Is this a sign that sanity is beginning to be restored to
Washington D.C.?
By Associated Press, Updated: Friday, January 25, 10:12 AM
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama violated the
Constitution when he bypassed the Senate to fill vacancies on a labor relations
panel, a federal appeals court panel ruled Friday.
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
D.C. Circuit said that Obama did not have the power to make three recess
appointments last year to the National Labor Relations Board.
The unanimous decision is an embarrassing setback for the
president, who made the appointments after Senate Republicans spent months
blocking his choices for an agency they contended was biased in favor of
unions.
The ruling also throws into question Obama’s recess
appointment of Richard Cordray to head the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau. Cordray’s appointment, also made under the recess circumstance, has
been challenged in a separate case.
Obama claims he acted properly in the case of the NLRB
appointments because the Senate was away for the holidays on a 20-day recess.
But the three-judge panel ruled that the Senate technically stayed in session
when it was gaveled in and out every few days for so-called “pro forma”
sessions.
GOP lawmakers used the tactic — as Democrats have in the
past as well — to specifically to prevent the president from using his recess
power. GOP lawmakers contend the labor board has been too pro-union in its
decisions. They had also vigorously opposed the nomination of Cordray.
The Obama administration is expected to appeal the decision
to the U.S. Supreme Court, but if it stands, it means hundreds of decisions
issued by the board over more than a year are invalid. It also would leave the
five-member labor board with just one validly appointed member, effectively
shutting it down. The board is allowed to issue decisions only when it has at
least three sitting members.
On Jan. 4, 2012, Obama appointed Deputy Labor Secretary
Sharon Block, union lawyer Richard Griffin and NLRB counsel Terence Flynn to
fill vacancies on the NLRB, giving it a full contingent for the first time in
more than a year. Block and Griffin are Democrats, while Flynn is a Republican.
Flynn stepped down from the board last year.
Obama also appointed Cordray on the same day.
The court’s decision is a victory for Republicans and
business groups that have been attacking the labor board for issuing a series
of decisions and rules that make it easier for the nation’s labor unions to
organize new members.
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