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Who Owns The President's Papers?The Office of Legal Counsel concluded that the Presidential Records Act (PRA) is unconstitutional. In Civitas Outlook, I explained why I thought this opinion was consistent with recent Supreme Court precedents, including Trump v. Mazars. Others, unsurprisingly, disagree. Christopher Fonzone, who headed OLC during the Biden Administration, writes that the PRA is constitutional. Here, I want to focus on one aspect of Fonzone's analysis: who owns the President's papers? Fonzone writes:
The Carter Administration may have reached this conclusion, but (thankfully) one executive branch cannot bind another executive branch--especially one that was "especially pleased" to acquiesce to so many congressional constraints on presidential power. Fonzone does not mention that the Supreme Court expressly left this issue open in Nixon v. Administrator of General Services (1977):
The litigation over Nixon's records did not end in 1978. There was extensive caselaw that stretched decades. In 1992, the D.C. Circuit stated that the papers did belong to Nixon:
For those who keep track, the panel opinion was written by Judge Harry Edwards, and Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg joined it in full. The recent OLC opinion mentions the 1992 case and points out that the Presidential Records Act nowhere authorizes payment of just compensation: ". . . we note that the PRA is plainly not an attempt to exercise the power of eminent domain: Unlike the PRMPA, it contains no just-compensation provision." And wait, there's more! The Domestic Emoluments Clause is relevant. Seth Barrett Tillman and I discussed this issue in our contribution to the Heritage Guide to the Constitution:
The issue of who owns the the President's papers is not a settled question. When an issue is not yet settled by the Supreme Court, the only way to resolve the issue is what I call the Nike approach: "Just do it!" The executive concludes that the PRA is unconstitutional, stops voluntarily complying with it, and waits to be sued. Without such affirmative action, the President will forever be bound by the leadership of Jimmy Carter. In CASA, the Solicitor General stated clearly that lower courts cannot universally bind the executive branch, but the Supreme Court can. And now, the issue will race to SCOTUS. In other news, the litigation filed by American Oversight to block the implementation of the OLC opinion hit a stumbling block. The group attempted to judge shop the case to Judge Howell, a friendly forum. They listed this case as "related" to a pre-existing case before Judge Howell involving FOIA and DOGE. The government moved to randomly reassign the case, and Judge Howell agreed:
The case was reassigned to Judge Bates. You see, judge shopping is only bad when conservatives do it. When progressive use chicanery to draw a favored judge, there is no cause for concern. If people wanted to get serious about judge-shopping, the first area of focus is not a few single judge divisions. The rampant abuse of the "related cases" option should be the first priority. The post Who Owns The President's Papers? appeared first on Reason.com. |
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