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Humphrey's Executor v. United States

District · Historical Historical
Court
Historical/Teaching
Judge (CL)
Sherri A Lydon
Filed (CL)
Sep 9, 2024
CL Status
terminated

Case Overview

In 1935, the Supreme Court ruled that the president cannot fire members of independent regulatory agencies like the FTC just because he disagrees with them — those agencies were designed to operate with insulation from the White House. That precedent has been the legal wall standing between the Trump administration and its ability to remove commissioners from the FTC, the Federal Reserve Board, and similar bodies, and by 2025 the Supreme Court was actively being asked whether to overrule it. Bryan covers it as the fulcrum of the DOGE-era independence cases — it's the case Trump needs gone.

Legal Issues

separation of powersindependent agenciesremoval powerexecutive powerCFPBFTC

BrynoDC Coverage 1 video


The Conclusion

**Humphrey's Executor v. United States established that presidents cannot summarily remove independent agency commissioners.** The 1935 ruling created a constitutional boundary protecting agencies like the FTC and Federal Reserve from politicized removal, anchoring the modern framework for agency independence from executive control.

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