This Wednesday [November 29, 2023],
the Supreme Court will hear a case that poses the most direct challenge yet to
the legitimacy of the modern federal government. The right-wing legal
movement’s target is the “administrative state”—the agencies and institutions
that set standards for safety in the workplace, limit environmental hazards and
damage, and impose rules on financial markets to ensure their stability and
basic fairness, among many other important things. The case, Securities
and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy, threatens all of that. Terrifyingly,
this gambit might succeed.
The case involves garden-variety
securities fraud. George R. Jarkesy Jr., a right-wing activist and
conservative-radio talk-show host, ran a pair of investment funds with $24
million in assets. But he misrepresented how the funds were run, paid himself and
his partner exorbitant fees, and inflated the assets’ value. As punishment, the
SEC fined him several hundred thousand dollars and prohibited him from working
in some parts of the securities industry—very standard stuff.
Jarkesy responded with what can be
described only as chutzpah. He didn’t just contest the SEC’s ruling; he alleged
that the SEC’s entire process against him was unconstitutional. Among other
things, he asserted that Congress never had the authority to empower the SEC
and that the SEC adjudicator who punished him was too independent from
presidential control.
In May of last year, Jarkesy’s
arguments were accepted by two judges on the conservative Fifth Circuit Court
of Appeals. In a 2–1 decision, the court agreed with Jarkesy, all but ruling
the SEC’s entire existence unconstitutional. The opinion was so extreme that
Judge W. Eugene Davis, twice appointed by Republican presidents—and elevated to
the appeals court by Ronald Reagan—dissented vigorously.
Jarkesy’s most far-reaching
constitutional argument is built on the “nondelegation doctrine,” which holds
that there may be some limits on the kinds of powers that Congress can give to
agencies. Jarkesy argues that, when Congress gave the SEC the power to decide
whether to bring enforcement actions in court or in front of an independent
agency adjudicator, it gave away a core legislative function. It thus violated
the doctrine and engaged in an unconstitutional delegation.
This is wild stuff. Not long ago, a
lawyer would have been laughed out of court for making such nondelegation
claims. Today, they’d have a good chance of destroying the federal government’s
administrative capacity—taking down its ability to protect Americans’ health
and safety while unleashing fraud in the financial markets.
Whether Congress’s grant of authority
to the SEC was constitutional should not be a close question. Congress has
delegated expansive authority to government agencies since the dawn of the
republic. Only twice in American history has the Supreme Court concluded that a
delegation to an agency ran afoul of the Constitution—and both of those times,
nearly 90 years ago, involved unusual statutes nothing like this one.
The SEC was created as an independent
agency in 1934, after the financial crash of 1929, to thwart the sort of market
manipulation that preceded the Great Depression; Congress has granted it
additional powers over the years to continue protecting financial markets.
Responding to catastrophes and
guarding against market manipulation is exactly the kind of work that Congress
should empower the executive branch to do. Requiring Congress to legislate in
response to every new fraud some crook might dream up would not be a good use
of its time. And there’s no reason to think that delegating authority to police
markets runs afoul of the Constitution.
This was, of course, irrelevant to the
conservative judges who heard Jarkesy’s appeal. The Fifth Circuit
majority concluded that Congress acted
“unconstitutionally” without “an intelligible principle” by letting the SEC
choose where to bring its enforcement actions. But of course, statutes
routinely leave prosecutors and other enforcement agencies the discretion over
how to proceed in their cases, without raising delegation concerns.
And for more than 75 years, the
Supreme Court has recognized that other agencies can decide how to proceed in
their policy-making activities—whether via case-by-case adjudications or
general rule makings, for example—without even hinting at any delegation
problems.
Jarkesy’s second claim—that the
internal adjudicator who first heard his case held too much independence—is
especially galling. These adjudicators should be independent;
the alternative would be to put their regulatory powers at the political whim
of whichever administration might be in charge. They have long enjoyed some
protection from removal, in order to insulate them from threats of reprisal.
The Supreme Court has always
recognized the need to maintain the independence of internal agency
adjudicators: Even the conservative Chief Justice William Howard Taft, who
wrote an opinion nearly 100 years ago extolling the benefits of presidential
control of all government officers, was careful to carve out exceptions for adjudicator
independence. But, apparently, Taft is no longer conservative
enough.
