment during
a recess of less than 10 days.''
Both parties have relied upon the adjournment clause in Article I of
the Constitution to argue that the absolute minimum recess period would
conceivably be 3 days.
We can also look at the number of recess appointments made by recent
Presidents. As of January 23 of this year, President Obama had made 32
recess appointments, all to full-time positions. At the same point in
time in his first term, President Clinton had made nine recess
appointments to full-time positions. President Bush, at about the same
time, had made 35.
So they all made recess appointments--appointments while the Senate
was in recess. That is provided for specifically in the Constitution as
something the President could do. But President Clinton never did it
when Congress was in session for less than 10 days. President Bush
never did it when Congress was in recess for shorter than 11 days. Now,
unfortunately, President Obama has broken that precedent and made 4
appointments when we were in a period of less than 3 days.
Why is that important? In 2007, the current majority leader of the
Senate, Harry Reid, decided the Senate did not want President Bush
making recess appointments; that is, making appointments while the
Senate wasn't in session. So the Senate refused at that time to enter
into prolonged recesses. They invented the idea of pro forma recesses
every 3 days. President Bush strenuously objected to that, but he
respected that. He respected the constitutional authority of the Senate
under article I, section 5 to determine when the Senate is in session.
On November 16, 2007, Senator Reid said: ``With the Thanksgiving
break looming, the administration has informed me that they would make
several recess appointments.''
Senator Reid didn't like the idea of recess appointments any more
than we do. So he said: ``As a result, I am keeping the Senate in pro
forma to prevent recess appointments until we get back on track.''
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator has consumed 10
minutes.
Mr. ALEXANDER. I thank the Chair and ask to be notified when I have
consumed 3 minutes more.
On November 16, 2007, Senator Reid said:
As a result, I am keeping the Senate in pro forma to
prevent recess appointments until we get this process back on
track.''
And on July, 28, 2008 he said: ``We don't need a vote to recess. We
will just be in pro forma session. We will tell the House to do the
same thing.''
The President is restricted, as Senator Reid indicated, by article I
section 5 of the Constitution, which states that ``neither House,
during the Session of Congress, shall, without the Consent of the
other, adjourn for more than three days, nor to any other Place than
that in which the two Houses shall be sitting.''
Last December when the House and Senate agreed to adjourn, the
Speaker--a Republican--and the majority leader here--a Democrat--agreed
the two Chambers would hold pro forma sessions for the express purpose
of not going into recess. Yet the President went ahead and made his
appointments. This is a dangerous trend. It is a dangerous trend.
The major issue before our country is the Obama economy. That is what
we will be talking about more than anything else in an election year.
But liberty is the defining aspect of our American character. If the
President's current actions were to stand as a precedent, the Senate
may very well find that when it takes a break for lunch, when it comes
back, the country has a new Supreme Court Justice.
Because we believe in the importance of that constitutional system,
all of us on the Republican side insist on a full and complete debate
on this issue. We intend to take this issue to the American people. We
will file amicus curiae briefs in all of the appropriate courts and we
will take this issue to the most important court in the land and that
is the court of the American people on election day.
I do not suggest that the President will find, or even should find,
his relationship with Congress to be easy or simple. George Washington
did not. President Washington once came up here to discuss a treaty
with Senators and became so angry that he said, and this is
Washington's word, he'd be ``damned'' if he ever went there again.
The separation of powers does not mean an easy distribution of powers
but it is essential to the American character. We should remember that.
A short trip to Mount Vernon would remind us of that. The President's
recess appointments not only show disregard for the Constitution, they
show disregard for every individual American who chooses liberty over
tyranny, President over King.
I yield the floor.
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