
by Mitchel A. Sollenberger. Durham, N.C.: Carolina Academic Press, 2011. 284 pp. Paper $40.00. ISBN: 9781594607851.
Reviewed by Michael R. Dimino, Sr., School of Law, Widener University (Associate Professor). E-mail: mrdimino [at] mail.widener.edu.
pp.52-57
In FEDERALIST #47, James Madison explained that to protect against the “tyranny” that results from placing all governmental power “in the same hands,” the Constitution not only separates the powers of government, but it equilibrates those powers. If powers are nominally separate, but one branch can direct the behavior of another, then the liberty-preserving function of the separation of powers is undermined. Thus, each branch must not only have powers assigned to it, but it must have the “constitutional means,” in the words of FEDERALIST #51, “to resist encroachments” by the other branches. The objective is to have a government whose constituent parts “keep each other in their proper places.”
Congress’s thirst for power was a particularly worrisome prospect, as Madison recognized when he warned in FEDERALIST #51 that “[i]n republican government, the legislative authority necessarily predominates.” If, as he argued in #47, “Congress is everywhere drawing power into its impetuous vortex,” the President and the courts must have the ability to resist congressional pressure—particularly in areas requiring the cooperation of multiple branches.
One such area is the power over appointments. Article II of the Constitution grants the President the power to “nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, [to] appoint” federal judges and other officers of the United States. As Madison foresaw, whenever one branch’s power is checked by another’s, conflicts are likely to develop concerning the scope of each branch’s authority. And so it has been with the Appointments Clause.
Sollenberger argues for a strengthening of congressional power over appointments through the use of what he terms “democratic controls.” His book is both an historical discussion of the ways such controls have been used to exert congressional influence over, and concerning, courts, and an argument for their vigorous employment to counter presidential appointment authority.

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