This is the third post in our online symposium on today’s decision in Arizona v. United States, the federal government’s challenge to Arizona’s S.B. 1070.  During the next few days, we will be posting a series of essays on the decision by lawyers and scholars in the field.  

The Court’s decision to uphold the immigration status check provision is a big win for state sovereignty. But in the end, does President Obama’s selective enforcement of immigration law win the day? It was a little more than one week ago when President Obama actually changed immigration law by simply issuing a directive – an order to stop deporting many young illegal immigrants who were brought to the United States as children.

The Supreme Court’s decision in Arizona v. United States represents an important victory for Arizona and proponents of the States’ authority to protect their borders and citizens when the federal government fails to do so. Granted, the Court’s holding that some of the Arizona law (SB 1070)’s provisions are preempted by federal immigration policy is disappointing (for the reasons Justice Scalia explained in his dissenting opinion). But, the Court’s holding that the immigration status check provision (Section 2(B)) is not preempted by federal law represents an important rejection of the position that States are powerless to counteract the negative impact that illegal immigration has on their citizens when the President, Attorney General, or other federal Executive Branch actors choose not to enforce, or to otherwise disregard, duly enacted federal immigration laws.

Summary of Section 2(B) and the Court’s Decision

Section 2(B) of SB 1070 states that, “[f]or any lawful stop, detention or arrest” made by Arizona law enforcement officers, “where reasonable suspicion exists that the person is an alien and is unlawfully present in the United States, a reasonable attempt shall be made, when practicable, to determine the immigration status of the person.” Section 2(B) also states that “[t]he person’s immigration status shall be verified with the federal government pursuant to 8 U.S.C. section 1373(c),” which requires the Immigration and Nationalization Service to verify the citizenship or immigration status of any individual when requested to do so by state or local law enforcement agencies.

In addition, if the lawful status of an arrested person cannot be presumed or determined, the status verification must occur “before the person is released.” A person is presumed to be lawfully present if he presents a valid Arizona driver’s license, tribal identification, or identification from any unit of government in the United States that requires proof of lawful presence. Section 2(B) expressly states that law enforcement officers “may not consider race, color or national origin in implementing the requirements of this subsection except to the extent permitted by the United States or Arizona Constitution.”

The Department of Justice (DOJ) argued that Section 2(B) conflicted with federal law enforcement objectives for two reasons: 1) The provision requires immigration status checks in some situations that the Attorney General would not likely have the individual removed; and 2) The provision could justify prolonged detentions while status checks are conducted. The Court rejected these arguments, noting that Arizona law enforcement officers generally contact Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which is required by federal law to respond to requests made by state officials to verify an individual’s immigration or citizenship status and operates a support center for this purpose 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Slip op. at 19-20. In addition, the Court concluded that hypothetical concerns that prolonged detentions may be authorized under Section 2(B) were premature, as Section 2(B) could be interpreted to avoid those concerns. The Court stated, “[h]owever the law is interpreted, if § 2(B) only requires state officers to conduct a status check during the course of an authorized, lawful detention or after a detainee has been released, the provision likely would survive pre-emption—at least absent some showing that it has other consequences that are adverse to federal law and its objectives.” Slip op. at 23.

Justice Scalia concurred in the decision to uphold Section 2(B) but dissented from the Court’s decision to invalidate other provisions of the law. He stated that the majority opinion “deprives States of what most would consider the defining characteristic of sovereignty: the power to exclude from the sovereign’s territory people who have no right to be there. Neither the Constitution itself nor even any law passed by Congress supports this result.” Slip. op. at 1 (Scalia, J., dissenting in part). He said that accusing Arizona of contradicting federal law by enforcing provisions that the President declines to enforce “boggles the mind.” Id. at 21. Justice Scalia also noted that the States would not have agreed to ratify the Constitution if it included a provision that prevented the States from taking action to defend their borders if the President declined to enforce immigration laws. Id. at 21-22.

Analysis

Scholars, pundits, and politicians from all corners are sure to spin the Court’s decision in various ways, but the importance of the Court’s holding concerning Section 2(B) cannot be denied. It not only affirms a level of State sovereignty to enact provisions like Section 2(B), but it also (at least indirectly) reestablishes that Congress, not the Executive Branch, is the ultimate source of federal immigration policy.

