Court Opinion

ID: 4120540
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-01-27 22:48:11.777765+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:37:04.615230
License: Public Domain

Constitutionality of the Federal Advisory
                              Committee Act
Without reaching definitive conclusions, this memorandum considers three constitutional questions
  raised by the Federal Advisory Committee Act.
First, is it within Congress’s constitutional powers to regulate advisory committees in general and
   presidential advisory committees in particular?
Second, even if Congress can regulate advisory committees, may it regulate those committees giving
  advice to the President without violating the separation of powers?
Third, even if Congress may regulate those committees giving advice to the President, may the
  President except certain committees from certain regulations because of executive privilege?

                                                                               December 1, 1974

                                        MEMORANDUM

                                           I. Outline

   Is the Federal Advisory Committee Act unconstitutional?

        1. Is it beyond Congress’s power to legislate?

           a. Not as to committees created or funded by Congress.

           b. Not as to agencies created by Congress in their use of advisory
           committees.

           c. Perhaps, as to private committees advising the President gener-
           ally.

           d. Most likely, as to private committees advising the President
           about a matter expressly vested in the executive, e.g., pardoning.

           e. No case law on point.

               i. Trend is to find almost anything within the scope of Con-
               gress’s power to legislate.

        2. Does the Act unconstitutionally violate the separation of powers?

           a. Yes, because it attempts to regulate a power impliedly vested
           exclusively in the President—the power to seek and obtain advice
           where he wishes.

               i. Argument by analogy from Myers.

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                Constitutionality of the Federal Advisory Committee Act

          b. The Act limits the advice the President will be able to receive.

          c. Such a limitation impinges on the executive’s inherent power.

             i. The limitation is unconstitutional no matter what the subject
             of the advice is.

          d. The power to limit committees’ advice is not constitutionally
          distinguishable from the advice from any person.

          e. Subordinates to the President exercising powers delegated to
          them may also be protected.

       3. Certain committees may be relieved from certain requirements of
       the Act on the basis of executive privilege.

          a. Supreme Court has acknowledged the existence of executive
          privilege.

          b. The privilege should prevail against an unparticularized call for
          publicizing the contents of a meeting.

          c. Executive privilege would not void the Act but merely relieve
          some committees of some requirements—notably the requirement
          that the meeting be open.

             i. Question as to the exemption in the Act itself for keeping
             meetings closed.

          d. Executive privilege might be claimed with regard to meetings
          of even committees created by Congress.

          e. Courts’ dislike of exemption 5 under the FOI Act might augur
          poorly for the executive privilege claim unless rarely invoked.

                                       II. Text

   The Federal Advisory Committee Act, Pub. L. No. 92-463, 86 Stat. 770 (1972)
(codified at 5 U.S.C. app. I (Supp. II 1973)), regulates advisory committees
“established or utilized by the President” as well as those established or utilized by
agencies and those established by statute or reorganization plan.
   Three separable, if not altogether distinct, constitutional questions are raised by
the Act. First, is it within Congress’s constitutional powers to regulate advisory
committees in general and presidential advisory committees in particular? Second,
even if Congress can regulate advisory committees, may it regulate those commit-
tees giving advice to the President without violating the separation of powers?

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            Supplemental Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel in Volume 1

Third, even if Congress may regulate those committees giving advice to the
President, may the President except certain committees from certain regulations
because of executive privilege?

                                          A.

    Whatever power Congress has to regulate advisory committees would seem to
stem from the Necessary and Proper Clause. Moreover, to the extent that Congress
creates an advisory committee by statute (e.g., the Air Quality Advisory Board, 42
U.S.C. § 1857e), there would seem no question as to its power to regulate its
existence or the means by which it functions. It would also seem justified for
Congress to regulate committees not created by it, but which are funded by its
appropriations, for it would seem within Congress’s power to insure that commit-
tees utilizing its monies be constituted and function in accord with its regulations.
Most advisory committees, as defined by the Act, would presumably fit within
these two categories. Nevertheless, private committees utilized by the government
for advice without any form of compensation would not be covered (e.g., the ABA
Committee on the Federal Judiciary). To the extent that such committees were
utilized by statutory agencies, again Congress would seem to have the power to
regulate, not the committees themselves, but the means by which they might
advise agencies created by Congress. That is, it would be within Congress’s power
to regulate the means by which agencies created by it might be advised, so as to
diminish the likelihood of private rather than public interests being served by its
creations.
    Still, however, private committees advising the President would not be within
these theoretical frameworks, and thus it might be argued that the Act’s attempt to
regulate such committees is beyond Congress’s power. The counterargument, and
it is not without force, is that to the extent that the advice relates to the execution
of laws passed by Congress, Congress has an interest, and consequently a power,
in seeing that advice concerning the administration of its laws is given in such a
manner as to lessen the likelihood of private interests being served. As for private
advisory committees, not funded by Congress, advising the President on matters
entrusted solely to him by the Constitution, there would seem no justification for
congressional regulation of the manner of their giving advice to the President.
    Authority for the proposition that regulation of presidential advisory commit-
tees is beyond the powers of Congress to legislate is very meager. Courts rarely
find laws unconstitutional solely on this basis, and then only with difficulty. See,
e.g., Oregon v. Mitchell, 400 U.S. 112 (1970). The tendency, and especially the
modern tendency, is to read broadly the power of Congress to legislate.

