The Supreme Court decision in Lucia v. SEC is out. ALJs, at least at the SEC, have been found unconstitutional. The decision leaves wide open the question of whether Social Security ALJs are constitutional. Social Security is not discussed at all in the opinion. You can find a distinction if you want in the fact that SEC ALJs hear adversary adjudications but I don't know if that's going to be enough.
There's going to be an eruption of litigation concerning ALJs at every agency that employs them. Indeed, there will also be litigation over non-ALJ adjudicators across the federal government, including Social Security -- think Administrative Appeals Judges at Social Security's Appeals Council.
We might wish that Social Security would defend the constitutionality of its ALJs but that is far from certain. The Trump Administration may have more general aims and Social Security ALJs may get caught in the crossfire.
This is a seminal moment in the history of administrative law in this country.
There's going to be an eruption of litigation concerning ALJs at every agency that employs them. Indeed, there will also be litigation over non-ALJ adjudicators across the federal government, including Social Security -- think Administrative Appeals Judges at Social Security's Appeals Council.
We might wish that Social Security would defend the constitutionality of its ALJs but that is far from certain. The Trump Administration may have more general aims and Social Security ALJs may get caught in the crossfire.
This is a seminal moment in the history of administrative law in this country.