logo
Supreme Court lets Trump fire Consumer Product Safety panel members

Supreme Court lets Trump fire Consumer Product Safety panel members

"Once again, this Court uses its emergency docket to de-stroy the independence of an independent agency, as estab-lished by Congress," Justice Elena Kagan wrote. "By means of such actions, this Court may facilitate the permanent transfer of authority, piece by piece by piece, from one branch of Government to another."
The five-member regulatory commission, created by Congress in 1972, aims to keep people from being injured or killed by defective or harmful products.
Commissioners are appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate in staggered seven-year terms to protect them from political or industry pressure and to protect the agency from abrupt changes in composition. By law, commissioners can be removed only for "neglect of duty or malfeasance in office."
But, in May, Trump fired without cause the three members appointed by President Joe Biden: Mary Boyle, Alexander Hoehn-Saric and Richard Trumka Jr.
A federal judge in Maryland ordered the commissioners reinstated, saying the threat to public safety from removing them outweighed any hardship the administration might suffer from keeping them on while the firings are being challenged.
In his June ruling, U.S. District Judge Matthew Maddox also said the product safety commission is similar in structure and function to another independent agency that was the center of a landmark 1935 ruling - Humphrey's Executor v. U.S. - limiting the ability of the president to remove independent agency officials.
"Humphrey's Executor remains good law and is binding on this Court," Maddox wrote.
But the Trump administration said Maddox instead should've taken his cue from the Supreme Court's May decision allowing the president to fire Democratic members of two federal labor boards while the former members challenge their dismissals.
The product safety commission is now effectively controlled by Biden's appointees even though Trump is president, lawyers for the government said in a filing.
Decisions made by the commissioners who are "hostile" to Trump's agenda have "thrown the agency into chaos and have put agency staff in the untenable position of deciding which Commissioners' directives to follow," the Justice Department said.
Attorneys for the three commissioners appointed by Biden reminded the Supreme Court that the justices twice in the past year declined to review appeals court decisions that upheld restrictions on the president's ability to remove Consumer Product Safety Commission members without cause.
And Maddox, the district judge, noted that the term of one of the three Biden appointees expires in October, giving Trump the chance to appoint her successor and to "exert significant influence over the agency."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

No arrests made at anti-Trump demonstrations, police say
No arrests made at anti-Trump demonstrations, police say

South Wales Guardian

time2 minutes ago

  • South Wales Guardian

No arrests made at anti-Trump demonstrations, police say

A 50-year-old woman was issued with a recorded police warning in connection with alleged threatening behaviour at a Stop Trump Scotland protest outside the US consulate in Edinburgh on Saturday, but no arrests were made, according to Police Scotland. In Glasgow, a woman aged 49 was arrested at a 'mass deportation rally' led by Ukip's Nick Tenconi, which was met by a counter-protest in George Square. The woman, who was a counter-protester, was arrested in connection with an alleged obstruction of the police and a report will be submitted to the procurator fiscal. Police Scotland said two arrests were made in Aberdeen at 'other events' on Saturday, but not at a huge anti-Trump demonstration in the city. A spokesperson said the force 'took action at demonstrations and protest events' but did not make any arrests at Trump rallies across the country. In Aberdeen, an 18-year-old man was arrested in connection with a number of outstanding warrants and will appear in court at a later date, according to Police Scotland. A 56-year-old man will be the subject of a report to the procurator fiscal after an alleged assault in Aberdeen city centre. Police Scotland said they could not give further details.

No arrests made at anti-Trump demonstrations, police say
No arrests made at anti-Trump demonstrations, police say

The Herald Scotland

time32 minutes ago

  • The Herald Scotland

No arrests made at anti-Trump demonstrations, police say

In Glasgow, a woman aged 49 was arrested at a 'mass deportation rally' led by Ukip's Nick Tenconi, which was met by a counter-protest in George Square. The woman, who was a counter-protester, was arrested in connection with an alleged obstruction of the police and a report will be submitted to the procurator fiscal. People take part in a Stop Trump Scotland protest outside the US consulate in Edinburgh (Jane Barlow/PA) Police Scotland said two arrests were made in Aberdeen at 'other events' on Saturday, but not at a huge anti-Trump demonstration in the city. A spokesperson said the force 'took action at demonstrations and protest events' but did not make any arrests at Trump rallies across the country. In Aberdeen, an 18-year-old man was arrested in connection with a number of outstanding warrants and will appear in court at a later date, according to Police Scotland. A 56-year-old man will be the subject of a report to the procurator fiscal after an alleged assault in Aberdeen city centre. Police Scotland said they could not give further details.