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                Constitutionality of the Federal Advisory Committee Act

                                          B.

    Even if the regulation of advisory committees generally and presidential advi-
sory committees in particular is within the subject area of Congress’s power to
legislate, that regulation might be unconstitutional as a violation of the separation
of powers. Thus, in Myers v. United States, 272 U.S. 52 (1926), the Supreme
Court held unconstitutional a law requiring the President to obtain the approval of
the Senate to remove an officer appointed by him with the advice and consent of
the Senate. This requirement was considered to violate the separation of powers
between the Executive and Legislative Branches. So also in Ex parte Garland, 71
U.S. (4 Wall.) 333 (1867), and United States v. Klein, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) 128
(1872), the Supreme Court struck down congressional enactments which tended to
undercut the effect of presidential pardons as unconstitutional infringements on
executive powers.
    Most struggles between the Executive and Legislative Branches do not result in
court decisions, often because they are considered political questions, so again
case authority for the unconstitutional legislative infringement of the Executive
Branch is meager. Both Garland and Klein dealt with restrictions on an express
presidential power and hence are distinguishable from the Federal Advisory
Committee Act which, at best, limits an implied right to unrestricted advice. Myers
involved a power implied by the words of Article II, Section 1, Clause 1, that the
executive power shall be vested in a President, and the words of Article II, Sec-
tion 3, that the President shall take care that the laws be faithfully executed. While
Myers has been severely limited by Humphrey’s Executor v. United States, 295
U.S. 602 (1935), and Wiener v. United States, 357 U.S. 349 (1958), it still remains
true that removal of executive officers, at least those appointed by the President
with the advice and consent of the Senate, cannot be restricted or regulated by
Congress.
    The Federal Advisory Committee Act regulates, as well as other committees,
committees which advise the President, and thereby restricts to some degree his
ability to seek and obtain advice. The restrictions, indeed, may be great if meetings
must be open to the public (id. § 10(a)(1)). See Gates v. Schlesinger, 366 F. Supp.
797 (D.D.C. 1973) (suggesting that exemption 5 of the Freedom of Information
Act—dealing with interagency memoranda—is not available as an exemption from
the requirement to have open meetings under the Federal Advisory Committee
Act). See also Nader v. Dunlop, 370 F. Supp. 177 (D.D.C. 1973) (following
Gates). Or the restrictions may be fairly minor—e.g., charter requirements (FACA
§ 9(c)) and requirement of a federal employee attending all meetings (id. § 10(e)).
In any case, these restrictions may be presumed to limit the ability of the President
to receive advice from whom he seeks it, for private committees faced with certain
of these requirements might well decline to become involved in an advisory
capacity with the President, thus limiting the President’s ability to inform himself.

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    Opposed to this restriction and consequent limitation of the power to seek and
obtain advice would be the implied power to seek and obtain advice from whom-
ever the President deemed necessary in order to faithfully execute the laws. This
would be a power lodged exclusively and inherently in the Executive Branch.
While inherent executive powers may be strictly construed when they conflict with
congressional enactments, cf. Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S.
579, 639–40 (1952) (Jackson, J. concurring), certain powers must exist inherently
in an executive in order for him to execute. In Myers that was understood to
include the power to remove officers under his direction, for unless he could
remove them, they would not be under his direction. In United States v. Nixon, 418
U.S. 683 (1974), the Court recognized an inherent executive power to keep
confidential the discussions of persons attempting to decide questions. Again, the
discussion by the court of the practical considerations involved reinforces the idea
that in order to fulfill the duties of the executive, certain powers are necessary. The
same compelling practical considerations suggest that the power to seek advice
anywhere is also such an inherent power of the Executive. To the extent that the
Federal Advisory Committee Act restricts that power it would be void.
    It is arguable perhaps that the subject about which the President or his agency is
receiving advice should have some bearing on the ability of Congress to regulate
the advice. Thus, where the advice bears on a power granted expressly to the
President, Congress would have the least justification for regulation. Where the
advice involves how best to execute a law of Congress, Congress would have the
greatest interest, and consequently power. Nevertheless, it is suggested that the
subject of the advice is not a substantial consideration, for in either case the
President is exercising his exclusive power—in one case, for example, the
pardoning power, and in the other the power to execute the laws. Congress may
leave a greater or lesser area of discretion or flexibility to the President in the
execution of its laws by the inclusion of standards or safeguards by which the
President is bound. But within the area left to the President to execute, it is his
power which is and must be exercised.
    The purpose of the Federal Advisory Committee Act was to guard against
private interests having an inside track to advising the government, but whether it
be a presidential advisor, not subject to congressional confirmation, a private
individual like David Rockefeller, or a private committee of persons like David
Rockefeller, the President must have the freedom to seek out whom he wishes for
advice. The Act would restrict only advice from a “committee,” but there is no
constitutional distinction between the advice of a committee and that of an
individual; if Congress can regulate the one, it may regulate the other.
    In short, however Congress wishes to regulate its own advisory committees and
its own agencies to insure that the public’s viewpoint is adequately represented, it
cannot legislate to require the President to hear all sides of an issue before he
makes a decision.

