Clinton v. City of New York

 
US Supreme Court Decisions:

Clinton v. City of New York


118 S.Ct. 2091 (1998), argued 27 April 1998, decided 25 June 1998 by vote of 6 to 3; Stevens for the Court, Scalia, O'Connor, and Breyer concurring and dissenting in part or whole

Since the late nineteenth century, presidents have sought the power to eliminate selectively provisions from legislation presented to them by Congress. The Constitution in Article I, however, requires that the chief executive must either accept or reject any measure in full rather than rejecting particular pieces. Republican President Ronald Reagan in the 1980s had urged such power as a way of fostering a balanced budget by curbing the spending of a Democratic Congress. The line-item veto emerged in the 1990s as one of the important clauses in the Republicans' so-called “Contract With America,” and the Republican-controlled Congress in 1996 finally passed the Line Item Veto Act. That measure allowed the President to cancel individual items of federal spending and tax breaks.

Although the act passed with solid majorities in both houses, its opponents acted aggressively to overturn it. Led by Democratic Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia, six members of Congress brought suit in federal court challenging the act's constitutionality. The Supreme Court, in Raines v. Byrd (1997) rebuffed this effort and sustained the Clinton administration. The justices found that the lawmakers bringing the suit lacked standing to challenge the statute, because they were not personally affected by it. President Clinton continued to invoke his powers, ultimately rewriting 11 laws and eliminating 82 provisions, including money for New York City hospitals and a tax break for Idaho potato growers. These two groups sued and this time the Court accepted the cases for full hearing.

The Clinton administration, through Solicitor General Seth P. Waxman, conceded that a true line-item veto would be unconstitutional, but the measure at hand was not one. Instead, Waxman insisted, the law was constitutional because the president first signed the measure in question and then selectively eliminated portions of it as an exercise of the authority that Congress had delegated to him. As long as Congress had not identified a particular provision as exempt from the veto, then the president retained the prerogative to eliminate it.

A majority of the Supreme Court, however, rejected this logic. Speaking for the majority, Justice John Paul Stevens insisted that the statute violated the presentment clause of the Constitution in Article I. The president lacked constitutional authority to modify the text of legislation presented to him; he had either to accept or reject it in toto. The dissenters, led by Justice Antonin Scalia, insisted that the measure was a proper constitutional experiment. Scalia reasoned that there was no meaningful difference between the president canceling a particular provision of a law and refusing to spend money that Congress had appropriated. The Court avoided dealing with the explosive issue of the delegation of congressional powers to executive branch agencies, a practice that has become commonplace in the modern administrative state.

Although members of Congress supportive of the line-item veto have proffered other schemes, there seems little likelihood that any of them will stand the test of high court scrutiny. If a true line-item veto is to be added to the president's powers, as it already exists among the governors of 40 states, then it will almost certainly have to come through a constitutional amendment.

— Kermit L. Hall

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US Government Guide: Clinton v. City of New York

118 S.Ct. 2091 (1998)
Vote: 6–3
For the Court: Stevens
Dissenting: Scalia, O'Connor, and Breyer

Article 1, Section 7, of the U.S. Constitution says that bills passed by Congress must be presented to the President, who can either accept or reject any proposal in full. For more than a century, however, Presidents have wanted the power to reject selectively one or more points of a multifaceted bill that they generally approved. President Ulysses S. Grant, for example, asked Congress in 1873 to approve an amendment to the Constitution that would give the chief executive the power to veto particular items of a comprehensive bill enacted by Congress while generally approving the legislation. Congress refused to support the President in his quest for what later came to be called a “line-item veto.” In the 20th century, Presidents Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan unsuccessfully sought the power of the line-item veto. Then in 1996, Congress passed the Line Item Veto Act, and President Bill Clinton signed it.

This new federal statute gave the President the power to “cancel” a particular item on expenditure of funds in an omnibus, or comprehensive, bill that the chief executive otherwise approved. This “cancellation” had to be done within five days after the President signed the bill into law. This law also gave Congress the power to restore the item or items “canceled” by the President by passing a new bill within the next 30 days. However, the President could comprehensively sign or veto that bill, and the Congress could overrule the veto by a two-thirds vote.

Six members of Congress, led by Senator Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia, quickly challenged the Line Item Veto Act. They claimed the law violated the “presentment clause” in Article 1, Section 7, of the Constitution. They argued that this constitutional clause requires the President comprehensively, not selectively, to sign or veto a bill enacted by Congress and presented intact to the chief executive.

Senator Byrd and his five colleagues filed a suit in a federal district court on January 2, 1997, that asked that the Line Item Veto Act be nullified as unconstitutional. The federal judge agreed with the congressional plaintiffs. The Supreme Court, however, decided in June 1997 (Raines v. Byrd) that the members of Congress had no legal standing to file the suit because none of them had suffered a personal injury.