Opponents of SB 1070 essentially argued that any State provision (including the entirety of SB 1070) that seeks to enforce federal immigration law, or to otherwise protect States from the harmful effects of large-scale illegal immigration, is necessarily preempted by federal law. This is especially true if the Attorney General or the Department of Justice claims that the State provision undermines the Executive Branch’s decision to under-enforce (or not enforce) federal statutes, even where the State provision is identical to, or otherwise mirrors, federal statutes. Under this view of preemption, the Executive Branch may effectively wrest de facto control of immigration law from Congress by both adopting a policy of under-enforcement or non-enforcement of federal statutes and actively fighting any State attempts to pursue Congress’s stated goals.

If the Court had adopted this simplistic if-then approach to preemption (if the DOJ opposes a State law that touches upon some immigration matter, citing law enforcement concerns, then it must be preempted), State efforts to mitigate the deleterious effects of the federal government’s failure to combat illegal immigration could be ground to a halt. Importantly, the Court’s decision upholding Section 2(B) rejected DOJ’s claim that a conflict between a State law and the Attorney General’s preferences is necessarily a conflict with federal law for purposes of preemption. This may (and should) have major implications for the inevitable future battles over State provisions that mirror federal statutes that the Executive Branch objects to.

As a basis for a preemption argument, DOJ stated that, under Section 2(B) “the officers must make an inquiry even in cases where it seems unlikely that the Attorney General would have the alien removed. This might be the case, for example, when an alien is an elderly veteran with significant and longstanding ties to the community.” Slip. op. at 21. The Court responded by stating, “Congress has done nothing to suggest it is inappropriate to communicate with ICE in these situations, however. Indeed, it has encouraged the sharing of information about possible immigration violations. . . . The federal scheme thus leaves room for a policy requiring state officials to contact ICE as a routine matter.” Id. In other words, an Executive Branch preference that ICE not be contacted for an immigration status check in certain situations does not establish a conflict, for purposes of preemption, between a state law requiring ICE to be contacted and federal statutes encouraging such contacts.

Conclusion

The Court’s decision in Arizona v. United States is just one chapter (albeit an important one) in the ongoing story of how the federal, state, and local governments wrestle with the hot button issue of illegal immigration. Importantly, the Court did not carve the States out of the story entirely by adopting a blanket rule that whatever the Executive Branch says in informal memos or court documents about a State provision represents federal “law” with preemptive power.

In light of the Court’s decision, States will continue to enact provisions that are designed to remain consistent with federal statutes while mitigating the problems caused by the federal government’s failure to adequately address illegal immigration. The Executive Branch will likely continue to attempt to elevate its (often unwritten) policy of under-enforcement or non-enforcement of federal immigration statutes to the level of federal “law” that would create a conflict between state statutes and identical, or nearly identical, federal statutes. The courts will continue to interpret the fine line between federal law that preempts state law and mere Executive Branch preferences that do not. That the States remain major players concerning this issue is a big defeat for the Executive Branch and its attempt to effectively rewrite immigration law through non-enforcement and litigation against the States.

Jay Sekulow is Chief Counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ), which filed an amicus brief backing the Arizona law on behalf of 57 members of Congress and more than 65,000 Americans.


SOURCE
http://www.scotusblog.com/2012/06/online-symposium-scotus-on-az-immigration-state-sovereignty-is-the-issue/
 
The high school groups are set to explode even more next year.

Who can we thank for the surge in atheist groups? Richard Dawkins? SSA Campus Organizer Lyz Liddell? SSA High School Specialist JT Eberhard?

We owe them a debt of gratitude, no doubt, but according to American Humanist Association president Dave Niose, we can thank Religious Right litigator for the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) Jay Sekulow:

In the case of Westside Community Board of Education vs. Mergens (1990) Sekulow successfully argued, on Free Speech grounds, that public schools generally cannot prohibit formation of Christian clubs if other kinds of clubs are allowed. Since then, Bible clubs, prayer clubs, and other voluntary Christian-oriented extracurricular activities have become commonplace in public schools across the country.
    …

What Sekulow and others on the Christian Right may not have considered, however, is that the Mergens decision opened the doors not just for Christian groups in public schools, but for other groups as well. In fact, it was a game-changer. If Free Speech standards dictate that Christian clubs cannot be banned, then neither can Jewish, Hindu, or Muslim clubs.

Or atheist clubs.
    …
    … thanks to Jay Sekulow, organized atheist groups are now rapidly sprouting in high schools all over the country, protected by First Amendment rights and recognized by the school administration.

