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kjksfyesterday at 7:25 PM4 repliesview on HN

To everyone asking: why is it crazy?

Because the constitution explicitly grants the president absolute executive power over executive branch (government) of which FCC is part of. If government is a company then president is CEO and can do anything he wants to do.

Of course people can argue about the meaning so ultimately the arbiter of what constitution mean is Supreme Court.

And recently there were several lawsuits in the vain "the president can't do THAT" and while federal judges said "indeed, he can't" and issued injunctions, they were pretty much overturned by higher court or Supreme Court, re-affirming that president does in fact has control of executive branch.

And if you want to game this: if this wasn't true, congress could completely defang the powers of the president by making every government agency (IRS, FBI, FTC etc.) "independent" and de facto giving the power to unelected beaurocrats away from elected president.

And why should you care about this?

Because every 4 years you can vote for a different president.

You can't vote for the head of FCC.


Replies

jakelazaroffyesterday at 7:34 PM

> You can't vote for the head of FCC.

FCC commissioners are appointed by the president (who is elected) and confirmed by senators (who are also elected). The chair is then chosen from those commissioners by the president (who, again, is elected).

Saying you can't vote for the head of the FCC is like saying that you can't vote for the Secretary of State. Sure, you don't cast a ballot for them directly, but you do wield influence by electing leaders to represent your interests.

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estearumyesterday at 7:36 PM

> Because the constitution explicitly grants the president absolute executive power over executive branch

No it doesn't.

The President is obligated to faithfully execute the laws of the United States. It's literally in the very first sentence of the Constitution's definition of the President's power and responsibilities.

Article 2 Section 3

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cyberaxyesterday at 7:37 PM

So every 4 years we throw out everyone who disagrees with the El Presidente. But yeah, this can be fixed by making the El Presidente be there for life, right?

Independent agencies exist to make policy shifts more gradual. That's their entire purpose.

Suppose, the next election cycle AOC gets elected, then puts in her cronies who require all stations to air 8 hours of pro-socialism ads every day. And there is nobody at the FCC to say "no".

The only entity that can sue is the DOJ, and it's also controlled by the president.

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