In August 1997, President Clinton used his power under the Line Item Veto Act to “cancel” two items from the budget enacted by Congress. And he removed one item from the Taxpayer Relief Act. He had previously signed both bills, which, with the exception of the “canceled” items, became federal law.

Members of Congress from New York opposed President Clinton's cancellation of a budget item that benefited hospitals and health-care workers in New York City. And residents of Idaho objected to the President's veto of a line item giving tax breaks to potato farmers in their state. Representatives of the offended groups in New York City and Idaho filed suits challenging the constitutionality of Clinton's actions under the Line Item Veto Act.

The Issue

Did the Line Item Veto Act violate the presentment clause of Article 1, Section 7, of the Constitution? Supporters of the law claimed it was crafted carefully to overcome arguments against its constitutionality. They pointed out, for example, that the President could cancel particular items from an omnibus bill only after he signed it. And, they argued, Congress was empowered by the act to restore canceled items. Opponents of the act argued that it clearly and directly contradicted a specific provision of the Constitution. Thus, it should be nullified.

Opinion of the Court

The Court ruled for the plaintiffs and declared the Line Item Veto Act to be unconstitutional. Writing for the Court, Justice John Paul Stevens said that the law at issue violated the presentment clause of the Constitution. He wrote, “This Act gives the President the unilateral power to change the text of duly enacted statutes…. Congress cannot alter the procedures set out in Article 1, Section 7, without amending the Constitution.”

Dissent

The dissenting opinions defended the constitutionality of the statute at issue. In particular, Justice Antonin Scalia argued that there was no significant difference between a President's cancellation of a line item in an omnibus budget bill and a chief executive's refusal to spend funds that Congress had appropriated because of disapproval of the programs to be supported by the money.

Significance

The Federal Office of Budget and Management released all the funds for items the President had vetoed. So the immediate consequence of the decision was the distribution of federal benefits to the plaintiffs and those they represented in New York and Idaho.

The constitutional principle of separation of powers was reinforced. “The Constitution is intact,” exclaimed New York Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan. It appears that the only way to give the President the power of the line-item veto is to amend the Constitution.

 
Wikipedia: Clinton v. City of New York
Clinton v. City of New York
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued April 27, 1998
Decided June 25, 1998
Holding
The President's unilateral striking of portions of legislation passed by Congress pursuant to the Line Item Veto Act was without legal force, because the U.S. Constitution did not authorize the President to enact federal law of which both houses of Congress had not previously approved the text. District Court for the District of Columbia affirmed.
Court membership
Chief Justice: William Rehnquist
Associate Justices: John Paul Stevens, Sandra Day O'Connor, Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, David Souter, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer
Case opinions
Majority by: Stevens
Joined by: Rehnquist, Kennedy, Souter, Thomas, Ginsburg
Concurrence by: Kennedy
Concurrence/dissent by: Scalia
Joined by: O'Connor; Breyer (in part)
Dissent by: Breyer
Joined by: O'Connor, Scalia (in part)
Laws applied
U.S. Const. art. I; 2 U.S.C. § 691 et seq. (1994 ed., Supp. II) (Line Item Veto Act of 1996)

Clinton v. City of New York, 524 U.S. 417 (1998), is a legal case in which the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the line-item veto as granted in the Line Item Veto Act of 1996 violated the Presentment Clause of the United States Constitution because it impermissibly gave the President of the United States the power to unilaterally amend or repeal parts of statutes that had been duly passed by the United States Congress. The decision of the Court, in a six-to-three majority, was delivered by Justice John Paul Stevens.

Contents

Background of the case

The Line Item Veto Act of 1996 allowed the President to "cancel", that is to void or legally nullify, certain provisions of appropriations bills, and disallowed the use of funds from canceled provisions for offsetting deficit spending in other areas.

Political circumstances

The 1994 federal midterm elections signaled a sea-change in American politics known as the Republican Revolution, with the Republican Party wresting control of both houses of the U.S. Congress from Democrats. Key to that revolution was the Republicans' Contract with America, which included a list of actions they promised to take if they gained control of Congress. Among this list was the Line Item Veto Act itself, one of two provisions designed to ensure Congressional fiscal conservativism. The Act was the only provision of the "Contract with America" that then-President Bill Clinton supported.[1]

Initial litigation

At its passage, the Act was politically controversial, with many Democrats breaking with Clinton to oppose it. Of the opposition, six members of Congress, including Republican Mark Hatfield sued to prevent use of the line-item veto. They were granted summary judgment by the U.S. District Court, but the Supreme Court held that the Congressmen lacked standing because they could not show any particularized harm, and dismissed their suit.[2] Within the next two months, Clinton began using the line-item veto, prompting several entities to file suit in a second attempt to have the Act declared unconstitutional.

