During today's oral argument in the Supreme Court the Consumers' Research case regarding the constitutionality of the FCC's Universal Service regime, there was a brief tell-tale exchange that likely telegraphs the answer to the question whether a president can constitutionally remove an FCC commissioner without cause – in other words, at will.
Justice Brett Kavanaugh ask the government's counsel defending the Universal Service program whether it makes any difference to the government's defense against the constitutional nondelegation challenge whether the FCC is considered an independent agency or part of the executive branch subject to the president's control. The government's counsel conceded, in effect, that the FCC is not independent because there is no "for cause" restriction on the president's removal power in the Communications Act.
Yesterday, at the Free State Foundation's Seventeenth Annual Policy Conference, FCC Chairman Brendan Carr made the same point in our Fireside Chat ( at 2:45) when I asked him how he thought about the question whether the FCC is an independent agency insulated from presidential control. He pointed to the lack of a restriction on removal in the Communications Act.
In connection with then-developing discussion regarding a president's power to remove FCC commissioners, I pointed out several weeks ago, here and here, that the Communications Act lacks statutory restrictions on removal that are contained in the laws governing the FTC, NLRB, and other agencies. This distinction, until recently, has been overlooked by most everyone, and for decades, many have referred to the FCC as an "independent" agency.