Washington — The Supreme Court heard arguments Monday in Trump v. Slaughter testing whether presidents may remove independent-agency commissioners without statutory cause. The justices considered whether to overturn Humphrey’s Executor (1935), which restricts presidential removal of independent regulators. Administration lawyers defended President Trump’s firing of FTC commissioner Rebecca Slaughter; opponents said removal protections preserve agency independence. The conservative majority has permitted removals while legal challenges proceed. During oral arguments, justices examined separation-of-powers doctrine and practical impacts on regulatory governance. A ruling is expected this term and could shift executive authority over independent agencies. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
Presidential administrations and aligned officials may gain expanded authority to remove independent-agency members, increasing executive influence over regulatory appointments and enforcement priorities.
Independent agencies, their commissioners, regulated industries, and administrative-law protections face reduced insulation from political removal, potentially diminishing long-term policy stability and institutional independence.
After reading and researching latest news.... The case challenges Humphrey’s Executor (1935) and centers on President Trump’s removal of FTC commissioner Rebecca Slaughter; oral arguments examined separation-of-powers and agency independence. A decision this term could alter removal protections and reshape executive oversight of independent regulatory agencies with nationwide institutional consequences.
Supreme Court to hear major test of presidential power over Trump's firing of FTC commissioner
CBS NewsSupreme Court Hears Case on Presidential Removal Powers
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