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101 Tex. L. Rev. 89 (2022-2023)
Checks, Not Balances

handle is hein.journals/tlr101 and id is 90 raw text is: 












Checks, Not Balances


Joshua C. Macey* & Brian M. Richardson**

     Critics of the administrative state who would revive the nondelegation
doctrine and embrace  the unitary theory of executive power often assume that
each  branch's powers  are capable of precise definition, functionally distinct
from  the others, and that the formal boundaries  between  each branch  are
sacrosanct. This Article situates these critiques in Founding Era and nineteenth
century debates about the structure of the Constitution. In the 1780s, the Anti-
Federalists objected to the Constitution for failing to enumerate a precise
taxonomy  of each branch's powers,  for failing to specify that each branch's
powers  were exclusive, and for failing to make government officials sufficiently
accountable to the voting public. The drafters responded that the Anti-Federalist
approach  would neither support effective government nor prevent the branches
from acting tyrannically. Rather than develop a scheme of discrete and precisely
divided powers, as the Anti-Federalists proposed, the drafters preferred precise
rules of inter-branch coordination to ensure that no one branch dominates the
others. This debate continued throughout  the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries, with influential legal minds such as Daniel Webster and Joseph Story
rejecting the Anti-Federalist theory of separation of powers.

     We  call this a theory of separation of powers based on a principle of anti-
domination.  On this view, the separation of powers is breached only if one
branch  deprives another of its procedural capacity to check the others. We
further argue that this theory (a) provides a plausible account of the Framers'
understanding;  (b) has had significant purchase in the development of inter-
branch  relations since the Founding and thus can serve as a kind of rational
reconstruction of historical practice; and (c) is consistent with the relevant
constitutional text and the overall constitutional structure.

INTRODUCTION.................................................................................... 90
I.   CRITIQUES  OF THE  ADMINISTRATIVE STATE............................. 100
       A.   The Nondelegation  Doctrine........................................... 100
       B.   The Unitary Theory  of Executive Power ........................ 104
II.  RESPONSES   TO ADMINISTRATIVE SKEPTICS .............................. 106



   * Assistant Professor, The University of Chicago Law School.
   ** Assistant Professor, Cornell Law School. We would like to thank Akhil Amar, Will Baude,
Curtis Bradley, Emily Bremer, Cary Coglianese, Michael Dorf, Blake Emerson, Bridget Fahey,
Aziz Huq, Will Havasy, Hajin Kim, Genevieve Lakier, Odette Lienau, Neysun Mahboubi, Jerry
Mashaw, Jonathan Masur, Gillian Metzger, Jennifer Nou, Nicholas Parrillo, Eric Posner, Jeff
Rachlinski, Shalev Roisman, Bill Eskridge, David Pozen, Farah Peterson, Aziz Rana, Peter Shane,
Peter Strauss, Jed Stiglitz, Ilan Wurman, and David Zaring.

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