The high court majority recently went out of its way to signal its intention to protect the Federal Reserve boards independence.
https://www.msnbc.com/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/lisa-cook-fired-federal-reserve-supreme-court-humphreys-rcna227270
Back in May, when a divided Supreme Court gave President Donald Trump the power to fire members of certain labor boards without cause, the Republican-appointed majority went out of its way to signal its intention to protect the Federal Reserve board, even though the Fed itself wasnt at issue in that case.
Now, Trumps attempt to fire Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook could test the high courts strange signal.
In that May shadow docket case, Trump v. Wilcox, which involved members of the National Labor Relations Board and Merit Systems Protection Board, the majority addressed those board members argument that the logic behind stripping their protections would also imperil the Federal Reserves independence.
We disagree, the majority wrote, citing a previous precedent in noting that the Fed is a uniquely structured, quasi-private entity that follows in the distinct historical tradition of the First and Second Banks of the United States.
Dissenting in the Wilcox case, Justice Elena Kagan wrote for the Democratic appointees that she appreciated the majoritys intention to avoid imperiling the Fed but that its decision still posed a puzzle. Thats because the Federal Reserves independence rests on the same foundation as agencies such as the NLRB and the MSPB which, Kagan pointed out, means it rests on a nearly century-old precedent, Humphreys Executor. The Trump administration wants to overturn that 1935 decision, and the majoritys recent rulings on presidential power suggest that its on board with that effort.
If the idea is to reassure the markets, a simpler and more judicial approach would have been to rule against Trump on the continued authority of Humphreys, Kagan wrote in Wilcox......
While it will depend on how exactly Cook presses her legal claim and how the administration defends itself, the cases resolution could turn on the narrower issue of the sufficiency of cause for removal, as opposed to the justices resolving the outer limits of presidential authority when it comes to the Federal Reserve. Given Kagans critique of the logic behind the majoritys Fed carveout in Wilcox (not that the majority has to care about that), the majority might appreciate such narrower grounds as a way of solving the puzzle, as Kagan put it, that the court created for itself.
We may see trump's attorney citing Justice Kagan's dissent in this litigation. I think that Justice Kagan has the better argument, but the majority may be committed to defend their prior bad shadow docket ruling which will hurt trump's argument.