THE BULL IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL CHINA SHOP
WHY THE UNITARY EXECUTIVE THEORY IS LEGAL NONSENSE (aka BS) AND THE ROBERTS COURT NEEDS A SERIOUS LEASH
A well-sourced and thoroughly exasperated examination of how nine unelected lawyers are quietly building a throne
There's an old legal maxim: if it looks like a king, acts like a king, and fires everyone who disagrees with it like a king, it's probably unconstitutional. The Framers didn't write that one down, but they absolutely meant it — they had just finished a rather expensive, musket-intensive argument with a king to make the point. And yet here we are, in the year of our Lord 2026, watching the Roberts Court methodically dismantle two centuries of constitutional architecture to hand one person the keys to the entire federal government. The theory enabling this slow-motion coup has a respectable-sounding name — the Unitary Executive Theory — but don't let the academic packaging fool you. Underneath the Latin-adjacent jargon, it's a constitutional power grab dressed up in a Federalist Society tuxedo.
Let's call it what it is, trace how we got here, and — most importantly — talk about how to fix it before the "land of the free" starts needing a permission slip from the Oval Office to regulate its own drinking water.
The Bull Itself: What the Unitary Executive Theory Actually Claims
The logic goes like this:
- The President holds all executive power.
- Therefore, the President must have absolute, unrestricted control over every single person in the executive branch.
- Therefore, the President can fire anyone, overrule any agency, and direct any bureaucrat at any time, for any reason.
- Therefore, Congress cannot create "independent" agencies insulated from presidential removal — like, say, the Federal Reserve, the FTC, or the CFPB.
- Therefore, any law that limits the President's ability to fire an agency head is unconstitutional.
In its strong form, this theory essentially argues that the President of the United States is a constitutionally protected autocrat over the entire federal apparatus — constrained by elections every four years, but otherwise answerable to no one in between.
This is, to use a precise legal term, a lot.
The Roberts Court has been advancing this vision steadily and deliberately. In Seila Law v. CFPB (2020), the Court ruled that the structure of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — a single director removable only "for cause" — was unconstitutional because it limited the President's removal power. In Free Enterprise Fund v. PCAOB (2010), the Court struck down a double-layer removal protection for a financial oversight board. The pattern is unmistakable: chip away, case by case, at every structural buffer Congress has ever built between the White House and the federal bureaucracy.
The bull is in the china shop. And it brought a briefcase.
The Textual Sleight of Hand: Making a Mountain Out of a Vesting Clause
Here's where the Roberts Court's reasoning gets genuinely embarrassing for anyone who has actually read the Constitution — the whole Constitution, not just the parts that are convenient.
The "Missing Words" Trick
Proponents of the theory love to point out that Article II says "the executive Power shall be vested in a President," while Article I says Congress gets "all legislative Powers herein granted." The absence of "herein granted" in Article II, they argue, means presidential power is inherent and unlimited, not merely enumerated.
This is, to put it charitably, a breathtaking inference to build an empire on.
Constitutional scholars call this the "Vesting Clause Thesis," and it requires you to believe that the Framers — meticulous, paranoid men who had just escaped a monarchy and spent months arguing about semicolons in Philadelphia — accidentally handed the President unlimited executive authority through a grammatical omission. These were the same people who wrote three separate clauses just to limit how the government could quarter soldiers in your house. The idea that they casually, inadvertently granted one person total control of the government through a missing adjective is, to use the technical legal term, bananas (aka BS).
The Article I Elephant in the Room
More importantly, the Roberts Court's reading requires ignoring Article I, Section 8 — the Necessary and Proper Clause — which explicitly gives Congress the power to make all laws "necessary and proper for carrying into Execution" the powers of the federal government. That includes structuring the executive branch itself.
The Roberts Court has effectively performed a constitutional magic trick: it has elevated an inferred presidential power over Congress's explicit structural authority. It has taken a sentence and made it eat a clause.
As Justice Kagan put it in her scathing dissent in recent removal cases, the majority is "gutting Humphrey's Executor without honestly overruling it" — which is a polished judicial way of saying: they're doing something radical while pretending they're not.
The Historical Myth: The Framers Were Not Unitarians
The Roberts Court's favorite historical prop is Federalist No. 70, in which Alexander Hamilton argues for "energy in the executive" and a single, unified president rather than a governing council. It's a great essay. Hamilton was a brilliant man. He also died in a duel, which suggests that even brilliant men can make catastrophic miscalculations.
