Appeals court backs Trumpβs firings of MSPB, NLRB members
A three-judge panel ruled Friday that President Donald Trumpβs firings without cause of Cathy Harris and Gwynne Wilcox, Democratic members on the Merit Systems Protection Board and the National Labor Relations Board, were lawful.
The split 2-to-1 panel decision of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals has no immediate effect, since both Harris and Wilcoxβs firings were finalized in May. But Fridayβs ruling comes as the Supreme Court is expected to soon hear arguments on whether to overturn a 90-year-old ruling known asΒ Humphreyβs Executor β a decision that could expand Trumpβs power to shape independent agencies.
In the 1935 Supreme Court ruling on Humpreyβs Executor, the justices unanimously found that commissioners can be removed only for misconduct or neglect of duty, effectively limiting when presidents can fire board members.
But when Judges Gregory Katsas and Justin Walker ruled Friday in favor of Trumpβs firings of Harris and Wilcox, they argued that MSPB and NLRB fall outside the limitations stemming from Humphreyβs Executor, and that the president can still βremove principal officers who wield substantial executive power.β
βThe NLRB and MSPB wield substantial powers that are both executive in nature and different from the powers that Humphreyβs Executor deemed to be merely quasi-legislative or quasi-judicial,β the judges wrote. βSo, Congress cannot restrict the Presidentβs ability to remove NLRB or MSPB members.β
JudgeΒ Florence Pan, the dissenting panel member and a Biden appointee, argued that the two agencies do fall under the scope of Humphreyβs Executor, and that maintaining the independence of MSPB and NLRB is critical. She wrote that the Trump administrationβs βextreme view of executive power sharply departs from precedent.β
βWe may soon be living in a world in which every hiring decision and action by any government agency will be influenced by politics, with little regard for subject-matter expertise, the public good, and merit-based decision-making,β she wrote.
The MSPB is an independent agency responsible for adjudicating appeals from federal employees who allege prohibited personnel practices by their agencies. The NLRB investigates unfair labor practices in the private sector and oversees union elections. Both boards are typically composed of members of both political parties.
Trump fired both Wilcox and Harris within his first few weeks in office, but did not point to a specific reason for the terminations. Wilcox and Harris, both of whom were Democratic board members, sued the president over their removals, arguing that they are protected by a federal law meant to ensure MSPB and NLRBβs independence from political considerations β and that the president can only remove them βfor inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office.β
Though a federal judge initially ruled the two terminations were unlawful, the Supreme Court reversed that decision in May, effectively green-lighting the finalization of the board membersβ firings earlier this year.
In its May decision, the Supreme Court indicated that it was likely βthat both the NLRB and MSPB exercise considerable executive power,β which it said would make restrictions on the presidentβs ability to fire them unconstitutional. Fridayβs panel ruling aligns with the Supreme Courtβs initial arguments.
The Supreme Court is expected to hear arguments Monday on Trumpβs firing of Rebecca Slaughter, a Democratic member ofΒ the Federal Trade Commission β a case that may further influence the outcome of both Harris and Wilcoxβs terminations.
The Associated Press contributed reporting.
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