It’s easy to forget that the Religious Right fought our battles before we were starting groups everywhere, but I guess we can thank them for this unintended-but-wonderful consequence :)

In fact, we should celebrate it with a nationwide Sekulow Student Day! Who’s in?


SOURCE
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/friendlyatheist/2011/05/26/thanks-jay-sekulow/
 
Have you ever wondered, as candidates profess their faith along the campaign trail, just how "Christian" does someone have to be to win?

I witnessed a fascinating debate on exactly that last month at the annual meeting for the professional association of reporters, editors and bloggers who cover this beat for the secular media, Religion Newswriters Association. (Disclaimer: I'm on the RNA board.)

This debate was sponsored by the public relations group that represents many leading Christian conservatives, The DeMoss Group. It featured some fairly strong views.

Dr. Robert Jeffress, senior pastor of First Baptist Church, Dallas, gave me the impression he wouldn't vote for a dogcatcher, much less a president, who was not a deeply conservative Christian for fear God would lift his favor from the United States.

He was countered -- somewhat -- by almost-as-conservative attorney Jay Sekulow, chief counsel for the American Center for Law & Justice, the conservative civil liberties law firm, who says he'd look at a person's policy positions ahead of his or her personal beliefs.

If you have a spare hour to get riled up, check out the video and then come back to let us know which side you "vote" for, Sekulow or Jeffress? Or "other?"


SOURCE http://content.usatoday.com/communities/religion/post/2008/11/782595/1#.USW4vxwwH_c
 
Is ensuring taxpayer funding for the largest provider of abortions in America really worth shutting down the federal government? Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid sure thinks so.

Reid took to the Senate floor yesterday to explain why Democrats have not been able to reach a compromise with Republicans over the budget. He said that “the main issue that [is] holding this matter [up is] the choice of women, reproductive rights.” Likewise, Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) said that her party would not “allow” a budget “to keep the government funded” that doesn’t include funding for Planned Parenthood. In other words, if Democrats can’t fund Planned Parenthood with taxpayer dollars, they won’t fund the entire government! It is more evident than ever that the abortion lobby owns most of the Democrat Party.

Planned Parenthood itself has clearly become desperate. One spokesman for the abortion provider decried, “If we are defunded, America’s emergency rooms will be overrun” — this from an organization that provides only one “emergency” medical service, abortion.

The same politicians that have argued that we should put social issues behind us are staking the entire federal budget on abortion funding. This issue is not even about abortion “rights” — it’s about how federal taxpayer dollars will be spent.

Yesterday, I spoke with Representative Mike Pence (R-IN), who told our radio audience that “liberals in the Senate are ready to shut down the federal government rather than end the practice of borrowing money from China to fund abortion providers here at home.”

He is exactly right. The $363 million of taxpayer money given to Planned Parenthood each year is no small budget matter considering that Republicans in the House and Democrats in the Senate are only a few billion dollars away from reaching a multitrillion-dollar budget deal.

Liberals in the Senate are attempting to spin a potential government shutdown as the fault of social conservatives and the Tea Party, but we all know this is a bogus claim. Democrat senators have plenty of time for the media but have not figured out how to pass a budget. This is the kind of hypocrisy that the American people are sick of.

Whatever the outcome, we will make sure that voters are reminded of who was responsible for the budget debacle.

Jordan Sekulow is the Director of International Operations for the American Council for Law and Justice and co-host of Jay Sekulow Live.


SOURCE
http://dailycaller.com/2011/04/07/planned-parenthood-owns-democrats/
 
Popular televangelist and author Joel Osteen recently commented on a visit he and his wife made to Israel, expressing his conviction that "God's hand is upon" the Jewish nation, which he also called the "heritage" of Christians.

Osteen sat down with Jay Sekulow, Chief Counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ), to discuss his perspective on one of the most-reported on countries in the world.

Osteen commented on visiting Israel for the first time in about 25 years.

"I felt amazing peace there, even among the people," Osteen said. "I went over there thinking 'Oh man there's so much violence and all this stuff going on, which there is,' but people seem to have such a resolve... I saw the hope."

The Lakewood, Texas minister also commented on how a such a small country could garner so much worldwide attention.

"When I think about that small country — how can it get so much attention? God's hand is upon it. It's our heritage, so we stand with the people of Israel," the It's Best Life Now author said.

Sekulow, a Messianic Jewish lawyer, raised ssues concerning Israel in biblical prophecy.