Here's what Hamilton was actually arguing in Federalist No. 70: he wanted one president instead of a committee of executives — not because a single president should have unlimited power, but because a single president could be held accountable. If a council of five made a disastrous decision, they could all point fingers at each other. With one president, the voters know exactly whose door to knock on.
Hamilton's argument was for accountability, not autocracy. The Roberts Court has taken an argument for democratic responsibility and retrofitted it into a justification for uncheckable presidential control. That's not originalism. That's fan fiction (aka BS).
The historical record is even more damning. When the very first Congress created the Department of the Treasury in 1789, it directed the Secretary of the Treasury to report directly to Congress — not to the President. Early Congresses routinely assigned specific, independent duties to executive officers that the President could not override. Chief Justice John Marshall himself, in Marbury v. Madison — the foundational case of American judicial review — explicitly acknowledged that some executive officers have legal duties imposed by statute that the President cannot countermand.
The Roberts Court's narrative that the executive branch has always been a strict, top-down corporate hierarchy with the President as an all-powerful CEO is not originalism. It is, to be precise, historical revisionism with a gavel (aka BS).
The Functional Catastrophe: What This Actually Means in Practice
Strip away the legal theory, and what the Roberts Court is building is this: a federal government where every single employee — from the FBI Director to the head of the Federal Reserve to the administrator of the EPA — serves entirely at the pleasure of one person, with no structural protection whatsoever.
Think about what that means:
- The FBI investigates whoever the President wants investigated. Not because of evidence. Because of a phone call.
- The EPA regulates whatever the President wants regulated. Or doesn't regulate. Depending on who donated to the campaign.
- The Federal Reserve sets interest rates with one eye permanently on whether the President is happy with the numbers.
- The DOJ prosecutes whoever the President designates as an enemy. The civil service, stripped of merit-based protections, becomes a loyalty operation.
This is not a hypothetical slippery slope. It is the explicit, logical endpoint of the strong unitary executive theory. And it has a name in other countries. In Hungary, they call it Orbánism. In Russia, they call it Putinism. In the United States, the Roberts Court is building the constitutional scaffolding for it and calling it originalism (aka BS).
The glaring hypocrisy is almost artistic in its audacity. The same Roberts Court that has spent years stripping power away from federal agencies — overturning Chevron deference, deploying the "Major Questions Doctrine" to invalidate regulations — is simultaneously concentrating all remaining administrative power directly in the President's hands. The Court is not limiting the administrative state. It is privatizing it — handing it, whole and intact, to a single elected official with no structural checks on how they use it.
The Framers fought a revolution to escape exactly this arrangement. They called it a monarchy. The Roberts Court is calling it constitutional law.
The Dissent: Three Justices Sounding the Alarm
To their considerable credit, Justices Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson have not been quiet about what they're watching. Their dissents across the Court's recent terms read less like legal opinions and more like urgent dispatches from inside a burning building.
Their core arguments form a coherent and damning indictment:
| The Majority's Move | The Dissenters' Response |
|---|---|
| Gut removal protections for agency heads | "You are dismantling Humphrey's Executor without the honesty of overruling it" — Kagan |
| Invoke Hamilton's Federalist No. 70 | Hamilton argued for accountability, not autocracy — a selective misreading of history |
| Prioritize inferred presidential power | Congress has explicit structural authority under the Necessary and Proper Clause |
| Claim fidelity to the original Constitution | Early Congresses built independent offices; this is historical revisionism |
| Frame it as neutral legal interpretation | This is ideological project-work dressed as doctrine |
Justice Kagan's dissents, in particular, have been remarkable for their clarity and barely contained fury. She has repeatedly warned that the majority is not interpreting the Constitution — it is rewriting it, one removal-protection case at a time, in service of a theory that was a fringe academic position forty years ago and is now, apparently, the law of the land.
The dissenters' central warning is simple: once you remove the structural buffers between the President and the bureaucracy, you have not reformed government. You have weaponized it.