In the second case, which was consolidated from two cases by the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, the City of New York and several organizations related to health care alleged injury from President Clinton's cancellation of certain provisions of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 that eliminated certain liabilities, and Snake River Potato Growers, Inc. alleged injury from the President's cancellation of certain provisions of the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 that gave tax benefits to aid farmer's cooperatives in purchasing potato processing facilities.

The District Court ruled for the plaintiffs, holding that the Line Item Veto Act was unconstitutional. Because the Act established an expedited appeal process for challenges, the case was directly appealed from the District Court to the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court's decision

In a majority opinion written by Justice John Paul Stevens, the Court ruled that because the Act allowed the President to unilaterally amend or repeal parts of duly enacted statutes by using line-item cancellations, it violated the Presentment Clause of the Constitution,[3] which outlines a specific practice for enacting a statute. The Court construed the silence of the Constitution on the subject of such unilateral Presidential action as equivalent to "an express prohibition", agreeing with historical material that supported the conclusion that statutes may only be enacted "in accord with a single, finely wrought and exhaustively considered, procedure",[4] and that a bill must be approved or rejected by the President in its entirety.

Breyer's dissent

In a dissenting opinion, Justice Stephen Breyer contended that the objective of the Act was constitutionally proper and was consistent with powers that the President has held in the past, stating that the Act "does not violate any specific textual constitutional command, nor does it violate any implicit Separation of Powers principle." He extensively refers to many different cases which support the delegation of power by the Congress, and primarily suggests that the Act is an efficient means by which a constitutionally legitimate end may be achieved.

Kennedy's concurrence

Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, in an opinion concurring in the opinion and judgment of the Court, objected to the dissent's argument that the Act did not violate principles of the separation of powers and threaten individual liberty, stating that the "undeniable effects" of the Act were to "enhance the President's power to reward one group and punish another, to help one set of taxpayers and hurt another, to favor one State and ignore another". Kennedy's concurrence implicitly viewed the statute as a violation of the nondelegation doctrine.

Scalia's partial concurrence and partial dissent

In an alternative opinion, Justice Antonin Scalia objected to the Court's consideration of the case with respect to the Taxpayer Relief Act, finding no party in the case with standing to challenge it. However, he did find a party with standing to challenge the President's cancellation in the Balanced Budget Act, and concluded that it did not violate the Constitution, because the Congress has the power to delegate the discretionary authority to decline to spend appropriated sums of money, which he asserted was equivalent to cancellation.

Critical response

Steven G. Calabresi argued that although the Court had denied this, the instant decision was really a "Nondelegation doctrine case masquerading as a bicameralism and presentment case." [5] He also suggested that this decision was "the blockbuster separation of powers case of the Rehnquist years." [6]

Michael B. Rappaport argued that the original meaning of the Constitution does not apply to certain parts of the nondelegation doctrine, relying on his interpretation of the Executive Power Vesting Clause.[7] Under this view, "laws that authorize the withdrawal of money from the treasury and which have traditionally taken the form of authorizing a certain amount to be spent for particular programs ... are not subject to the nondelegation doctrine."[8] He further criticized the majority opinion for failing to satisfactorily justify its application of a stricter standard to the delegation of cancellation authority than it had used in the past for other executive delegations. In Rappaport’s opinion, "...the Court’s approach to cancellation authority has no basis in text, structure and purpose, or precedent."[9]

J. Stephen Kennedy wrote that the majority of the Supreme Court was sufficiently concerned with the constitution challenges the line item veto presented to declare the act wholly unconstitutional, instead of relying on other traditional and less sweeping ways of correcting acts of Congress.[10] In his view, “the Court’s decision sent a clear message of finality for any future use of the line item veto.”[11] Kennedy also noted that while the majority relied on a strict interpretation or literal textual reading of the Presentment Clause contained in Article I of the United States Constitution, Justice Scalia, in his dissent, “stray[ed] somewhat from his usual strict constructionist approach ... by stressing that the President’s act of cancellation would only occur after satisfaction of the Presentment Clause.”[12]

Steven F. Huefner wrote that "Although the Presentment Clause analysis of the Line Item Veto Act has superficial appeal, it ultimately does not withstand scrutiny,"[13] arguing that the Court should have relied on the nondelegation doctrine in order to invalidate the Act, as it provided a superior basis for such a decision.[14] Huefner named two main implications of the Court’s refusal to use the nondelegation doctrine. First, it suggests that the Court seems unready or unwilling to alter the existing interpretation of the nondelegation doctrine.[15] Second, the Court has shown that it is willing to rely upon alternative rationales to achieve the same result "as would a more robust nondelegation doctrine rationale".[14] This approach is significant because in theory, such a rationale could endanger previously accepted delegations to the executive.[14]

Roy E. Brownell criticized the Clinton administration for its exercise of the Line Item Veto Act, charging that it should have restricted its cancellation powers only to statutory provisions that remain in the realm of national security.[16] He argued that had the Clinton administration limited its use of the Line Item Veto Act in this fashion, it would have ensured that when the constitutionality of the Act was inevitably challenged, the challenge would have been based on terms most favorable to the Executive. Brownell suggested that a test case brought forth on the grounds of national security would have likely acknowledged the existence of "National Security Rescission", "a narrow statutory construction limiting the area of presidential cancellation power to within the field of national security. Such a result...would have assured that the President maintained cancellation authority over a sixth of the federal budget."[17]

Later developments

Though the Supreme Court struck down the Line Item Veto Act in 1998, President George W. Bush asked Congress to enact legislation that would return the line item veto power to the Executive. First announcing his intent to seek such legislation in his January 31, 2006 State of the Union address, President Bush sent a legislative proposal Legislative Line Item Veto Act of 2006 to Congress on March 6, 2006, urging its prompt passage.[18] Senator Bill Frist, Senator John McCain, and Republican Whip Senator Mitch McConnell jointly introduced this proposal.

On that same day, Joshua Bolten, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, gave a press conference on the president’s line-item veto proposal. Bolten explained that the proposed Act would give the President the ability to single out “wasteful” spending and to put such spending on hold. While the spending line-item is on hold, the President can send legislation to Congress to rescind the particular line-item. The proposal would then be considered in both houses within ten days on an up or down basis, and could be passed by a simple majority. Additionally, such proposals could not be filibustered.

When asked how this proposed legislation was different from the 1996 Line Item Veto Act that was found unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court, Bolten said that whereas the former act granted unilateral authority to the Executive to disallow specific spending line items, the new proposal would seek Congressional approval of such line-item vetoes. Thus, in order for the President to successfully rescind previously enacted spending, a simple majority of Congress is required to agree to specific legislation to that effect.

Though the current line-item veto proposal is much weaker than the 1996 version, it has nevertheless failed to find strong support in Congress. Senator Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia called it "an offensive slap at Congress," asserting that the legislation would enable the president to intimidate individual members of Congress by targeting the projects of his political opponents. He also complained that the line-item veto as proposed would take away Congress’ constitutional "power of the purse" and give it to the Executive branch.

On June 8, 2006, Viet D. Dinh, Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center, and Nathan A. Sales, John M. Olin Fellow at Georgetown University Law Center testified by written statement before the House Committee on the Budget on the constitutional issues in connection with the proposed legislation.[19] Dinh and Sales argued that the Legislative Line Item Veto Act of 2006 satisfies the Constitution’s Bicameralism and Presentment Clause, and therefore avoids the constitutional issues raised in the 1996 Act struck down by the Supreme Court. They also stated that the proposed Act is consistent with the basic principle that grants Congress broad discretion to establish procedures to govern its internal operations.

The proposed Act was approved by the House Budget Committee on June 14, 2006 by a vote of 24-9.[1]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Supreme Court Deletes Line-Item Veto from CNN, June 25, 1998.
  2. ^ Raines v. Byrd, 521 U.S. 811 (1997)
  3. ^ U.S. Const. art. I, § 7, cl. 2
  4. ^ From INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919 (1983).
  5. ^ Steven G. Calabresi, Separation of Power and the Rehnquist Court: The Centrality of Clinton v. City of New York, 99 Northwestern University Law Review 77 (2004-2005), at 85.
  6. ^ Id. at 86.
  7. ^ See Michael B. Rappaport, The Selective Nondelegation Doctrine and the Line Item Veto: A New Approach to the Nondelegation Doctrine and Its Implications for Clinton v. City of New York, 76 Tulane Law Review 265 (2001-2002).
  8. ^ Id. at 265.
  9. ^ Id. at 290.
  10. ^ See J. Stephen Kennedy, How A Bill Does Not Become Law: The Supreme Court Sounds the Death Knell of the Line Item Veto, 20 Mississippi College Law Review 357 (1999-2000).
  11. ^ Id. at 371.
  12. ^ Id. at 372.
  13. ^ Steven F. Huefner, Supreme Court’s Avoidance of the Nondelegation Doctrine in Clinton v. City of New York, 49 Catholic University Law Review 337 (1999-2000), at 339.
  14. ^ a b c Id.
  15. ^ Id. at 340.
  16. ^ See Roy E. Brownell II, The Unnecessary Demise of the Line Item Veto Act: The Clinton Administration’s Costly Failure to Seek Acknowledgement of "National Security Rescission", 47 American Law Review 1273 (1997-1998).
  17. ^ Id. at 1280.
  18. ^ Proposal for a Legislative Line Item Veto Act of 2006
  19. ^ http://www.budget.house.gov/hearings/dinhstmnt060806.htm

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