Underlying the Fifth Circuit’s ruling
is a deep misunderstanding of American history. Of the three judges who decided
the case, the two in the majority seem to believe that government regulation of
any kind is somehow un-American. Their opinion invokes the opening language of
the Constitution, “We the People,” and then cherry-picks quotes from the
Framers to support a stifling vision of federal power. For instance, they cite
James Madison for the proposition that unless we keep the government’s powers strictly
separated among three different branches, we will inevitably fall into tyranny.
But Madison goes on, in “Federalist
No. 51,” to recognize that “some deviations … from the principle [of the
separation of powers] must be admitted.” And Alexander Hamilton, in “Federalist
No. 66,” goes further still, championing “partial intermixture.”
Besides, both Madison and Hamilton
were interested first and foremost in establishing a powerful national
government. That is, after all, why they had participated in what the legal
historian Michael Klarman has called the “Framers’ coup” to get rid of the
Articles of Confederation.
The Fifth Circuit’s claim that
regulation and the separation of powers are incompatible is not simply bad
history; like much of the rest of originalist jurisprudence, it is selective
history served up to justify a preferred political outcome. In fact, as
voluminous scholarship has decisively established, regulation was pervasive in the early republic.
Congress has always depended on expansive delegations to govern the country.
Separation of powers was not
understood to be a bar to effective government. Indeed, for the drafters and
ratifiers of the Constitution, such separation was a pragmatic principle to
ensure free and efficacious government.
That is why, far from impeding
delegations, Congress made creative use of the separation of powers—such as in
the establishment of the Sinking Fund Commission,
enacted by the very first Congress, which mixed representation from the three
branches to ensure the stability of the federal debt.
The Fifth Circuit’s misuse of history
is symptomatic of much of the originalism practiced by judges affiliated with
the conservative Federalist Society, who now hold immense power across the
federal judiciary. Originalism’s ideology was born in sin; recent scholarship has argued that originalism first
emerged to defend segregation following the Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of
Education.
And, in any case, many conservative
judges don’t even bother to make substantial originalist arguments anymore. A
lazy hand-waving suffices instead. They sprinkle in a few historical quotations, refuse to
engage seriously with historians’ findings, and then declare that their
right-wing policy preferences are dictated by the authority of history.
Thus, Jarkesy’s challenge might
succeed. Arguments like his have been rejected by federal courts many times
already. But the federal judiciary has drastically changed in recent years, and
the Supreme Court with it—opening the possibility of a new, friendly reception
to these absurd legal claims. (The Court could also set aside these substantive
questions and decide the case on other, more technical grounds.)
Were Jarkesy to win, he would help
achieve what the conservative legal movement’s members have long dreamed of:
the destruction of the New Deal. The SEC, Jarkesy’s target, is not just the
most important regulator of the financial markets, it is also one of the crown
jewels of the New Deal agencies. Republicans have had it in their crosshairs
for nearly a century.
The consequences of Jarkesy’s success
would be disastrous, especially for the American economy. The SEC enforces the
basic rules that make stock markets work. Without it, stock issuers and dealers
would lie—with disastrous results. One needs only to examine the rampant fraud,
contagion, and meltdown in crypto markets last year to see what an unregulated
securities market looks like.
More generally, if Congress cannot
delegate to agencies, it cannot govern. Congress could never and has never
written rules specific enough to anticipate all eventualities. This is why
Congress delegated power to the SEC in the first place.
Finally, and most dangerous, ending
independence for internal agency adjudicators would undermine the rule of law.
Without independence, adjudicators would be beholden to the politicians who
oversee agencies. Unscrupulous presidents would use agencies to punish their
opponents and reward their allies. This would do more than turn regulators into
political handmaidens; it would destabilize markets, stifle growth, and
inevitably lead to financial crises.
Of course, if Republicans want to
pursue this terrifying course, they can try. The country is still a democracy.
The right way to abolish the SEC and undo the New Deal is to win a majority and
pass a statute.
But Americans like having functional
financial markets and bringing fraudulent hedge-fund managers to justice—just
as they like eating unspoiled food and using effective and safe medication. The
“administrative state”—that is, government regulation to protect the public—is
rightly popular, as Republican presidential candidates, to their chagrin, keep
discovering.
But Jarkesy, a fringe figure using
fringe arguments, is trying to do an end run around the democratic process and
win in the Court what right-wing activists have failed to achieve at the ballot
box. The Supreme Court should reject this antidemocratic ploy rather than
accept the Fifth Circuit’s fake history.
Noah Rosenblum is a professor at New
York University School of Law.
The Atlantic
Source URL: https://portside.org/2023-11-27/case-could-destroy-government
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