The Prescription: How to Fix a Rotten Court
The good news — and there is good news — is that the Constitution itself provides the tools to push back. The Roberts Court is powerful, but it is not omnipotent. Congress built this government, and Congress can rebuild it. Here's the reform toolkit, ranked from the most broadly supported to the most aggressive:
1. Staggered 18-Year Term Limits (The Popular Fix)
The most widely supported reform. Every president gets two nominations per term. Vacancies open automatically every two years. The arbitrary, death-dependent lottery of life tenure ends. The confirmation wars lose their apocalyptic stakes. This is good governance, and it's what virtually every other advanced democracy does in some form.
2. A Binding, Enforceable Ethics Code (The Obvious Fix)
The Supreme Court is currently the only federal institution where the judges rule on their own ethical conduct. An independent oversight body — staffed by retired lower-court judges — with real enforcement power, mandatory financial disclosures, and binding recusal rules is not radical. It is the bare minimum of institutional accountability. The fact that it doesn't exist yet is itself a scandal.
3. The Rotating Panel / Lottery Model (The Creative Fix)
Legal scholars Daniel Epps and Ganesh Sitaraman proposed expanding the Court to include all federal appellate judges, with a randomly selected panel of nine hearing each case. This elegantly de-politicizes confirmation battles, prevents strategic case-timing, and makes it impossible to game a known ideological supermajority. It's unconventional. It's also genuinely brilliant.
4. Supermajority Requirements for Striking Down Laws (The Restraint Fix)
Require 7 of 9 justices — not a bare 5-4 or 6-3 majority — to invalidate a law passed by the elected branches. This enforces the principle that laws should only be struck down when their unconstitutionality is beyond serious dispute, not when a narrow ideological bloc has a theory it wants to test.
5. Shadow Docket Reform (The Transparency Fix)
Mandate that emergency orders require a supermajority, carry a fully reasoned signed opinion, and expire within a defined period. The Roberts Court has been quietly rewriting national law through unsigned, unexplained emergency orders issued in the middle of the night. That ends now.
6. Mandatory Retirement Age (The Simple Fix)
A hard cap at 70 or 75. Used by most states. Used by most democracies. Prevents a justice appointed at 42 from exercising unchecked constitutional authority for four decades. Simple, clean, and long overdue.
The Bottom Line: No One Elected a King
The Unitary Executive Theory, in its strong form, is not a faithful reading of the Constitution. It is a political project — one that has been decades in the making, incubated in the Federalist Society, road-tested in the Reagan and Bush administrations, and now being installed as constitutional doctrine by a Court whose own ethical legitimacy is under serious question.
The Framers were not naive. They had just lived under a king. They designed a system of separated, competing powers precisely because they understood that concentrated authority, however well-intentioned at the outset, is a machine for producing tyranny. They gave us checks and balances not as a bureaucratic inconvenience but as the core structural guarantee of republican self-government.
What the Roberts Court is doing — systematically, case by case, using the language of originalism to advance a theory the original Framers would have found horrifying — is dismantling that guarantee. It is building, brick by legal brick, the constitutional architecture for an elected autocracy.
The American Revolution was fought, at considerable expense in blood and treasure, to establish the principle that no one person holds absolute power over a free people. The Roberts Court is in the process of forgetting that lesson.
The reform movement starts now. The ballot box is the first tool. Legislation is the second. Constitutional amendment is the third. All of them are on the table.
The bull has been in the china shop long enough. It's time to clean up the mess — and put a leash on the theory that let it in.
"The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands... may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny." — James Madison, Federalist No. 47
Madison, notably, did not have a Federalist Society membership card.