"We know what happens to Israel, those that follow the Scriptures, it's very clear — Israel is not going away," Sekulow said.

He asked Osteen if he felt that God had a special plan for Israel and if, during his visit, he sensed that people in Israel were aware of their apparent special place with God.

"Do you sense that they... know that God has a special plan for that country?" Sekulow asked.

Osteen responded, "I felt like they do. Everyone we talked to...I felt like they knew God's hand was upon them. They live that way, in my opinion," Osteen said, emphasizing again how peaceful he felt during his visit to the Middle Eastern country.

In referring to Israel's place in Scripture, Sekulow echoed a viewpoint held by some Christians that maitains that Israel holds eschatological significance in biblical prophecy.


SOURCE
http://global.christianpost.com/news/joel-osteen-gods-hand-is-upon-israel-video-56291/

 
According to Jay Sekulow, who practices before the Supreme Court and is the founder of ACLJ, the American Center for Law and Justice, the short answer is “Yes.”

This is the case he cites:

“In Lee v. Weisman, the Supreme Court held only that it violates the Establishment Clause for school officials to invite clergy to give prayers at commencement. [FN15] Justice Kennedy made clear, for the majority, that the Court's decision was limited to the particular facts before the Court. [FN16] Thus, any change from the factual situation presented in Lee might alter the resulting opinion from the Court.”

“Indeed, following Lee, at least one Federal Appeals Court has ruled that ‘a majority of students can do what the State acting on its own cannot do to incorporate prayer in public high school graduation ceremonies.’’’

Jay stated in his answer to a question on his radio show that most teachers are good people, but that they are intimidated by fear of expensive lawsuits from the ACLU, etc.

Here are some of the questions addressed with the “short” answer.

Questions:

·    Can we have student-led prayer at graduation?  Yes!
·    Can valedictorians, salutatorians, or honorary student speakers give speeches on religious subjects, including reading from the Bible? Yes!
·    Can we have Baccalaureate services? Yes!
·    Are official "Moments of Silence" permissible under current law? Yes!
·    Do students have a right to pray together at school and participate in events like the See You at the Pole National Day of Prayer? Yes!
·    Can a See You At The Pole rally be held even if it is not part of an officially recognized club on campus? Yes!
·    Is it constitutional to have holiday observances, in the public schools? Yes!
·    Can the Bible be used as part of the curriculum of the school? Yes!
·    Can members of the community or organizations use school facilities for religious purposes? Yes!
·    Can Christmas vacation still be called Christmas vacation? Yes!

You can read the entire article at the following link:

http://www.aclj.org/Issues/Resources/Document.aspx?ID=717

Here is another case involving prayer in school that has had national attention recently.

The Missouri House has endorsed a proposed amendment to the state Constitution guaranteeing the right to pray in public settings, including schools.

http://www.ky3.com/news/local/43333812.html


SOURCE http://www.examiner.com/article/can-you-have-prayer-at-a-graduation-ceremony
 
Lawyers representing the family of an American jailed in an Iranian prison will appeal his conviction, calling it a violation of human rights and a "mockery of justice."

Saeed Abedini, a Christian pastor who became an American citizen in 2010, was sentenced on Sunday to eight years in the notorious Evin Prison for "threatening the national security of Iran" for his involvement in an underground house church movement.

Lawyers with the American Center for Law and Justice say the sentence is "effectively a death sentence" due to the brutal, abusive conditions at the prison and acknowledge an appeal by his Iranian attorney is likely meaningless.

"An appeal has been filed, but that doesn't mean anything in Iran," said ACLJ Chief Counsel Jay Sekulow on his radio show "Jay Sekulow Live."

The charges, lawyers said, stemmed from the year 2000 when Saeed, now 32, converted from Islam to Christianity. In Iran, converting from Islam or trying to convert a Muslim to another faith can be punishable by lengthy jail sentences and death.

Abedini was doing work toward setting up an orphanage when he was arrested last year. He and his attorney were barred from all but one day of his trial and he will not be allowed to talk to his family until his release.

Abedini's wife, Naghmeh, and children, ages 4 and 6, live in Idaho.

Naghmeh Abedini, represented by the ACLJ, released a statement Sunday saying, "I am devastated for my husband and my family."

"We must now pursue every effort, turn every rock, and not stop until Saeed is safely on American soil."

On Friday, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said the State Department is "actively engaged in the case" and called for his release, but the White House has had no comment since his conviction.

