
Restoring the Chain of Command: Chevron, Humphrey’s Executor, and the President’s Constitutional Mandate
In the architecture of American governance, the President is charged under Article II of the Constitution with a singular mandate: to “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.” This clause is not ceremonial—it is the operational heart of executive authority. Yet over the past century, a series of judicial doctrines and legislative maneuvers have erected a bureaucratic firewall that obstructs this mandate, insulating executive actors from presidential oversight and diluting the clarity of constitutional command.
Two pillars uphold this firewall: the Chevron doctrine and the precedent set by Humphrey’s Executor. Together, they have enabled the administrative state to expand its reach, interpret laws with ideological discretion, and resist reform—even when directed by a duly elected President.
Chevron: Bureaucratic Interpretation Over Judicial Review
The 1984 decision in Chevron v. NRDC established that courts should defer to federal agencies’ interpretation of ambiguous statutes, provided those interpretations are “reasonable.” This doctrine granted agencies the power to self-authorize, effectively allowing unelected bureaucrats to define the scope and meaning of laws passed by Congress. Over time, this deference became a shield for regulatory expansion and selective enforcement, undermining judicial scrutiny and empowering ideological actors within the executive branch.
The recent Supreme Court decision to overturn Chevron marks a tectonic shift. By restoring judicial authority over statutory interpretation, the Court has begun to dismantle the interpretive autonomy of the administrative state, reasserting the judiciary’s role as a check on executive overreach and bureaucratic discretion.
Humphrey’s Executor: Insulating Executive Officers from Removal
The 1935 ruling in Humphrey’s Executor v. United States upheld Congress’s ability to limit the President’s power to remove certain agency heads, such as FTC commissioners. The Court reasoned that these officials exercised “quasi-legislative” and “quasi-judicial” functions, and thus could be shielded from executive control. This precedent laid the foundation for the proliferation of “independent” agencies—entities that wield executive power but are not accountable to the President.
Now, in Trump v. Slaughter, the Supreme Court is poised to revisit this precedent. If overturned, it would restore the President’s removal authority over agency heads, reinforcing the unitary executive theory and reestablishing a coherent chain of command within the executive branch.
The Inspector General Act and Judicial Tensions
“This is the intended order: Citizens sovereign, Constitution supreme, government accountable.” The lack of clutter demonstrates the true intent of our founders.
The recent ruling by U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes illustrates the ongoing tension between statutory insulation and constitutional authority. Reyes found that President Trump violated the Inspector General Act (IGA) by failing to provide proper notice and rationale when removing 17 Inspectors General. Yet she also affirmed that the President retains the power to remove IGs—suggesting that the statutory constraints may be procedural rather than substantive.
This raises a deeper constitutional question: Can Congress, through legislation like the IGA, impose conditions that obstruct the President’s Article II duties? If the President is responsible for rooting out waste, fraud, and abuse, but cannot remove those complicit in such dysfunction, then the statutory framework itself may constitute a form of institutional sabotage.
Restorationist Reckoning
From a restorationist perspective, these doctrines and statutes represent a deviation from constitutional intent. They obscure causality, fragment accountability, and empower unelected actors to resist lawful governance. The administrative state, in its current form, operates as a self-perpetuating organism—shielded by statutory fog and judicial deference, yet wielding immense power over the lives of citizens.
The collapse of Chevron and the potential reversal of Humphrey’s Executor signal a constitutional reckoning. They reopen the path to executive clarity, judicial integrity, and citizen agency. They invite a restoration of the original architecture—where power flows through a transparent chain of command, and the President can fulfill his mandate without obstruction.
This is not merely a legal shift. It is a philosophical realignment—one that honors the Founders’ vision, restores the ethics of repair, and reclaims the architecture of truth.