I
wrote this back in January in response to the upcoming oral argument in
Lucia v. SEC, on the issue of Administrative Law Judge constitutionality:
There is an urgent need for at least the Acting Commissioner of Social
Security to issue an order appointing each of the current ALJs and
ratifying any actions they may have previously taken. The SEC has long
since done this. The Department of Labor
did it this week. I think it would be far safer if the President were
to issue such an order. The Constitution talks only of department heads
having the power to appoint inferior officers. SSA isn't a department.
Yes, there's a reasonable argument that the framers of the Constitution
were using the word "department" in a more generic way than it is
currently used in the federal government; that they meant something more
like "agency." Maybe the courts will buy that but maybe doesn't seem
good enough to me with so much at stake. We need to move to Defcon 1 on this.
Social Security didn't need me to tell them this. I'm virtually certain their in-house attorneys were saying the same thing. They may have been getting the same advice from the Department of Justice. However, they did nothing. Perhaps the problem was the lack of a proper acting Commissioner. Maybe they asked the President to do something or tell them what to do and he didn't. You may have noticed that the Trump White House isn't a well-oiled governing machine. Who knows what happened internally at Social Security? (If you're an insider who knows, I'd be interested in hearing from you.) In any case, they did nothing.
How long is it going to take Social Security to respond to the
Lucia decision? Will their response just be wishing and hoping that the Supreme Court ultimately draws a distinction between SEC ALJs and SSA ALJs? They might but I wouldn't bet on it.
At the absolute least, we need for the President to sign an order appointing each of Social Security's current ALJs and ratifying their actions to this point. We need at least a backup plan for immediately converting Social Security's ALJs to some other job title where they can be fired at will. Perhaps, we need to go to that forthwith.
I'd very much prefer to keep independent ALJs who are hired in much the same way as before and who can only be removed with great difficulty but a situation where Social Security has to redo every hearing held over a several year time period while it's in the middle of hiring new people to hold hearings would be an unimaginable catastrophe. Non-ALJ hearing officers wouldn't be the end of the world.
By the way, the same problem exists with the Administrative Appeals Judges at the Appeals Council. They're civil service too.
Also, this problem won't wait until a new Commissioner is confirmed. I don't know when a confirmation hearing is coming up. I don't know what the chances are that Mr. Saul will be confirmed. There are certainly reasons for Senators of both parties to be concerned about him.