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                Constitutionality of the Federal Advisory Committee Act

    The above argument assumed private committees, not funded by Congress. A
committee might be formed by the President but paid from appropriations (e.g., the
Clemency Board). Here both Congress and the President have legitimate interests,
and Congress’s interest in regulation is substantial because its funds are utilized.
How a court might decide this conflict is hard to determine.
    Important also would be the availability of such a claim of unconstitutionality
by officers subordinate to the President with respect to committees advising them.
A clear distinction would be that all such officers hold positions created by
Congress, which presumably reduces their ability to claim invasion of their offices
by the branch which created them. A policy argument to support the constitutional-
ity of an inclusion of all officers within the Act, moreover, is that they, unlike the
President, are not directly responsible to the electorate, so that, while the check on
the President against serving private rather than public interests is the ballot box,
his officers are not so checked. Nevertheless, to the extent that the officer is
exercising presidential powers delegated to him, the same policy arguments can be
made with respect to his need for unfettered advice. A good example is an agency
head entrusted by the President with the responsibility for suggesting names of
persons to be nominated by the President to the Senate for confirmation (e.g., the
Attorney General with regard to federal judges). Here the officer is acting solely as
an agent of the President and not in respect to any statutory power given him.
When he receives advice from some committee, that advice is similarly outside the
scope of legitimate congressional inquiry. This should be especially true because,
in such a case, Congress (through the Senate) will, or should, independently pass
on the fitness of the nominee.

                                          C.

    The third constitutional question is whether the President may except certain
committees from certain of the Act’s requirements on the basis of executive
privilege. The Supreme Court has decided that a constitutional executive privilege
exists, even if its parameters are not clear. United States v. Nixon, 418 U.S. 683
(1974). While the privilege may not prevail against a particularized need for
evidence in a criminal trial, it certainly should prevail against a general require-
ment for open advisory meetings. The practical considerations which compel the
need for some sort of executive privilege were recognized by the Supreme Court in
Nixon, and those considerations would be undermined by applications of the Act’s
requirements in all cases covered by its definitions. Some of the confidentiality
that might be required may be provided by the Act itself, but if courts are prepared
to read those exceptions out of the Act, as suggested by Gates and Nader, then
reliance on executive privilege may be called for.
    Executive privilege, unlike the first two constitutional objections, discussed
above, would probably not void the regulation of the President’s advisory
committees, but rather would only limit it. Thus, the charter requirement would

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remain as well as the requirement of notice in the Federal Register. So also, most
probably, would the requirement of a federal employee attending all meetings of
the committee.
   It might be argued that private committees discussing matters without the pres-
ence of the President would not be deserving of executive privilege. First,
however, discussions by executive officers without the presence of the President
are sufficient for executive privilege. Second, if the committee’s meeting is
sufficiently imbued with presidential considerations to bring it within the Act, it is
sufficiently connected to bring it within executive privilege. Third, the considera-
tions justifying executive privilege mentioned by the Court in Nixon would apply
equally to a private group advising the President as well as to his own advisers.
   A claim of executive privilege might be extended to meetings of advisory
groups created and/or funded by Congress as well. Executive officers, by analogy,
hold positions created by Congress and are paid from appropriations but are able to
invoke executive privilege, when allowed by the President.
   Executive privilege could also be a basis for claiming confidentiality of adviso-
ry committees advising executive officers as opposed to the President (e.g., the
ABA Committee on the Federal Judiciary). Thus, since an executive officer can
claim executive privilege with relation to advice or recommendations of staff
members, so by analogy should he be able to claim privilege with relation to
private committees, or for that matter committees created and funded by Congress.
   Case law support for the extension of this privilege is lacking, although it is
settled practice. It is a conflict between Congress and the President which has not
been put to the courts to decide, although with relation to the Federal Advisory
Committee Act it would be decided by a court because a private party would be
the one precluded by executive privilege. The courts’ reactions to attempts by
agencies to withhold information under the Freedom of Information Act might
indicate a reluctance to sanction equivalent withholdings under a claim of
executive privilege.

                                                  ANTONIN SCALIA
                                               Assistant Attorney General
                                                Office of Legal Counsel

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