'The Supreme Court Case Could Reverse a Century of Bureaucratic Overreach' by Steve AbramowiczIf silver’s hitting $100 and even country singers are tweeting ‘Unbelievable,’ maybe your wallet should start panic-buying a seatbelt.The Supreme Court case Trump v. Slaughter is as a pivotal moment that could dismantle over a century of unchecked growth in the administrative state. The case stems from President Donald Trump’s attempt to remove Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter without cause, challenging longstanding statutory protections that limit presidential removal power to specific grounds like inefficiency or malfeasance. Seila Law LLC v. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (591 U.S. 197, decided June 29, 2020) is a landmark Supreme Court case that significantly chipped away at the foundations of independent agencies, making it a direct precursor to the ongoing Trump v. Slaughter case challenging removal protections for Federal Trade Commission (FTC) commissioners. These unelected officials wield immense power with little direct accountability to elected leaders or voters.The author contrasts this with the Founders’ vision, citing Alexander Hamilton and James Madison in the Federalist Papers. They argued for vesting executive power in a single, elected president to ensure accountability—power must flow from the people through elections, not accumulate in permanent bureaucracies.During oral arguments on Monday (December 8, 2025), Justice Neil Gorsuch captured the constitutional concern succinctly: “There is no such thing in our constitutional order as a fourth branch of government that’s quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative.” https://heartlandjournal.com/ Invite your friends and earn rewardsIf you enjoy Heartland Journal ®, share it with your friends and earn rewards when they subscribe. |