While the ACLJ continues to press the U.S. government to do more, the organization will now turn to the United Nations and European Union to pressure Iran for Abedini's release.

They've also posted a petition, urging the U.N. and European Union to "take all available diplomatic action to press Iran to respect human rights and release Pastor Saeed."

As of Monday afternoon, the petition had more than 27,000 signatures.

SOURCE http://www.foxcarolina.com/story/20755112/attorneys-for-american-imprisoned-in-iran-file-appeal-press-for-release
 
Today the Supreme Court has ruled 5-4 in favor of the individual mandate within the Affordable Care Act - more commonly known as "Obamacare." However, the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) has already announced that it will fight to appeal this decision requiring the purchase of healthcare for all U.S. citizens.

An email sent out this morning to ACLJ supporters reads:

"The ACLJ represented more than 100 Members of Congress and 145,000 Americans in challenging ObamaCare before the Supreme Court. Today's decision is extremely disappointing.

With this decision, the mandate to buy health insurance that covers abortion stands, the abortion surcharge stands, the abortion-pill mandate that violates religious liberty still stands; but we will not stand idly by and let this happen.

We are already working with Congress to pass a full repeal of ObamaCare, and our multiple lawsuits against Planned Parenthood and the abortion-pill mandate continue.

Our work has increased but so has our determination to stop pro-abortion ObamaCare.

Take action, make a tax-deductible donation to fight ObamaCare today.

When trying to pass the ObamaCare bill, President Obama claimed it was not a tax; but while defending it at the Supreme Court, the President's attorneys argued that it was a tax and the Court agreed. This could represent the largest middle class tax increase in American history. This law is not what our nation needs or deserves.

The ACLJ will continue to stand against this massive expansion of abortion by forcing higher taxes on the American people. Please continue to stand against ObamaCare with us.

Jay Sekulow ACLJ Chief Counsel

P.S. Please forward this email and share this message on Facebook and Twitter.

Of course, you may also feel free to forward this article and let us know what you think of the ACLJ's decision. Should they continue this fight, or should they move on dot org?


Original post published at http://www.examiner.com/article/aclj-will-fight-to-repeal-supreme-court-healthcare-decision
 
Prominent conservative attorney Jay Sekulow is accusing President Barack Obama of illegally using his executive privilege to help cover up the details of a federal gun-trafficking investigation and to protect Attorney General Eric Holder from a contempt of Congress citation.
 
“The president has created quite a constitutional showdown and a serious constitutional crisis,” Sekulow told Fox News’ Sean Hannity on Wednesday, referring to Obama’s assertion of executive privilege over documents related to the Justice Department’s botched Fast and Furious investigation.
 
Sekulow, chief counsel for the American Center for Law and Justice, called on House Speaker John Boehner and other Republicans leaders to press the issue in federal court following a vote by the GOP-controlled House Oversight and Government Reform Committee recommending that Holder be held in contempt for refusing to turn over requested documents.
 
Boehner has said a vote on the recommendation would likely take place in the House next week. If approved, it would mark the first time a sitting attorney general has ever been held in contempt.
 
Sekulow — who earlier this year raised legal questions about Obama’s handling of recess appointments of judges — insisted the president’s assertion of executive privilege in the Fast and Furious case would not hold up in court because when it is used as part of “a cover-up the privilege doesn’t apply.”
 
“This is what the American people need to be asking themselves: What is it that is in these documents that they do not want the committee to see?” Sekulow told Hannity.
 
He said it was unprecedented that an attorney general would ask the president, “Please protect me. I’m about to get in real trouble here because the truth is about to come out.”
 
“The truth will ultimately come out, but now they’ve got a political issue that is huge,” Sekulow added.

Read Latest Breaking News from Newsmax.com http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/fast-furious-holder-cover/2012/06/21/id/442980#ixzz2KrlxcB26
Urgent: Should Obamacare Be Repealed? Vote Here Now!



SOURCE: http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/fast-furious-holder-cover/2012/06/21/id/442980
 
Barack Obama breached the constitution when he bypassed Congress to make appointments to a labour relations panel, a federal appeal court ruled on Friday in a decision that was condemned by the White House as "novel and unprecedented".

The judgement, from a three-judge panel of the US court of appeals for the DC circuit and regarding the filling of vacancies at the the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), represents a significant legal victory for Republicans and big business. It could also severely restrict the president's use of a constitutional provision that permits him to directly appoint officials without congressional approval.

