Notice & Comment

Symposium of Jon D. Michael’s Constitutional Coup

Notice & Comment

The Alternative Separation of Powers in Constitutional Coup

I am honored to have the chance to review Jon Michaels’s engaging, brilliantly written, and insightful work. Constitutional Coup is a very enjoyable read, chock-full of creative word pictures like Michaels’s description of the “torch and pitchfork crowd” out to get the “Nanny State.” As Jeff Pojanowski and others have observed, the book is thought-provoking […]

Notice & Comment

Deliberate and Serendipitous Separation of Powers in the Administrative State

Jon Michaels’ new book is a masterful blend of important and fascinating subjects, including the constitutional character of administrative law, superstatute theory, privatization, and procedure. It’s a fun read, too, and a must for anyone interested in a fresh perspective on the perils of privatization! In this post, however, I’m going to focus on some discrete details of […]

Notice & Comment

Anti-Privatization as a Second-Best Strategy, by Jeffrey Pojanowski

There are a number of ways to be unhappy about the federal administrative state we have today. One is straightforwardly libertarian. The administrative state allows substantial, systematic interference with private ordering in a way that Congress, acting alone could not (and should not even try). Another way to be unhappy about the federal administrative state […]

Notice & Comment

In Praise of Privatization

Jon D. Michaels’s new book, Constitutional Coup: Privatization’s Threat to the American Republic, offers a creative and—in my view—persuasive defense of the modern administrative state. I agree with Michaels that the tripartite allocation of authority among agency leaders, civil servants, and federal courts endows the administrative state with a measure of democratic legitimacy while also […]

Notice & Comment

The State(s) of Civil Society Oversight, by Miriam Seifter

Jon Michaels’ imaginative, insightful book portrays the administrative state in a new and thought-provoking light. He argues that the modern arrangement of agency leaders, civil servants, and civil society—“the administrative separation of powers”—recreates the internally rivalrous, tripartite structure that he sees as central to the federal constitutional design. And he makes an impassioned call that […]

Notice & Comment

Constitutional Coup, Privatization, and the Federal False Claims Act

There are already so many thorough analyses, illustrative applications, and thoughtful extrapolations of Jon Michaels’s provocative thesis, it took some time to decide where anything more might be usefully contributed.   It is, I think, at the conceptual role “privatization” plays in Constitutional Coup’s core argument.  The threat privatization poses to our fundamental constitutional order, according […]

Notice & Comment

Pretend Privatization

Jon Michaels has written an important book — and I say that even though I suspect that he and I disagree about many things! Although the administrative state has value, it also “has its share of problems.” For instance, the federal government sometimes overreaches in “ominous” and even “crushing” ways. Like the Chief Justice, I’m […]