Locals have their say as President Donald Trump visits sleepy Scots seaside village
Locals have their say as President Donald Trump visits sleepy Scots seaside village

Scottish Sun

time32 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Locals have their say as President Donald Trump visits sleepy Scots seaside village

The area is used to hosting big shots like Robert the Bruce MAKE AYRSHIRE GREAT AGAIN Locals have their say as President Donald Trump visits sleepy Scots seaside village THE sleepy seaside village of Maidens looked to be completely unaffected by the Presidential hullabaloo happening just along the coast — until two excited MAGA hat-wearing fans turned up. This was not a pair of US Trump supporters either as brother and sister Ben, 16, and Alicia Skilling, 15, had only travelled 30 miles from their home in Kilmarnock to try and catch a glimpse of their idol. 5 Brother and sister Ben, 16, and Alicia Skilling, 15, travelled 30 miles to try and catch a glimpse of Trump Credit: John Kirkby 5 Dave Carter, 86, reckons the US President has been a breath of fresh air for the area Credit: John Kirkby 5 Angela Bryce dreams of having an 'appointment' with the President one day Credit: John Kirkby Ben said: 'I would describe myself as a Trump fan for sure. I'm just back from Florida and wore my MAGA hat all the time. 'In Disney everyone kept saying to me 'nice hat'. I get a lot more stick over here for wearing it than I ever got in America.' However, sister Alicia is a less vocal Trump advocate, stretching only as far to say she thinks the US President is 'alright'. So why is she wearing a MAGA hat then? She sighs: 'Because he has four of them.' Their mum, student teacher Jacqueline Malone, 44, added: 'He even bought a Turnberry hat for £45 and Trump gold cufflinks, but he lost one of them at school.' The family head off with a long lens camera, desperate to snap a picture of Donald's arrival at his golf resort in Turnberry. But they were the only sign that in a few hours' time the leader of the free world would arrive by motorcade as the people of Maidens continued life at their normal laidback pace. Hosting big shots OAPs played bowls in the local bowling club, while kids squeals heard from the swing park as folk dined out on the balcony of Ropes Bistro. Then again historically this area has been used to hosting big shots. Donald Trump touches down in Scotland In 1307, Robert the Bruce landed in Maidens after sailing from Ireland — a stone's throw from his childhood home in Turnberry — accompanied by a small army of 300 men. No doubt The Bruce would have been impressed by the 6,000-strong battalion of officers drafted from across the country to protect The Donald. Strolling along the seafront I spotted a man with a Turnberry logo on his jacket, who turned out to be a caddie at the golf course. Not wishing to be named, he told me security had been ramped up since the last time Trump was President. He explained: 'Before you just had to show your work pass to get in, but since someone took a shot at him we've now got to go through airport scanners.' Chris Saunders, 61, from the charity Adventure Carrick, was also expecting to get the third degree as he arrived to take a class of disadvantaged kids paddleboarding on the Firth of Clyde. He added: 'There are roadblocks all around Turnberry but the way I heard it on the radio I was expecting to have a real problem getting here today — I even brought my ID in case I was asked. "Sure you see the odd police van about, but I just drove in no problem at all. There aren't even any protesters. It's pretty much as normal.' What also seems to be normal for these parts is the amount of dog walkers taking their pooches for a stroll. Retired sewage plant manager Dave Carter, 86, from Warrington, who has been holidaying here for the last 30 years, reckons the US President has been a breath of fresh air for the area. He says: 'Trump has been better than some of the daytrippers you get down here when the weather is nice. 'They leave a right mess behind. Turnberry was going to wrack and ruin until he took over. Play to his the gallery Commentary by Chris Musson, Associate Editor (Politics) KEIR Starmer and John Swinney will both meet Donald Trump in the next couple of days. But a chinwag with Trump can be a dangerous thing. Like trying to calm a temperamental toddler playing with the pin of a grenade. Just ask Volodymyr Zelensky. Though it bodes well for Starmer and Swinney that the Prez was full of cheer as he arrived in his ancestral homeland. And today he was out golfing at his beloved Turnberry — the biggest and bestest course in the universe. Frankly, given his troubles back home — not least the Jeffrey Epstein row — Trump would probably take a month in a leaky caravan