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70 Stan. L. Rev. 443 (2018)
Who Are "Officers of the United States"?

handle is hein.journals/stflr70 and id is 457 raw text is: ARTICLE
Who Are Officers of the United States?
Jennifer L. Mascott
Abstract. For decades courts have believed that only officials with significant authority
are Officers of the United States subject to the Constitution's Article II Appointments
Clause requirements. But this standard has proved difficult to apply to major categories of
officials. This Article examines whether significant authority is even the proper
standard, at least as that standard has been applied in modern practice. To uncover
whether the modern understanding of the term officer is consistent with the term's
original public meaning, this Article uses two distinctive tools: (i) corpus linguistics-style
analysis of Founding-era documents and (ii) examination of appointment practices during
the First Congress following constitutional ratification. Both suggest that the original
public meaning of officer is much broader than modern doctrine assumes-
encompassing any government official with responsibility for an ongoing governmental
duty.
This historic meaning of officer would likely extend to thousands of officials not
currently appointed as Article II officers, such as tax collectors, disaster relief officials,
customs officials, and administrative judges. This conclusion might at first seem
destructive to the civil service structure because it would involve redesignating these
officials as Article II officers-not employees outside the scope of Article H's requirements.
But this Article suggests that core components of the current federal hiring system might
fairly readily be brought into compliance with Article II by amending who exercises final
approval to rank and hire candidates. These feasible but significant changes would restore
* Assistant Professor of Law, Antonin Scalia Law School, George Mason University. Earlier
drafts of this article were written as an Olin-Searle Fellow in Law affiliated with
Georgetown University Law Center and the George Washington University Law School.
This article benefited from feedback received during presentations at Northwestern's
Public Law Colloquium; the Administrative Law New Scholarship Roundtable hosted by
the Ohio State University Moritz College of Law; the Center for the Study of
Constitutional Originalism at the University of San Diego School of Law; the George
Washington University Law School's faculty lunch workshop series; the Federalist
Society's Junior Scholars Colloquium; and the Georgetown Law Fellows Collaborative.
Particular thanks for helpful comments and conversations are due to Aditya Bamzai,
Randy Barnett, Will Baude, Bill Buzbee, Jud Campbell, Shon Hopwood, Greg Maggs,
Dina Mishra, Jonathan Mitchell, Stephen Mouritsen, Eloise Pasachoff, James Phillips,
Richard Re, Matt Shapiro, Ryan Scoville, Jonathan Siegel, Larry Solum, Seth Barrett
Tillman, and Robin West. I am also grateful for excellent research assistance from Daniel
Shapiro.

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