Sources & References
⚖️ Primary Legal Cases
| Case | Year | Significance | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137 | 1803 | Established judicial review; Marshall acknowledged independent executive duties | https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/5/137/ |
| Humphrey's Executor v. United States, 295 U.S. 602 | 1935 | Upheld congressional limits on presidential removal of agency heads | https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/295/602/ |
| Morrison v. Olson, 487 U.S. 654 | 1988 | Upheld independent counsel statute; Scalia's lone dissent foreshadowed unitary executive revival | https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/487/654/ |
| Free Enterprise Fund v. PCAOB, 561 U.S. 477 | 2010 | Roberts Court struck down double-layer removal protections | https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/561/477/ |
| Seila Law LLC v. CFPB, 591 U.S. 197 | 2020 | Ruled CFPB's single-director removal protection unconstitutional | https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/591/197/ |
| Collins v. Yellen, 594 U.S. 220 | 2021 | Extended Seila Law logic to FHFA structure | https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/594/220/ |
| West Virginia v. EPA, 597 U.S. 697 | 2022 | Established "Major Questions Doctrine"; stripped agency regulatory power | https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/597/697/ |
📜 Constitutional Text & Founding Documents
U.S. Constitution, Article I, Section 8 — The Necessary and Proper Clause https://constitution.congress.gov/constitution/article-1/
U.S. Constitution, Article II — The Vesting Clause & Take Care Clause https://constitution.congress.gov/constitution/article-2/
U.S. Constitution, Article III — Jurisdiction Stripping authority https://constitution.congress.gov/constitution/article-3/
Federalist No. 70 — Alexander Hamilton, "The Executive Department Further Considered" (1788) https://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/fed70.asp
Federalist No. 47 — James Madison, "The Particular Structure of the New Government" (1788) https://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/fed47.asp
🎓 Scholarly & Academic Sources
Steven G. Calabresi & Saikrishna B. Prakash, "The President's Power to Execute the Laws", Yale Law Journal, Vol. 104 (1994) — The foundational academic text for the modern unitary executive theory https://www.yalelawjournal.org/article/the-presidents-power-to-execute-the-laws
Daniel Epps & Ganesh Sitaraman, "How to Save the Supreme Court", Yale Law Journal, Vol. 129 (2019) — Introduced the Supreme Court lottery / rotating panel proposal https://www.yalelawjournal.org/article/how-to-save-the-supreme-court
Cass Sunstein & Lawrence Lessig, "The President and the Administration", Columbia Law Review (1994) — Key critique of the unitary executive theory's historical claims https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/faculty_scholarship/
Federalist Society, "The Unitary Executive Theory" — Primary institutional home of the theory's development https://fedsoc.org
📰 Journalism & Investigative Reporting
ProPublica — Investigative reporting on Supreme Court ethics, Justice Thomas gifts, and undisclosed travel https://www.propublica.org/series/supreme-court-ethics
SCOTUSblog — Comprehensive, nonpartisan coverage of all Supreme Court cases and opinions https://www.scotusblog.com
The Atlantic — "The Supreme Court Is Not Well" and related long-form analysis https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/supreme-court/
The New York Times — Supreme Court coverage, shadow docket reporting, ethics investigations https://www.nytimes.com/topic/organization/supreme-court-of-the-us
The Washington Post — Roberts Court analysis and unitary executive coverage https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/courts_law/
🏛️ Reform Proposals & Policy Sources
Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States (Biden Administration, 2021) — Official White House report examining term limits, court expansion, and ethics reform https://www.whitehouse.gov/pcscotus/
Fix the Court — Nonpartisan advocacy organization tracking Supreme Court reform proposals, ethics disclosures, and term limit legislation https://fixthecourt.com
Brennan Center for Justice — "Reforming the Supreme Court" — Comprehensive policy analysis of all major reform options https://www.brennancenter.org/issues/strengthen-our-courts/supreme-court-reform
American Constitution Society — Progressive legal scholarship on separation of powers and judicial reform https://www.acslaw.org
Demand Justice — Tracks shadow docket abuse, ethics violations, and court expansion proposals https://demandjustice.org
📖 Books for Deeper Reading
"The Unitary Executive: Presidential Power from Washington to Bush" — Calabresi & Yoo (Yale University Press, 2008) https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300123098/the-unitary-executive/
"The Shadow Docket" — Stephen Vladeck (Basic Books, 2023) — The definitive account of the Roberts Court's emergency order abuse https://www.basicbooks.com/titles/stephen-i-vladeck/the-shadow-docket/9781541602632/
"The Agenda" — Jan Crawford Greenburg (Penguin Press, 2007) — Inside account of the Rehnquist and early Roberts Courts
"Tyranny of the Minority" — Steven Levitsky & Lucan Way (Crown, 2023) — Comparative analysis of democratic backsliding and counter-majoritarian institutions https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/622176/tyranny-of-the-minority-by-steven-levitsky-and-lucan-ziblatt/
🔍 A Note on Verification
All case citations link to Justia.com, a free, authoritative legal database. Constitutional text links go to constitution.congress.gov, the official Library of Congress resource. If any link has rotated since publication, the case name and citation number will locate it instantly on Google Scholar (scholar.google.com) or the Cornell Legal Information Institute (law.cornell.edu), both of which are permanent, free legal archives.