in Saltcoats right now. The full-on UK-US diplomacy gets underway tomorrow when Starmer and Trump hold a TV press conference — the PM's moment of maximum danger. As for Swinney, well, Trump has said the 'Scottish leader is a good man'. But for Swinney's sake, let's hope the President didn't catch up with the papers as he tucked into his Full Scottish while gazing out at Ailsa Craig. If so, he may have spotted the First Minister virtue-signalling about Gaza and cultivating anti-Trump demos. But Trump isn't here for a row. He's here for a hol, to open his new course in Menie, Aberdeenshire, 'celebrate' a trade deal, and work out how to persuade R&A golf bosses to let Turnberry host The Open. I suspect all will be fine. Swinney has said some unwise things, but everyone in the world who's not Trump seems to have had a pop at him at some point. And the £180,000 Swinney magically announced for his Aberdeenshire course will certainly help oil the wheels of diplomacy. But a warning to Swin and Starm. When in the same room as The Donald, especially on camera, do NOT play to the gallery. If he gets an inkling you're challenging his authority or upstaging him, brace for a tantrum. Never bow down to a bully, it's said. But equally you could argue Swinney should choose his battles wisely. He should forget his grandstanding suggestion that he will confront Trump over 'war and peace, justice and democracy'. Just leave it, John. Instead, write 'don't turn Gaza into a golf resort' on a Post-it and stick it on Trump's jacket as you give him a friendly back slap. Trump will find it later, by which time Swinney will be back in Perthshire in his pyjamas. And the First Minister can stick out a half-honest press release saying he raised the big issues. One more thing. Should either UK leader end up on the golf course with Trump, then compliment his swing. And if he says it was a hole in one, then it was a hole in one. 'He has spent a fortune doing it up and now there are loads of Americans visiting here again.' Locals Jack Hannah, 65, and pal George Clark, 66, were also keen to have their views on their famous neighbour made known as they walked mutts Freddie and Tommy. George says: 'I don't want to get too political, but why do people object to him coming here? 'These protesters preach democracy yet Trump was democratically elected by millions of Americans. 'He's not done them any harm and puts money in the community, and employs a lot of people. So why can't he come here and play some golf without all the moaning. It's a free country after all.' Jack adds: 'I don't want to get into politics either but why don't the Green Party go and protest in countries like India and China who are among the worst polluters in the world. I'm all for Trump — drill baby, drill.' And that was them not being political? Just then Angela Bryce accosts me in the street as she wants to talk about Trump, along with her self-published book, show off her garden, oh, and she's also a healer to boot — even though she currently has a broken neck from a motorbike accident. She laughs: 'I've got to heal myself first.' 5 Chris Saunders was expecting the third degree he arrived to take a class of disadvantaged kids paddleboarding Credit: John Kirkby 5 George Clark and Jack Hannah don't understand why folk are protesting the President's visit Credit: John Kirkby But she dreams of having an 'appointment' with the President one day as she has '103 business ideas for him that are ready to go'. Right now though she just hopes the 79-year-old can be left in peace to enjoy some golf away from all the pressures of high office. Angela, 50, says: 'He is missing out on the simple joys of being able to just have a round of golf without all this fuss. But I really think he is a god or a king or a lord or a legend or something.' She's also enthusiastic about his wife Melania, adding: 'She is so beautiful — they are a beautiful match. And I bet she doesn't moan and do his f*****g head in while he's trying to get on with the great job he's doing.' Indeed. Surely if anyone is going to be miffed at all the road closures for The Donald it would be haulage worker Alex Hamilton, 77. But he insists: 'It's only a couple of days isn't it? The guy deserves to come here and play as he saved Turnberry.' The red MAGA hat-wearing Ben returns after being knocked back by cops while trying to make their way along the coastline towards Turnberry. He says: 'They told me they had sent Sky News packing as well. We're going to try and see him landing at Prestwick instead.' His patient mum Jacqueline adds: 'Ben is really into his politics. 'He always says that Trump would make a better Prime Minister than Keir Starmer — but I think anyone would.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store