Successive presidents have used the provision to place hundreds of officials who have been rejected, or are likely to be rejected, by the Senate at confirmation hearings.

But in what lawyers for the Republican congressional delegation called a "stinging rebuke" to Obama, the court narrowed the president's authority considerably by ruling that the constitution only permits him to make those appointments when the vacancy occurs during a recess between individual Congresses, such as occurred earlier this month when a newly elected Congress took office. Any appointment must then be made during the same recess.

"The filling up of a vacancy that happens during a recess must be done during the same recess in which the vacancy arose," the court said.

The ruling struck down the president's appointment of three people to the NLRB a year ago, but if it stands it is likely to have much wider implications.

Anthony Riedel of the National Right to Work Foundation, which is fighting several cases seeking to have NLRB rulings overturned on the grounds that the appointments were invalid, described the ruling as a "game changer".

"What the court did pretty much took a strict constructionist view of the constitution and said that the president cannot make recess appointments unless during the recess in which one Congress turns into the next Congress. It also said that the vacancy must have occurred within that recess," he said. "This is a game changer on a broader scale of how the president has the power to make recess appointments during a recess."

The court decision came in response to a legal challenge by the owners of a soft-drinks bottling plant, after the NLRB ruled against them in a union dispute. The company claimed Obama did not have the power to directly appoint the three officials to the NLRB last year while the Senate was on a 20-day holiday, and said the board's ruling was therefore invalid.

The dispute centres on article two of the constitution, which gives the president "the power to fill up all vacancies that may happen during the recess of the Senate".

Successive administrations have interpreted that as meaning whenever the Senate takes a break, such as during Christmas and summer holidays. Obama has invoked the article 32 times to make recess appointments. His predecessor, George W Bush, used it 99 times. But the court ruled that the framers of the constitution had a different meaning in mind.

At the time the article was written, Congress sat far less frequently, sometimes for less than half of the year.

"There is no reason the framers would have permitted the President to wait until some future intersession recess to make a recess appointment, for the Senate would have been sitting in session during the intervening period and available to consider nominations," the court said on Friday.

Lawyers for the bottling company argued that holidays did not amount to a recess because although senators were away from Washington, the Senate still effectively remained sitting.

"Such short intra-session breaks are not recesses. Otherwise, every weekend, night, or lunch break would be a 'recess' too," they told the court.

The court agreed, and noted that the House of Representatives had already returned to work the day before the appointments, meaning that Congress was in session even if senators were not in attendance.

Republicans joined the legal action, arguing that "the president usurped the Senate's control of its own procedures".

"By appointing officers without the Senate's consent, he took away its right to review and reject his nominations," they said.

The US justice department told the court that the Senate does no work, and does not fulfill its role to provide advice or consent on presidential nominations, when it takes holidays and therefore is not in session.

Democrats in Congress led the way in attempting to block direct presidential appointments during President George Bush senior's administration. They merely adjourned Senate sittings during holiday periods, rather than going into recess.

The Obama administration can be expected to take the case to the Supreme Court.

The American Center for Law and Justice, which represented the House of Representatives speaker, John Boehner, in the case, welcomed the ruling.

"This decision represents a stinging rebuke to the unprecedented and unconstitutional actions of President Obama," said the ACLJ chief counsel, Jay Sekulow.

"This decision is sound and well-reasoned and respects both the constitution and the separation of powers. From the very beginning, no one questioned the President's authority to make recess appointments, but those must occur when the Senate is in recess, which we asserted, and the appeals court concluded, is clearly not the case here. While the Justice Department may decide to appeal this decision to the supreme court, the appeals court decision today sends a strong message rejecting this presidential overreach."

The immediate implications of the ruling for the NLRB are unclear. Riedel said it could potentially invalidate hundreds of board decisions over the past year, and may affect other cases in the pipeline elsewhere in the country including several being handled by his own organisation.

"The NLRB has been handing down very biased decisions in favour of big labor so we're pleased that there's a chance these decisions will now be invalidated because the board has been seen to not have a quorum," he said.

The White House disagreed. "This court decision does not effect this operation, their ability to function," said Jay Carney, Obama's spokesman.

However the judgement could affect other recess appointments, notably that of Richard Cordray, who was put in place by Obama to head the newly-formed consumer financial protection bureau, after he was rejected by Congress. At the time, Boehner accused Obama of "trampling our system of separation of powers".


SOURCE http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jan/25/white-house-court-unconstitutional-appointments