Friday, May 11, 2012

Thursday, January 05, 2012

Why Obama’s Defying The GOP And Appointing Top Consumer Watchdog

President Barack Obama

Brian Beutler January 4, 2012, 9:54 AM

Update 10:17 Eastern. This post has been updated from an earlier version in order to reflect the full confirmation that has now come in.


The White House confirmed Wednesday morning that President Obama will announce a recess appointment for Richard Cordray to run the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau at a speech in Ohio later today [embedded below]. Cordray was a well-liked Ohio Attorney General until last year, after he was toppled by the GOP midterm wave in 2010.

Cordray's an accidental victim of a brazen act of GOP obstruction. They're refusing to allow an up-or-down vote on any CFPB nominee until the agency itself is fundamentally weakened — an extra-legal attempt to nullify a key portion of an act of law.

Obama actually missed his best opportunity to recess appoint his top consumer watchdog on Tuesday. But there are reasons Obama opted to take a more confrontational approach.

Though the Obama administration has made a couple dozen recess appointments since 2009, only a tiny fraction have been for officials in truly crucial positions, and none have occurred in the past year. This has frustrated progressives and good government advocates who worry that the executive branch has become riddled through like Swiss cheese with vacancies and can't function properly.

On Tuesday, they believed Obama could take advantage of a precedent set by Teddy Roosevelt, and filled those vacancies with the stroke of a pen and the blast of an email in the seconds-long window between sessions of the 112th Congress.

He didn't do it. That meant the Senate went back in "pro forma" session, lackadaisically gaveling in and out every three days to avoid a technical "recess," and thus prevent a recess appointment.
It's customary for Presidents to heed this defensive tactic. But there's nothing that says they have to. And Obama concluded he could move ahead. According to the Wall Street Journal the administration's own attorneys don't think they do — the Senate's "pro forma" sessions are meaningless and Obama retains the Constitutional right to recess appoint whomever he wants until session begins in earnest.

This creates a significant new precedent — a bold power play in the face of an unprecedented act of GOP obstruction, but also something to which Obama (and Democrats more generally) have been pretty averse. Given that aversion, it's hard to figure why Obama would choose to create a new precedent rather than avail himself of an existing one — unless you imagine he's daring the GOP to make a big stink about it, and thus loudly side with Wall Street against him and middle-class consumers. It's a safe bet that's part of his thinking.
 
Brian Beutler

Brian Beutler is TPM's senior congressional reporter. Since 2009, he's led coverage of health care reform, Wall Street reform, taxes, the GOP budget, the government shutdown fight, and the debt limit fight. He can be reached at brian@talkingpointsmemo.com.




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Jon Stewart on the whole 'recess appointment' thing: