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<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> We'll hear argument today in Case 18-1334, the Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico versus Aurelius Investment, and the consolidated cases. Mr. Verrilli.</u>
<p id="ORAL ARGUMENT OF DONALD B. VERRILLI, JR., ON BEHALF OF THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO">
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court: The question in this case is whether members of the Financial Oversight Board are officers of the United States who must be selected in the manner that the Appointments Clause prescribes or whether they are instead territorial officers who do not have to be selected in that manner. The Constitution's text, structure, and history, and this Court's precedents all make clear that the proper focus in answering that question is the nature of the authority the Board exercises. It comes down to whether Congress has vested the Board with the executive power of the national government or, instead, vested the Board with the territorial executive power. The statute that created the Board, PROMESA, answers that question in a straightforward way. It... it sets up an entity within the territorial government. It gives the Board only territory-specific authority and instructs the Board to pursue only territory-specific objectives. The Board acts on behalf of Puerto Rico as its representative in judicial proceedings to restructure the territory's debts. It pursues only Puerto Rico's interests in those proceedings. It's up to the Article III court that adjudicates those proceedings to balance all the competing interests. Congress also instructed the Board to implement a method for restoring fiscal stability. That, too, is territorial authority. It reaches only Puerto Rico's budgeting and fiscal planning, and the Board must exercise that authority in a manner that protects Puerto Rico's vital... vital interests. Now Congress did build in protections to guarantee the Board's independence. Congress did that because it concluded that Puerto Rico's staggering financial and humanitarian crisis could not be solved unless the Board was insulated from the political pressures that caused that crisis in the first place. But Congress also insulated the Board from federal control. Board members can be removed only for cause, which means that the President cannot remove them based on disagreement with the Board's policies or priorities in implementing PROMESA. When you put all that together, <w>it</w><w>'s</w>... the Board is in the territorial government, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> been given statutory directives to advance the interests of Puerto Rico, and <w>it</w><w>'s</w> insulated from federal control, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> clear that Board members are territorial officials...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> So how...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... not officers of the United States.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> Mister...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... how can that be, Mr. Verrilli? It seems to me that your very argument that <w>it</w><w>'s</w> independent is suggesting it <w>can</w><w>'t</w> belong to the territory and that <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a serious problem that the federal government is creating an entity that no one can control. Neither Congress nor the President can remove this entity for anything but cause. Tell me how this differs from a U.S. attorney. A U.S. attorney is an officer of the United States. I think you accept that. A U.S. attorney is enforcing federal law in Puerto Rico, the U.S. attorney of Puerto Rico, just the way PROMESA is. And a U.S. attorney <w>does</w><w>n't</w> have jurisdiction outside of Puerto Rico. So how is the U.S. attorney different?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> So let me make a general point, and then I'll specifically answer the U.S. attorney question. The general point, I think <w>it</w><w>'s</w> important to make clear, we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> say, contrary to our friends on the other side, that the Appointments Clause <w>does</w><w>n't</w> apply in Puerto Rico. It applies in Puerto Rico just like it applies in a state, in that federal officials, officials who are part of the federal government, have to be appointed in conformity with the Appointments Clause...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Could you do this... could you pass...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... including the U.S. attorney.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... could you pass... could Congress pass a law that... like PROMESA for a state?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> No, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think so, because the difference between that situation and this situation is Article IV. And I really think that gets to the heart of the matter, Justice Sotomayor, that I think the beef that my friends on the other side have is not with the Appointments Clause; <w>it</w><w>'s</w> with Article IV. And the difference between this situation and a state is that Congress has reserved authority under Article IV to alter the structure of a territorial government and to prescribe territorial law...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Could you...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... its substantive territorial law.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> ... could you give at least a quick answer...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> Sure. I'd be...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> ... to the first part of Justice Sotomayor's question?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> Yes. Of course. The difference, I think, the key difference between a U.S. attorney and the Board is that the U.S. attorney is executing laws of nationwide application, the... the U.S. Criminal Code, Title 18. And the U.S. attorney in Puerto Rico in that respect is no different than the U.S. attorney in New York. The Board does not implement laws of nationwide application. It implements as law...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> But all laws <w>do</w><w>n't</w> have nationwide application, even federal laws. Some federal laws have local application as opposed to national. They're still federal law because they were passed by Congress and there federal dictates.</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> But...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> This is no different for the U.S. attorney.</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> I do think <w>it</w><w>'s</w> different in a fundamental way, Your Honor. It is territory-specific. It applies only to the territory of Puerto Rico. And the Board's authority is to... is to act in the interests of the territory of Puerto Rico in the... in their...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Well, Mr. Verrilli, I mean, suppose that Congress looks at Florida and it says that there are a lot of hurricanes there and the waters are rising, and we have a terrible Florida problem. And Congress passes the Florida Reclamation Act, and <w>it</w><w>'s</w> supposed to deal with, you know, the Florida problem that it perceives but uses federal law to do so. Would you say that... I think the... your... your phrase was the executive power of the national government. Would the head of the agency that the Florida Reclamation Act sets up be exercising the executive power of the national government?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> Yes. And the difference is... I'm sorry, Your Honor.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> No, I was just going to say, what is the difference, Mr. Verrilli?</u>
<u loc="[LAUGHTER]">[LAUGHTER]</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> And the difference... and the difference is... and the difference is that... that Congress has dual authority with respect to the territories to act under Article I with nation... laws of nationwide application, which are enforced by federal officials. For example, <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a FEMA regional administrator. There's an EPA regional administrator. They're all appointed in conformity with the requirements of the Appointments Clause. But it has dual authority. It can also act as a territorial legislature, and... and under Article IV, it has plenary authority to do so.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Well, how do we know which... which authority <w>it</w><w>'s</w> using?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> Well, you look... I... I think as... we think Palmore is the relevant precedent there. And I think what you do is you look to two things. First, what does it... what does Congress say <w>it</w><w>'s</w> doing. Here, Congress said expressly we're invoking Article IV and we're creating an entity in the territorial government. That's the...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> What... what's...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... language of the statute, entity...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> ... what's the argument, Mr. Verrilli... you started with this is an... this is an entity within the Puerto Rico government. The argument on the other side is no, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> not within; <w>it</w><w>'s</w> above. It's above the Puerto Rican government, and <w>it</w><w>'s</w>... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> above the legislature and the governor.</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> Yes, and <w>that</w><w>'s</w>... and <w>that</w><w>'s</w> simply an incorrect characterization. I think it misinterprets independence for superintendence. And I think, if you think about it, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> just not right to say that what <w>you</w><w>'ve</w> got here is a federal overlord or a federal master in the language of... of the First Circuit, because think about what Congress did here. First, it said that the... that the Board's authority is territory-specific, and then it said that the Board is supposed to act on behalf of Puerto Rico and represent Puerto Rico in the restructuring proceedings. It's not supposed to advance the broad interests of the United States. It advances Puerto Rico's interests. And, similarly, with respect to its budget...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Well, <w>was</w><w>n't</w> Congress thinking about the broad interests of the United States? I mean, here it was. It was looking at this terrible financial crisis in Puerto Rico and considering a wide variety of options to address that crisis. Now one option could have been some kind of financial bailout. Congress <w>did</w><w>n't</w> want to do that. It instead chose an option that had less financial cost for the American people as a whole. So, you know, why <w>should</w><w>n't</w> we think that Congress, in enacting this piece of legislation, was not thinking about it through a broad national lens?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> First, I think what matters is what Congress did, not what the motivations of individual legislatures were in moving forward with what Congress did. Second, the best evidence of what Congress did is the statute itself, where it made a choice to create an entity in Puerto Rico and it instructed it to act on behalf of Puerto Rico. And even with respect to its budgeting authority, it said when you do your budgeting and fiscal planning, <w>you</w><w>'ve</w> got to ensure that <w>there</w><w>'s</w> adequate funding for essential services in Puerto Rico, adequate funding for the Puerto Rico pension plan, adequate funding for economic development in Puerto Rico. It told this Board to act for Puerto Rico.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Counsel, what if we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think <w>it</w><w>'s</w> an all or nothing division when you look at the responsibilities of the Board? I mean, certainly much of it has to do with territorial issues, but you can certainly appreciate congressmen viewing this obviously as something with nationwide significance. So, to some extent, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> dealing with territorial issues. To some extent, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> dealing with issues of broader national significance. What happens to your case in that instance?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> I think <w>it</w><w>'s</w>... I think the answer is the same, because what matters is the power that Congress chose to invoke and the way in which Congress chose to act. And what Congress did here was tell the Board the way to address this problem is by acting in the interests of Puerto Rico. And then it also insulated the Board from federal control through the for cause standard.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> May I ask you, if we had the original act setting up the U.S. Attorney for Puerto Rico and Congress changed only one label of the three Palmore factors, same factual situation as exists now, except that it says we're doing it under the territorial clause. You're suggesting that <w>that</w><w>'s</w> enough reason for why...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> Absolutely...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... our...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... absolutely not, Your Honor. And <w>that</w><w>'s</w> why the third factor in Palmore is the critical one. You have to look at the nature of the authority that the office is executing.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> All right.</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> And they...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Now let me ask you how you can label this a territorial officer as opposed to a federal officer handling federal issues... a federal mandate when none of the people of Puerto Rico have voted in any way to... on any of the directives that this agent has received?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> I... I understand that point, Your Honor. But, again, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think that has anything to do with the Appointments Clause. There is no doubt under this Court's precedence, starting two centuries ago, and as recently as Sanchez Valle, that the Congress has reserved authority to act at the territorial level and to change the structure of...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Certainly. There's no question.</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... territorial government and to change the substance.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> There's no fight... <w>there</w><w>'s</w> no fight there. The issue is where do you draw a line between what's a federal officer and what's a territorial officer.</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> And I think...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> And the issue has to be that when Congress chooses, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> Congress's choice. If the territory chooses, if it elects a governor, if it elects legislature, if it elects its own Attorney General, that those are officers that Puerto Rico have selected. But, if the federal government is making the selection and imposing it on a territory, it has to be a federal officer.</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> I... <w>that</w><w>'s</w>... I... I... I think <w>that</w><w>'s</w> just not right on numerous levels, Your Honor, and...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> No, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> too simplistic for you.</u>
<u loc="[LAUGHTER]">[LAUGHTER]</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> No, no, no, no. The main...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> That's... <w>that</w><w>'s</w> the problem that everybody...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... one of the main reasons which <w>it</w><w>'s</w> not right, I think, is that <w>it</w><w>'s</w> not consistent with the history of this country. And if you start with the mayor of Washington in 1802... now, admittedly, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> the Enclave Clause, not the Territories Clause, but the Court has said that there are provisions that should be read in the same way... if... if you start with that, the mayor of Washington was appointed... was... Congress created the position of mayor of Washington under a statute.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> That... <w>that</w><w>'s</w> one... I mean, <w>that</w><w>'s</w> one example. But the other side says the historical practice is otherwise overwhelming in... up until about the 1950s, of saying that territorial officers had to be appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate. So how do we deal with that historical practice? You do have the mayor example, so <w>it</w><w>'s</w> not uniform. But how do we deal with that historical practice?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> Two points. First on the mayor. I think the mayor of Washington is an extremely significant historical marker because, after all, the Presidents who made those appointments every year during that period were Jefferson and Madison, and if they had thought that their... that the Appointments Clause applied in a situation like that...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> I... I...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... certainly, we would have heard about that.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> ... I agree with you... I agree with you...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> And now we're...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> ... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> important, but assume the history is still...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> But... but with respect... the history they have essentially is that territorial governors up until the 1950s were appointed with advice and consent. But...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> And judges.</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> And territorial judges. But I actually think that... <w>let</w><w>'s</w> go right to the judges point because I think that actually proves our position and not theirs, because even though territorial judges were always nominated by the President, confirmed by the Senate, this Court held starting in Cantor and then also in Englebrecht and McAllister that they <w>were</w><w>n't</w> judicial officers of the United States, despite the fact that the President nominated them and the Senate confirmed them. And then, to reinforce that, there have been three times in the country's history where a question arose about whether a territorial judge could be impeached by Congress. And in each of those three instances, the political branches concluded that a territorial judge could not be impeached because a territorial judge was not a civil officer of the United States but only an officer of the territory exercising territorial power. Now, with respect to the governors, of course, you know, the... the Appointments Clause is not an either/or proposition. If it applies to the governors as principal officers, it applies to the people the governor appoints as inferior officers. But starting with the Northwest Ordinance and continuing throughout the country's history, inferior officers have been appointed in manners that <w>do</w><w>n't</w> comply with the Appointments Clause.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Does it just... does it strike you as a little strange, Mr. Verrilli, to use the history in this kind of case so extensively? I mean, first, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a little bit all over the map and you each have your historical examples to point to. But, second, the position of territories currently is so different from the position of territories throughout much or most of our history. So I... I guess it seems to me more natural, rather than to look to, you know, what the Northwest Ordinance did, is... is simply to use a kind of functional test and say are these people doing the sorts of things that would be done by state officials in states, or are they doing the sorts of things that would be done by federal officials?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> So two things. First, respectfully, we think, in interpreting the meaning of the phrase "officer of the United States," which is the job that has to be done in this case, the history is very, very relevant. But, second, even if one takes a functional analysis, I think the right way to look at the functional analysis is to look at the... what the Board is actually charged with doing. And what the Board is actually charged with doing is acting in the shoes of the government of Puerto Rico in the restructuring proceedings and acting as an independent entity insulated from political pressure within the budgeting proceedings, but... but constrained by statute to act on behalf of, in the interests of, for the territory. So...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Well...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... if <w>you</w><w>'re</w> going to use a functional approach, <w>they</w><w>'re</w> very much like a state government, not a federal overlord. And I think this would actually be kind of a crazy system if what you wanted to do was create a federal overlord to say: You're a federal overlord. Take the national interests into account, but, when you actually administer the... the authority you have, you have to only focus...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> What do we do about the brief...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... on territorial interests.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... what do we do about the brief of at least <w>there</w><w>'s</w> one amicus that suggests that in one of the litigations <w>that</w><w>'s</w> ongoing, with respect to PROMESA, that <w>there</w><w>'s</w> all sorts of evidence that the Board is taking directives from federal officials?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> So I... you know, that brief, you know, respectfully, Your Honor, I... I think that shows the perils of relying on an amicus brief that relies on extra-record information. The vast majority of those... of the... the documents there have not been disclosed. But, if I may talk about them, because I've been asked about them, the... the... the vast majority of those are communications from federal government officials to the Board in the wake of the disasters and the hurricanes saying we need information about what's going on on the ground here. And so it was... it was informational, the overwhelming majority of them. Now they did find one communication from a Senate staffer, I think, or a House staffer, I think a Senate staffer, saying we want you to resolve Issue X this way. Again, I've got to be outside the record to... to answer that. But, basically, the Board told them to pound sand. And so I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think <w>there</w><w>'s</w> any merit to it whatsoever.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Thank you, counsel. General Wall.</u>
</p>
<p id="ORAL ARGUMENT OF JEFFREY B. WALL ON BEHALF OF THE UNITED STATES">
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court: We know that Congress expressly invoked its authority over the territories and placed the Board within the Puerto Rican government. So the real question here is, was that choice constitutional under Article IV? It was. The Board budgets and restructures debt only for Puerto Rico. It acts in the territory under a territory-specific statute. In our view, Mr. Chief Justice, the Board's focus is exclusively local, but, at a minimum, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> primarily local, which is the appropriate test under Palmore. Justice Kagan, Congress could have legislated directly. It could have put this in the Treasury Department. If it <w>had</w><w>n't</w> otherwise specified, the powers would have gone to the assembly and the governor with respect to restructuring the debt and representing the Commonwealth in these Title III proceedings. It <w>did</w><w>n't</w> want that. It wanted new and independent territorial officers on the ground in Puerto Rico to resolve the fiscal crisis as it had with the D.C. Control Board 20 years earlier. That's a re...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> And what was the position the government took, the D.C. Control Board?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> So they point to a D.C. Circuit brief in the second set of proceedings. We said in that brief, after this Court had held <w>it</w><w>'s</w> exercising federal power with respect to federal property, we said, sure, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> federal, but I... I'd urge the Court to look at the brief. We said if it had been acting with respect to D.C., it would have been different because that would have been local power. I think the same is true with respect to the territories. We drew a distinction in that very brief between federal power over federal property and local power with respect to the District or, here, the territories. So I think our position has been entirely consistent. As early as...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> see how. I mean, you say federal power over federal property. But <w>that</w><w>'s</w> what the Territory Clause, read your way, would say, that Puerto Rico is federal property. You <w>can</w><w>'t</w> have it both ways.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> So I...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Your... you have to be disposing of federal control over federal property, because <w>that</w><w>'s</w> what a territory is.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> So I... I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think so, Justice Sotomayor, but I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> know that much turns on that here. Article IV says both property and the territory. And this Court's cases have treated them differently. So there it was Dulles and Reagan National airports. Those have a different status under the Constitution from the territories. But I think my point was just that where Congress is acting with respect to something federal, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> exercising national legislative power and <w>it</w><w>'s</w> creating national executive offices. That's not what <w>it</w><w>'s</w> doing here. It put a Board inside the Puerto Rican government. Now, yes, it wanted it independent from other Puerto Rican actors that it thought had played a role in this debt crisis. But <w>that</w><w>'s</w> a very different thing from putting it in the federal government and exercising federal power. It was reorganizing the Puerto Rican government. That is a quintessential exercise of Article IV power. And I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think, by the way, Justice Kagan and Kavanaugh, that the history is a wash. It's not just the early Washington mayors. Territorial judges were federally appointed, never treated as federal officers. Early territorial upper houses, the... the D.C. Control Board. D.C. judges, to this day, are appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. They've never been treated as federal officers. They do not have lifetime tenure and a guaranteed salary. Federal appointment has never been the hallmark of whether you are federal or territorial. The hallmark has always been, as Mr. Verrilli said, what kind of power are you exercising?</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Well, <w>that</w><w>'s</w> a question I... I mean, <w>you</w><w>'re</w> representing the federal government. If you lost, would they appoint the same people?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> The President has nominated the same people.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Okay. Now, if <w>that</w><w>'s</w> so and if you lose, but if we were to follow Judge Terrea and say the de facto officer doctrine, what difference would it make?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> So there are two separate things with respect to the... to the remedy, Justice Breyer. If the Court agrees with us on the de facto officer doctrine, that takes care of the Board's acts running up through the Court's decision. Going forward, I think all the parties now agree we still need a stay of the mandate because you'd have to give Congress the opportunity to confirm a new Board. Otherwise, the Board would shut down over night. You <w>would</w><w>n't</w> have a Board.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Yeah.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> So <w>you</w><w>'ve</w> got to give the Senate time to act. Right? And then that new Board would pick up where the old Board left off.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> But they would be the same people. And so what <w>you</w><w>'re</w> talking about is a delay of possibly days while the Senate gets its act together to confirm the people that they already recommended to the President with one exception. I mean, are we talking... is that what we're talking about? You win, and <w>there</w><w>'s</w> no delay; you lose, assuming Judge Terrea's right, and <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a slight delay? That's what this case is about?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Well, I...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> On that assumption?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> I hope we're not in a world where we lose, and I would love to tell you that it <w>won</w><w>'t</w> be a big deal in that world, but <w>it</w><w>'s</w> going to be a little more complicated that. They're almost certain to argue that the nominations have expired and that even though the Senate has confirmed people before to expired terms, it <w>can</w><w>'t</w> do that here. Even if we win that argument and even if the Senate committee reports them out and even if the Senate gets them through the floor during the period of the stay and we get a new Board, then <w>they</w><w>'re</w> going to argue that Board has to ratify everything that was done during the period of the stay, and <w>they</w><w>'re</w> going to challenge that ratification, and, of course, that ratification will extend backward in time, further and further, depending on what you do with the de facto officer doctrine.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> The... the... the big question on...</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> So, I mean, we're litigating for years on that view. It's just a question of how much we're going to have to litigate with them if we... if... if the Court decides we're wrong on the merits.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Mr.... Mr. Wall, do you have to still litigate that here? You're making an assumption that the de facto doctrine does go as far as you say, which is to deprive a winning party of no remedy whatsoever.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> That's not true. They will get prospective remedy as all of the litigants did in the de facto officer cases, including Buckley. It... the second this Court's stay expires, the Board can no longer act with respect to Aurelius, Assured, UTIER, or anybody else. What the de facto officer doctrine says is, even though you get meaningful prospective relief, we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> invalidate everything done moving backward in time that the officers are alleged to have done while invalidly appointed. And so... and I think <w>that</w><w>'s</w> critical here because the Board's been acting for three years. We have, you know, nearly 100 adversary proceedings, hundreds of thousands of claims, hundreds of millions of dollars collected or paid out, 12 billion dollars in bonds issued in the COFINA Title III proceeding that have been traded on the secondary... on the market something like <w>85,000</w> times. I mean, I have no idea how one unwinds this, and I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think that... that Aurelius and UTIER have given any real way to do it. And <w>that</w><w>'s</w> exactly what the de facto officer doctrine is for. We <w>do</w><w>n't</w> wipe everything out in the past. But I do want to say that I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think we get to that. I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think the merits here are... are close. Congress did its homework. It invoked Article IV. It told us where it was putting it...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> I thought your argument would be that if you lost, there would also be a lot of legal ramifications in terms of calling into question the status of elected governors, judges, territorial judges, and the like. Is that not the case?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Well, I think it depends on which of their four or maybe five tests you pick. They start with Buckley. If <w>they</w><w>'re</w> serious about that, which has significant authority under federal law, <w>that</w><w>'s</w> the D.C. mayor, city council, the Guam and Virgin Island governors, and all territorial legislators and judges. All of that authority flows directly from federal law, whether an organic act or the D.C. Home Rule Act. So then they tweak Buckley to say: Well, not if <w>you</w><w>'re</w> elected. And then I say: Well, but you still <w>do</w><w>n't</w> solve D.C. judges, territorial judges, Washington mayors, early territorial upper houses, or the D.C. Control Board. And then they say: Well, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> executing federal law, maybe <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a special law, maybe <w>it</w><w>'s</w> federal objectives, maybe <w>it</w><w>'s</w> federal removal and <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a hodgepodge of other factors thrown in there. If the Court accepts those, notwithstanding that there are historical counter-examples to every one of those tests, then I suppose you could try to carve out the test in just the way as to pick this up. But I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think <w>there</w><w>'s</w> any principled way to do it. All of the federal authority that these territorial officers and D.C. officers exercise flows from federal law. And if you take their test seriously, yes, Justice Kavanaugh, it will threaten to undermine, indeed I think it would condemn in its entirety, home rule. I mean... and... and that just points out... I mean, <w>there</w><w>'s</w> both an upper-level and a lower-level disruption here. The lower-level disruption is undoing three years of what the Board has done to try to stabilize the condition in Puerto Rico. The upper-level disruption is every test they've got runs smack dab into history, and every test they've got would federalize some number of officers who have always been thought of as territorial or local, whether in D.C. or in the territories. And like I say, I mean, from 1802 to now, I mean, if... if... if Mr. Olson is serious that significant authority under federal law makes you a federal officer, well, then, so too the D.C. judges who...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> That's assuming that the immediate... that <w>you</w><w>'re</w> looking at the ultimate source, which is a double jeopardy idea. And our... and our opinion in Sanchez Valle made it very clear that it was limited to that. A much different result if you limit it to what's the immediate source.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Oh, yes, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> disagree that <w>that</w><w>'s</w> kind of an... an ad hoc limitation that they've thrown on to try to avoid the consequences of their view. But just to refine what you said a little bit, Justice Sotomayor, what... what I took Justice Kagan's opinion to be saying in Sanchez Valle is, look, there are other ways you could have defined sovereignty or you could have looked at sovereignty, but, if we're looking at source of authority, the source of authority here flows from federal law. Well, their test is a source test. Their test is Buckley. Did you get significant authority from federal law? So maybe there are other tests they could have tried to come up with, but theirs is a source test.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> But you could say that about the states. The Constitution is the source of their power because the compact with the United States... with... their very existence is dependent on that. But we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> define what a state act is or a federal act by their original source.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Oh, well...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> We define it by who passed the law, the state or the federal government.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Well, except that under their test, and I think under Sanchez Valle, <w>you</w><w>'ve</w> got to look at where that power flowed from, where did you get that authority. And they keep saying authority under federal law. Okay, well, if <w>that</w><w>'s</w> your test, all of that authority, whether with respect to D.C. or the territories, flows from federal law. And, of course, the problem with the test, Justice Sotomayor, is Buckley is a significance test. It takes an officer <w>who</w><w>'s</w> got concededly federal power and says how significant is their power? Are they an employee or are they an officer? It's not designed to answer the predicate question of, well, are they exercising federal power or territorial power? That's the question that Palmore gets at. Is it a D.C. court or is it an Article III court? And the only way you know that is by asking two questions: One, did Congress invoke Article I or did it invoke Article IV? And then, two...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> I've not even...</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> ... did it do anything under Article I or Article IV that...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Why do you bother with the third? If you give the first... assuming that, as your adversary said, if Congress... all it has to do is wave a magic wand, Article IV, and that that gives permission? Obviously not.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Oh, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> still got to be... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> got... first, <w>you</w><w>'ve</w> got to ask where it was trying to put the office. That's the first step. And then <w>you</w><w>'ve</w> got to ask whether it had the constitutional power to do that thing. Did it do something under Article I or under Article IV that it <w>could</w><w>n't</w> do? And the very first sentence of the court of appeals discussion is no one here has claimed that anything in PROMESA extends beyond Congress's reach under Article IV. And <w>that</w><w>'s</w> true. There's not a word in these briefs from Aurelius or UTIER claiming that there is any power vested in the Board that is not among Congress's plenary power under Article IV. That's the end of the analysis, I think, correctly understood. What was Congress doing? It was putting it in the territorial government. Did it give it any power it <w>did</w><w>n't</w> have under Article IV? They <w>have</w><w>n't</w> claimed that it did. That under Palmore, I think, is the end of the analysis. Congress invoked its plenary power. It <w>did</w><w>n't</w> do anything Article IV <w>did</w><w>n't</w> give it the power to do.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> And, Mr. Wall, what is your answer to the question that Justice Sotomayor started off with about the difference between these Board members and a U.S. attorney?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> It's the same one that Mr. Verrilli gave, which is where you have executive officers who are acting under statutes of nationwide application, we think that <w>that</w><w>'s</w> best understood to be exercising federal...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> How about...</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> ... executive power.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> ... if PROMESA had, instead of setting it up the way it did, had just... had amended Chapter 9 of the federal bankruptcy laws and said Puerto Rico instrumentalities get to use Chapter 9 the way everybody else does, then creates the Board to do that.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Yeah, I...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> What... what of that?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> I... I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think the form of that matters. You're asking the same two questions.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Because there, there is a... I... I guess what I was suggesting was that on... on that there would be a uniform national law.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Oh, I... I think you'd have to ask the same two questions. Was Congress doing that under the bankruptcy clause in Article I or doing it under the Territory Clause in Article IV to just create or extend those laws to the territory? And then did it do... did it put any powers in that office that it <w>could</w><w>n't</w> have under Article IV. So I think it'd be the same answer if, when extending the bankruptcy statute, it had said we're extending a similar system to Puerto Rico. We're invoking Article IV. We are creating this new board to oversee these new bankruptcy proceedings. And we are putting that in the Puerto Rican government.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Well, then it <w>does</w><w>n't</w> seem to have much to do with whether the law is nationwide or not, because my hypothetical was nationwide law, and <w>you</w><w>'re</w> saying it <w>would</w><w>n't</w> matter because Congress said it was using Article IV. But <w>it</w><w>'s</w> got to be more than...</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> So...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> ... what Congress said, right?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> ... so I... I think that is pressing at exactly the tough question, which I'm going to say fortunately is not presented here, because <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a territory-specific statute and <w>it</w><w>'s</w> only acting in the territory. But Palmore does say primarily local. And <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a little tough to figure out exactly what it means. It seems to think that, if <w>you</w><w>'re</w> doing the D.C. code most of the time, rather than federal statutes most of the time, adjudicating, <w>you</w><w>'re</w> local, which seems to point up that you can do a little bit of the nationwide thing without converting into a federal officer. And we know <w>that</w><w>'s</w> true of territorial judges. That's the best historical example. They were hearing matters in the territory, but they were adjudicating them under federal law. So I think that <w>you</w><w>'re</w> asking a really tough question about, well, what does local mean? Does it mean <w>you</w><w>'re</w> doing only the local matters, or does it go to the geographic scope of the statute under which you act? I think <w>it</w><w>'s</w> tough. Palmore seems to indicate the scope of the statute might matter. History seems to indicate it might not if what <w>you</w><w>'re</w> doing is local. And, again, all I can say is I think this is the easy case because here we...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Although this case...</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> ... check both boxes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> ... <w>is</w><w>n't</w> all that different from my hypothetical, right, because essentially what PROMESA does is it replicates all the procedures of Chapter 9. I mean, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> not coming up with a new thing.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> I mean, it... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> similar in most respects, but I actually <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think that changes the analysis. I mean, when the Detroit mayor walks in under Chapter 9 and files for municipal bankruptcy, we <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think that simply because he has invoked some power granted to him by federal law that he becomes a federal officer. I mean, here, the Board basically represents the Commonwealth. It's almost like the debtor. All it does is, if the Commonwealth says restructure our debt, it walks in and files the petition in federal court. It then basically represents the debtor, not different from any other state or municipality, tries to work out the claims with the creditor, and then ultimately Judge Swain has to sort out the plan and confirm something in the bankruptcy. So I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think in that respect <w>it</w><w>'s</w> acting any differently from any state or locality that declares under Chapter 9. It's still... under Palmore, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> still focused on local matters. Everything the Board is doing, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> doing in Puerto Rico, which is why I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think they've tried to claim, look, you needed any Article I power. All you needed was Article IV.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Suppose Congress invokes Article IV and puts it in the territorial government, as <w>it</w><w>'s</w> done here, but assigns some matters that... to pick up on Justice Kagan's questions... are more national than local. Is the remedy for that problem to say that that officer <w>can</w><w>'t</w> perform the more national duties, or is the remedy for that to say that the... the office is invalid because <w>it</w><w>'s</w> appointed in violation of the Appointments Clause?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Well, first, Justice Kavanaugh, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want to... to grant that that office would be unconstitutional. It's pressing. It's a tough question Justice Kagan was getting at. So what does Palmore mean by primarily? It seems to leave some room to do nationwide or federal things as long as you are focused on the territory. But if you assume that <w>it</w><w>'s</w> got to be exclusive... a test that I think we meet here... I think <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a hard question what the remedy would be. I think you'd still have the de facto officer potentially going...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Well, I'm asking a...</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> ... outside...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> ... different question.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> ... unless <w>it</w><w>'s</w> an adjudicator.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Wouldn't... <w>would</w><w>n't</w> the officer still be a valid territorial officer but perhaps exercising some duties that he or she cannot exercise?</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> I think <w>that</w><w>'s</w> a potential remedy. We <w>have</w><w>n't</w> looked at that here. We <w>have</w><w>n't</w> briefed it. I do think that it kind of... it highlights the oddity of the other side's claim. It's not as if <w>they</w><w>'re</w> pointing to some federal power provision that...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Well, I think it highlights the difficulty, as Justice Kagan said, at the primarily local, because the word "primarily," you were very careful in your brief to have that each time you articulate the test. And I'm not sure how we're supposed to figure that out.</u>
<u loc="MR. WALL J.B."><w>[MR. WALL J.B.]</w> Justice Kavanaugh, I think you need it there. We've known since Cantor in that territorial judges are not federal officers. And yet they are adjudicating cases under federal law. They had general federal jurisdiction, just like state courts. It... it was exclusive until 1875. So I think <w>you</w><w>'ve</w> got to have some primary test in there. I think <w>you</w><w>'re</w> going to have difficult cases at the margins. And all I can fall back on is this is not a difficult case because, here, <w>there</w><w>'s</w> nothing in PROMESA that needed to be an exercise of Article I. By its terms, it is limited to the territory. It's not as if they can point you to some federal provisions of PROMESA that grant the federal power that you could just excise. It says represent the Commonwealth in the following ways. And... and I do... I do... and I think this is the best way to capture it. Congress could have given these powers to the governor and the legislature. They'd already... they already had many of them. They could adjust debt. They could propose budgets and fiscal plans. The governor otherwise would have represented the Commonwealth in the Title III proceedings. If they had created the Title III proceeding but not otherwise specified that the Board would play a role, and the governor had filed this petition, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think anyone believes that would have converted the governor into a federal officer, any more than the mayor of Detroit or anybody else. To say just a quick word on the... on the... on the remedy. As we tried to say, I think there are two things at play, the de facto officer doctrine, to ensure you have not applied it to adjudicators, <w>that</w><w>'s</w> Ryder, but you have more than a dozen cases applying it to legislative and executive bodies, <w>that</w><w>'s</w> Buckley. This is an executive body <w>that</w><w>'s</w> not doing adjudication. Right? So I think it falls squarely within that... it... that set of cases. And, indeed, I think <w>it</w><w>'s</w> sort of the classic case for that, given the immense reliance interests that have been built up on the Board over the next three years, going forward, everybody agrees we need a stay in order to confirm a new Board, if you decide we're wrong on the merits. I think the right model there is Northern Pipeline. That was six months. Same thing here. You've got to get them out of committee. You've got to get them through the floor. They're going to have to do some amount of ratification. And then <w>they</w><w>'re</w> going to have to act going forward. At a minimum, though, I'd say we need three months with the ability to come back and report progress just like what we did in the First Circuit, because we've got to allow Congress and then the Board some time to... to act. If the Board is shut down in Puerto Rico, I do think it imperils a process on which we have made really substantial gains in the last three years in trying to stabilize the island's finances. And I <w>can</w><w>'t</w> stress to the Court how important it is that the Board be allowed to continue to do that work. Thank you.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Thank you, General. Mr. Olson.</u>
</p>
<p id="ORAL ARGUMENT OF THEODORE B. OLSON ON BEHALF OF AURELIUS INVESTMENT, LLC, ET AL.">
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Thank you, Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court: In Federalist 48, James Madison anticipated what Congress attempted to do with the PROMESA oversight board, masking under complicated and indirect measures its encroachment on coordinate departments. Drawing all power into its impetuous vortex, he urged all precautions against the enterprising ambition of this department. PROMESA was a response to a national financial crisis affecting millions of American citizens, including 3 million citizens, American citizens, in Puerto Rico. The PROMESA Board is appointed, supervised, and removable by the President of the United States, reports regularly on its budget and decisions to federal officials, and makes recommendations... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> required to do so under the statute... for changes in PROMESA and other federal laws... other federal laws. It presides over the largest municipal bankruptcy proceeding in United States history, managing over 100 billion dollars in indebtedness, <w>165,000</w> claims, including over 200 claw-back actions, lawsuits against major financial institutions, in a proceeding in an Article III district court designated by the Chief Justice of the United States. The Board was effectively chosen... these are the words of the congressional committee... effectively chosen by members of Congress, all without the advice and consent of the Senate. The Appointments Clause is central to the separation of powers, without which, in the words of the framers, we have the very definition of tyranny. It was a response to the most insidious and powerful weapon of 18th-century despots.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> If the Board were elected, would it be constitutional?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> No, it would not be constitutional because... how... and... and...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Doesn't that mean the Puerto Rico governor election is unconstitutional as well then?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> No, because the Puerto Rican authorities that are given to the Puerto Rican governor and under the Puerto Rican legislature are primarily local activities. I just described what the PROMESA's Board powers are. They are national in scope. They bring cases in federal court against U.S. citizens. They conduct an extensive investigation of the oversight... over the underwriting practices, the bond rating situation with respect to this...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> All on behalf of Puerto Rico and its people and its agencies. The Board is instructed to act not on behalf of the United States but on behalf of Puerto Rico in pressing these claims?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Justice Ginsburg, it is not on behalf of Puerto Rico. It is not an internal Puerto Rican operation. It is an oversight board. This Board has the power to prescribe a budget for Puerto Rico. It has the power to veto decisions of the governor of Puerto Rico and the legislature of Puerto Rico. It has the power and has sued the governor of Puerto Rico and government... Puerto Rican officials. It's called an oversight board because it is not internal to Puerto Rico. It...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Well, but its oversight concerns... every sentence you just said there, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> of Puerto Rico, of Puerto Rico. Its focus is on Puerto Rico. Yes, the activities, as things in any of the territories often do, has broader impact. I get... I'll get back to the question I asked your friend, Mr. Verrilli. What if we... I mean, I think <w>it</w><w>'s</w> very artificial to look at this and say, is this local or is this national? It obviously is some of each, or even the local aspects certainly have national implications. So, again, I mean, where... where do we... I know what your answer is, but you could explain it. What do you do with... what... what do I do if I view it as some of each?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, it is overwhelmingly a federal problem dealing with a federal issue. In the... in the Limtiaco case just in 2007, with an issue involving insolvency or potential insolvency of Guam, this Court said this is not a local problem. This is the... the insolvency of a territory is a national... is a national issue. It's a federal issue. The concern of the United States... this is in a sense a little bit like the Lebron case or other cases where this Court has said the Congress is dealing with a significant federal problem. It has come up with a federal solution and has given this Board powers over citizens all over the United States.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> But I think the response on the other side is that they've taken some of the powers and responsibilities that belonged to the governor and to the legislature and given them to the Board, and the governor, as you acknowledged, is elected, not appointed consistent with the Appointments Clause. So is that wrong that they've taken the powers from the governor and legislature and given them to the Board?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> They've taken all of the powers with respect to the financial situation in Puerto Rico and given it to the federal-created Board, which is appointed by the President, removable by the President, and has supervisorial authorities under the... the very statute...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> But, Mr. Olson, I... I think the question is...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Mr. Olson...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> ... if, but for this statute...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Right.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> ... who would... who would be doing these activities? And if it would be the governor of Puerto Rico...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> The governor...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> ... then <w>does</w><w>n't</w> that tell us something?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> The governor of Puerto Rico does not have the power to do these activities.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> I understand that. But for this statute, who would? Wouldn't it be the governor? That's what...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> No.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> ... <w>that</w><w>'s</w> what your colleagues...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> But for the statute, this authority to do...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> That's what your colleagues suggest.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> And is... if <w>that</w><w>'s</w> erroneous, could you direct us to what... who would do it but for the statute?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> The statute was created because the... the governor of Puerto Rico... and there was no authority for officials in Puerto Rico to do these responsibilities, to bring these actions... these actions against financial institutions in the mainland, to bring... to overturn the budget, to do these various things, to bring suit against the governor himself.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Why <w>could</w><w>n't</w> they? Why <w>could</w><w>n't</w> they? They'd pass a law, a Puerto Rican law, which would give them authority to do it.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> They... they would not have the power to have the reach that this PROMESA...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> What? Give me an example. I mean, if the legislature and governor wanted to do it, they would pass a law. They would represent Puerto Rico in the bankruptcy proceeding.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> They would... they would take care of the problem.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> That case was before this Court just a couple of years ago.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Right.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> The... the case involving whether or not Puerto Rico could use the bankruptcy statutes to do...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> No, no, no, I'm saying we set up a... what I think <w>you</w><w>'re</w> being asked by several of us is: Look at all the powers that the... that the Board has. Aren't they powers that the Puerto Rican government could exercise if it had the legislative and gubernatorial will?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> I submit...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> Which one <w>could</w><w>n't</w> it?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> I think virtually all of them, Justice Breyer. This is a long statute prescribing an enormous range of powers, given the ability to overturn decisions of the governor, to reverse...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> You know, I understand that, but I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want to repeat my question. You see what my question was?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> I do see what your...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Mr. Olson, I think the basic question, if I can simplify it, I believe, is <w>could</w><w>n't</w> the governor of Puerto Rico and the legislature have created their own fiscal rescue plan? Yes. Correct?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> No, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> believe so. I think...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Why?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... that was the case that would give the authority to adjust debts, to accommodate the various different creditors, to... to...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Oh, <w>you</w><w>'re</w> talking about... we are... okay. I guess your intention is that without PROMESA, the bankruptcy law <w>would</w><w>n't</w> have changed to permit Puerto Rico...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> It... it would...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... to file...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... it would not.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... its action...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> And this statute...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... so...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... went far beyond the bankruptcy powers. The powers that are given to this Board are vastly greater than powers that are available on the...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Mr. Olson...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> So what <w>you</w><w>'re</w> basically saying is, without this federal law creating the structure, the structure itself <w>could</w><w>n't</w> exist under existing law?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> That's correct.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Justice Alito.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> So the legislature <w>could</w><w>n't</w> do it?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> That's correct.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Mr. Olson, are you and your client here just to defend the integrity of the Constitution, or would one be excessively cynical to think that something else is involved here involving money? And, if so, what is it? What did the Board do that hurt your client?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, with... my... aside from the constitutional right to an officer...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Well, I mean, are you... are you and Aurelius here just as... as amici to defend the Constitution, or do you have some kind of a concrete grievance?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> The process is not complete, Justice Alito. The process is ongoing. My client is being subjected to a process that is governed by officials that were appointed in violation of the separation of powers. So that sense, it <w>is</w><w>n't</w> complete. We <w>can</w><w>'t</w> describe the degree to which someone might have been hurt. But the Court's... this Court's said over and over again that <w>it</w><w>'s</w> fundamental that an officer of the United States must be appointed pursuant to the Appointments Clause. That is fundamental to the separation of powers, which is fundamental to the Constitution...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> I mean, you <w>do</w><w>n't</w> have to answer this if you <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want to, but there is no money issue involved here?</u>
<u loc="[LAUGHTER]">[LAUGHTER]</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Of course, there... of course, there...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Well, what is it?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> There's over...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> I'd just like to know what... this is a real case. I'd like to know what's really going on here.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, <w>there</w><w>'s</w>... <w>there</w><w>'s</w> over 100 billion dollars of indebtedness being adjudicated in various procedures, a lot of which is...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE ALITO"><w>[JUSTICE ALITO]</w> Right, and your client wants more of it and somebody else you think is getting too much. So what is it exactly? If you want to answer. If not...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> We <w>can</w><w>'t</w>... we <w>can</w><w>'t</w> possibly answer that. There are these extraordinarily large claims which the governor... which the agencies of Puerto Rico have defaulted on, have not been able to pay these claims. So, yes, <w>you</w><w>'re</w> right. Of course, it involves a lot of money. And the money is in a process <w>that</w><w>'s</w> being adjudicated by a federal district judge appointed by the Chief Justice of the United States.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> <w>did</w><w>n't</w> your client acquiesce in some settlement?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> There was a settlement of one small piece of it that was... that had nothing to do with... at no time did my clients relinquish their constitutional claims or recede from them in any way. There was a small settlement with respect to a taxing authority where the sales tax went into an agency. And that part of it has been resolved. And we've agreed not to challenge... my clients have agreed not to challenge that settlement in any way. So <w>that</w><w>'s</w> a bit of a...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Mr. Olson...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> But this one you have agreed to challenge, and why, you are challenging?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Pardon?</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> What is the difference between what you agreed to and <w>you</w><w>'re</w> not challenging and now what <w>you</w><w>'re</w> challenging?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> What we're challenging is the remaining part of the procedure, which is the giant part of it. This is a small piece of it that was settled in some way and... and there was really basically no choice because the Board was ongoing and a settlement was reached with respect to a small segment of the resources. But in no way did my clients relinquish its constitutional rights to an appointment under the Appointments Clause.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Mr. Olson...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> I see that, and I wanted to ask you a question...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> One thing... there was one thing that...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> ... that I think you may...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> I'm sorry. Justice Ginsburg?</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> ... that... that confuses me about your presentation, because you start out very strongly that the evil here is Congress aggrandizing itself, Congress aggrandizing itself at the executive's expense. How about the member of the Board <w>that</w><w>'s</w> appointed by the President alone? There <w>can</w><w>'t</w> be any question of Congress aggrandizing itself. Congress has given the President alone that authority. So would it be unconstitutional in your view if all of the members were appointed by the President and not subject to the advice and consent? I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> get how that...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> They would... they... these are principal officers of the United States, not inferior officers. Therefore, principal officers under the Constitution must be appointed, nominated by the President...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> But what does that have to do with Congress aggrandizing itself at the executive's expense?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, the... the... they... the President appointed one without advice and consent of the Senate. That violates the Appointments Clause. The other were pursuant to lists...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> How about the D.C. Control Board, where <w>they</w><w>'re</w> all appointed...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, <w>there</w><w>'s</w>...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> ... by the President?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... that has never been adjudicated. The government itself in connection with the D.C. Control Board took the position in an Office of Legal Counsel opinion that that was a federal agency. There has never been a resolution of that. The D.C. Control Board has vastly more limited powers with respect to local matters. And our... our opponents bring up and rely on the Palmore case, which had nothing to do with the Appointments Clause. It <w>was</w><w>n't</w> an adjudication or <w>was</w><w>n't</w>...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> They bring up...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... a discussion of...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Excuse me. They bring up home rule more generally. And <w>that</w><w>'s</w> of serious concern here, is if you were to prevail here, what would that do for home rule and the territories with elected governors? What would it do for the District of Columbia with the elected mayor, city council, the judges' appointments? How, if you were to prevail here, would the line be drawn so that it does not affect home rule?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> It would not affect home rule at all. Now people might make the argument that PROMESA itself affected in some way because it took over the responsibility of the... of the Puerto Rican officials to set financial conditions, establish a budget... budget, and all of those things. But the outcome in favor of my clients in this case would simply mean that the same officials would be appointed pursuant to the Constitution. It <w>would</w><w>n't</w> change home rule. All of the cases that we've relied upon...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> But <w>would</w><w>n't</w> it require that similar officials... maybe I'm not understanding... in the territories who exercise territorial power, but also affect national power?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> What... what... I think the issue might be primarily federal power or versus primarily local. The Palmore case itself, which our opponents rely on repeatedly, says in that opinion those were primarily or exclusively or largely... there are various different adjectives used in that opinion... local D.C. criminal proceedings, criminal law under the laws of the District of Columbia. And this Court has repeatedly likened the power that can be exercised in the territories under the territorial clause or under the clause that gives power over the District of Columbia local territorial matters, the type of authority that may be given by a state to a local municipality.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> Congress enacts the D.C. code, right? The D.C. code is enacted by Congress?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Yes, although... well, there is... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> changed over time. But... but at... at a certain point in time, yes. But... but the fact is that there is a difference between primarily local authority, and <w>that</w><w>'s</w> discussed in the... in the Palmore case. The reason that those...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> So... so that does sound like the test that is being used by Mr. Verrilli and Mr. Wall. I mean, they've said that your test is kind of malleable. And I guess what I'd like, what is your test?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> The test... my test is this Court's test, which was articulated in the Buckley case, again in the... in the...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> But you know what... what struck me...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... in the Lucia case.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> ... what struck me when I read that, when I read your brief, the Buckley test is significant authority pursuant to the laws of the United States. I guess what struck me was that in many... on many occasions you modified that test in your brief. You said significant federal authority pursuant to the laws of the United States. And when you do that, it strikes me that <w>you</w><w>'re</w> coming actually pretty close, I mean, and if you agree on a test, that seems not a bad thing. It seems as though, when you say significant federal authority, <w>you</w><w>'re</w> coming pretty close to what Mr. Wall and Mr. Verrilli have proposed.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, we looked at each of the cases that are cited both in our briefs and our opponents' briefs, including the United States' briefs. The... it is... it is... and <w>it</w><w>'s</w> the test of this Court, not just in the Buckley case, but as... as recently... as recently as a couple years ago in the Lucia case. It's the same case.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Right, but always... always to distinguish between officers and employees. And what I'm suggesting is that when you apply it to this situation, your own briefs modify the test by talking about federal authority and implicitly comparing federal authority to local authority.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> And we acknowledge that, that with respect to the test that this Court articulated, repeatedly, Lucia was just the last time it did, that authority under the laws of the United States has always accepted the... the purely local authority <w>that</w><w>'s</w> been exercised in the territories.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> So if <w>it</w><w>'s</w>...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> There's also exceptions for transitional governments. The Philippines, for example. There was a local government and then it was replaced...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> Mr. Olson, I'm... I'm confused. I honestly <w>do</w><w>n't</w> understand what the difference between your test and the government's test is in this case. If you could articulate that in a few sentences, I'd be grateful.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> The test is...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> The difference between the two tests.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, the difference between the two is that we believe, and what... what this Court has taught us, that if <w>you</w><w>'re</w> exercising significant authority under the laws of the United States, the laws enacted by Congress with respect to the government, affairs of the federal government, as opposed to purely local municipal, the... the speed limits, the zoning...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> I understand... I understand the test. My question is, what's the difference between that and the question asking whether the individual or the Board is acting primarily locally or primarily nationally?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> It...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> What's the difference? What's the delta?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> The... the delta is, is something that is a municipal matter, is it... have to do with local affairs, speed limits, zoning, and things of that nature, as opposed to federal statutes that deal with a national crisis. This was a national crisis, a national...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> Could I rephrase that as asking whether the Board was acting primarily locally or primarily nationally?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> It is... the Board is acting primarily nationally.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> Okay. So we do agree on a test then?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Pardon me?</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> So then we do agree on the test, right, whether the Board was acting primarily locally or primarily nationally?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, that part of it, yes.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GORSUCH"><w>[JUSTICE GORSUCH]</w> Okay.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Because those... what this Court has said repeatedly is that, where there is local municipal authority, Congress has the power under Article IV to give government and... and regulate the affairs in municipalities.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> So if <w>it</w><w>'s</w> primarily...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Mr. Olson...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> As...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> want you to ignore the de facto officer. But just to finish this, <w>there</w><w>'s</w> this nuance between you and your adversaries on are you dealing primarily with a local matter? And they would say dealing with a budget, dealing with running the government, <w>that</w><w>'s</w> all local. You are attempting to say something different, but I'm not sure what that difference is, because, when they use the words primarily local matters, <w>that</w><w>'s</w> the way I understand them to be using it.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> The... the test...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> They... they can obviously correct me if I'm wrong.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> But <w>they</w><w>'re</w> saying this Board is dealing with primarily local matters because <w>it</w><w>'s</w> dealing primarily with a budget and with...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> And <w>that</w><w>'s</w> not...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> That... that... <w>that</w><w>'s</w>... okay.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> With all due respect, you cannot say that at the same time that <w>you</w><w>'ve</w> read the PROMESA statute itself. And this Court...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Well, I... I've read it, but that <w>does</w><w>n't</w> mean I know what <w>you</w><w>'re</w> referring to. Could you succinctly make the... the difference between how you view primarily dealing with...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... in your way and the way the other side does?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... the insolvency of a territory of the United States is not a local matter. That's what this Court said in the Limtiaco case in 2007. The... and... and <w>that</w><w>'s</w> what Congress was saying when it was dealing with the enactment of this statute. We have a fiscal catastrophe, a humanitarian crisis involving millions of citizens, 3 million American citizens in Puerto Rico, but citizens all over the United States who are owed money by the government of Puerto Rico or agencies of the government of Puerto...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> So, Mr. Olson...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... Rico.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Counsel, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> just then... it... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> just a question of size. I mean, if the same thing, we're talking about not Puerto Rico, but Ponce... see, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> know the pronunciation... Puerto Rico, your position would be different? Or a county in Puerto Rico?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> I think that <w>it</w><w>'s</w> possible that you could find a fiscal insolvency situation of a small enough unit of a... of a portion of Puerto Rico where you <w>would</w><w>n't</w> be talking about this, but Guam, which is what this Court talked about in that case, Limtiaco case, was 1/400th the size of Puerto Rico, involving that tiny fraction of the significance of Puerto Rico. We're talking here about not just the size but the dimension of the problem, the number of citizens that are involved, the number of creditors' claims, over 200 claw-back claims against financial institutions throughout the United States that are being pursued in federal court. This is a...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> So would it be right to say, Mr. Olson, that you view this statute as essentially a statute about debt restructuring? I mean, it has other aspects and the Board does other things and oversees Puerto Rican budgets going forward, but <w>you</w><w>'re</w> saying that what we should do is look at the statute and say <w>it</w><w>'s</w> about restructuring a bankrupt territory's debt and that that has to be viewed as national? Is that the theory?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, that is part of the theory. And as... as the United States repeatedly said with respect to, in the Freytag case, the deputy solicitor general was asked a question about what if the governor of Puerto Rico was appointed by Congress or a federal official? And the response from the federal government was that would invoke in every case the Appointments Clause.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Did that deputy solicitor general prevail on that position?</u>
<u loc="[LAUGHTER]">[LAUGHTER]</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> That deputy solicitor general made a beautiful argument, Mr. Chief Justice.</u>
<u loc="[LAUGHTER]">[LAUGHTER]</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> And... and fortunately for him...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> A beautiful losing argument.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... the Court did not decide that precise case. But that... but that argument that was made is the same argument that the United States has made in 22 OLC in 1978, when it was talking about Guam, in 31 OLC in the brief in the Hechinger case, which was the follow-on to the Metropolitan Washington Authority's case, that was a very, very important case.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> If we conclude that the powers and duties here are primarily local... and I know you disagree... but, if we conclude that, do you lose?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> The... I suspect that if <w>there</w><w>'s</w>... if <w>there</w><w>'s</w> an agency in Puerto Rico <w>that</w><w>'s</w> dealing with purely local problems, like the...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> You keep...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... like the article...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> ... you keep saying... I'm sorry to interrupt. You keep saying "purely local."</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, primarily, I'll...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Okay.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... accept that, primarily.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> There's a big difference between...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, <w>there</w><w>'s</w> a big... it may be a big difference and it may be important in this case. Palmore case was talking about relative... it <w>was</w><w>n't</w> purely local, but it was primarily local. The Court used exclusively, but I think the Court meant in the Palmore case those courts that were dealing with problems in the District of Columbia involving District of Columbia criminal laws. So if your... the focus is on that, of course, there are state officials that can enforce federal law. That's always been the case from the beginning of the Constitution. So it is primarily what's being involved here. This is the... the Congressional Budget Office itself looked at this particular statute and said this is a federal office. The Lebron case that looked at Amtrak...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Can I just try the question again? If we conclude <w>it</w><w>'s</w> primarily local, do you have an alternative argument or do you lose?</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w>... I <w>do</w><w>n't</w>... I think that it <w>can</w><w>'t</w> conceivably be thought of as primarily local given the scope of the authority, but I'm imagining a hypothetical situation where you might have a small unit of... of government, a subdivision of Puerto Rico that was purely a municipal problem, yes, that could be a... that could not invoke the Appointments Clause, but...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> Mr. Olson, <w>do</w><w>n't</w> lose the de facto officer argument.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Yes. The de facto... this Court decided 24 years ago unanimously, in an opinion by... written by the then Chief Justice, that when there is a decision, a challenge, a timely challenge to an Appointments Clause violation, one who makes... to use the words of that Court... one who makes a timely challenge to the constitutional validity of the appointment of an officer who adjudicates his case and, legislative or adjudicative... these are Article I issues, so there really <w>is</w><w>n't</w> any difference there... is entitled to a decision on the merits and whatever relief may be appropriate. I heard the government say just a few minutes ago that we've done all these things, we've made all those decisions, so put the Constitution aside, let us continue to do it. Let us have the fruits of the decisions that we made with unconstitutional officers who could never have even filed...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> I think that they are making a distinction between adjudicatory and legislative decisions.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think that...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> They seem to be saying that when it comes to legislative officers, that we have applied the de facto officer status. In more recent times, <w>you</w><w>'re</w> absolutely right, with adjudicatory officers, we have said no, you have to give people a new hearing. So deal with that distinction...</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Well...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR"><w>[JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR]</w> ... and deal with why <w>that</w><w>'s</w> wrong.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> ... I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think that there is a valid distinction in... in a vacuum between an adjudicatory process. Look at the Lucia case, was an Administrative Law Judge that was exercising what the Court perceived as partially adjudicative problems, but also conducting Article I activities, enforcing the laws of the United States. And this agency has that same authority. It overlaps both.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> But the Ryder case, on which you placed such reliance, it... it was qualified. It said the defendant could object to the mode of appointment of a judge who adjudicates his case. And this Board is not adjudicating any cases. The... the federal district court is.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> Justice Ginsburg, I would submit that the... this Board is both adjudicating and enforcing the laws in the same sense, and has many of the same powers that the administrative law judge had in the Lucia case, and so that that distinction simply <w>does</w><w>n't</w> hold up.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> It was acting on behalf of the debtor agency in Puerto Rico. They... <w>it</w><w>'s</w> acting as a kind of a petitioner. It's not an adjudicator.</u>
<u loc="MR. OLSON T."><w>[MR. OLSON T.]</w> That's one of the... one small part of what PROMESA does. That has to do with <w>165,000</w> claims. It <w>does</w><w>n't</w> have to do with overturning the... the budget, changing the financial structure of Puerto Rico, suing in... in federal courts citizens of the United States outside of Puerto Rico in connection with financial claims, claw-back claims, they call them in the financial insolvency concept. If one were to look at all of the authorities, and I was... have to finish with the point that these officials are appointed by the President of the United States, an officer of the United States, removable by the President, and that what this Court said in the Bowsher case, that means that <w>that</w><w>'s</w> the official that they must fear and therefore obey, and is supervised in Section 2148, 2121, 2127, 19 2143. These are reports, recommendations, responsibilities that the oversight board must constantly give to officials of the United States and, therefore, supervision.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Thank you, counsel. Ms. Mendez-Colberg.</u>
</p>
<p id="ORAL ARGUMENT OF JESSICA E. MENDEZ-COLBERG ON BEHALF OF UTIER">
<u loc="MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG"><w>[MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG]</w> Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court: I would like to address the issue of the Insular Cases, the remedy, and also some of the questions... the questions of the Court. If we stand in front of this building, we will see the words "equal justice under law." The Insular Cases stretch that tenet into its breaking point. The court-made doctrine of territorial incorporation means that when my client, and even myself, return to Puerto Rico, we will have a lesser set of constitutional rights than what we have standing here today. On the other hand, the First Circuit decided that my clients suffered a constitutional injury, but still they were left without a remedy. Equal justice under law should mean the same thing here in D.C. than in Puerto Rico. It should reject ideas grounded on class... it should reject classifications grounded in ideas of alien races and savage people. It should also mean that when there is a constitutional injury, justice requires a remedy. Now, in this case, the... the First Circuit stated correctly that the Insular Cases hover like a dark cloud over this case. And it is true, because the opposing parties have been relying on the Insular Cases since the beginning of the proceedings to establish that even the structural provisions of the Constitution <w>do</w><w>n't</w> apply to the people of Puerto Rico because...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> I think here...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> I understood...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> ... everybody was... everybody was agreeing that the Article I... Article II does apply. And so whether you have the Insular Cases or not, and I agree <w>they</w><w>'re</w> a dark cloud, but the... the... the... it <w>does</w><w>n't</w> matter here because the provision of the Constitution does apply. And I thought what was more, which I've been trying to work out, and you may have looked into this, is what about the Federal Relations Act? You see, if... if, in fact, you... you would be the one who might have thought of this. But it does give these powers to deal, and the deal is the legislature of Puerto Rico and the governor do this. But there was a reservation. There was a reservation for the indebtedness. And that reservation was eventually repealed in '61. And when it was repealed, the legislature passed a... they passed a constitutional amendment in Puerto Rico promising that they would pay creditors and that they had some priorities and so forth. Now is that relevant? I've begun to think that the partnership, the Estado Libre Asociado, is... is... is more served by considering this a local law than considering it a federal law, because if a... if <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a federal law, it really is hard to reconcile with the FRA, but not so hard if <w>it</w><w>'s</w> a local law. Have you thought about it at all? If you <w>have</w><w>n't</w> thought of it, forget it.</u>
<u loc="[LAUGHTER]">[LAUGHTER]</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE BREYER"><w>[JUSTICE BREYER]</w> I'm just... I'm... I'm... I'm... I'm... I have a tough problem in my mind on that. And if you have thought of it, I'd appreciate what you think.</u>
<u loc="MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG"><w>[MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG]</w> Well, Your Honor, we would forget about it, but the problem here is that, actually, what Congress did was to, yes, say that this... that this are territorial officers, but it actually gave this... the oversight board powers that are not necessarily what power... what the powers of a... of a territorial officer are considered to be. They... the oversight board has the authority, and as Mr. Olson mentioned, has the authority to file this bankruptcy proceedings, which is a federal power, on behalf of the government. But, also, we see that they have the authority to impair contracts... which is something that <w>was</w><w>n't</w> mentioned before... impair contracts even outside of the... of the scope of the bankruptcy proceedings, which is in the Title II... II of PROMESA. If the Board understands that a contract may... that the government... by the government of Puerto Rico with other parties is inconsistent with the provisions of PROMESA, it can... it can... it can even prevent the execution of those... of those contracts. So that is a very significant power among the other powers that the oversight board has that not even the... the government, the local government of Puerto Rico, has. Now I do want to... to... to... to stress on the issue of the Insular Cases, because it is important for the people of Puerto Rico and for my clients. This is a... a doctrine that has been, well, 118 years, that it... that has been... that has been good law. And, here, I want to stress that it is a... it is a matter of overruling the Insular Cases, and the Doctrine of Territorial Incorporation, it is a matter of constitutional and law, but also a matter of who the United States is as a nation.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Well, but Justice... as Justice Breyer has pointed out, none of the other parties rely on the Insular Cases in any way. So it would be very unusual for us to address them in this case, <w>would</w><w>n't</w> it?</u>
<u loc="MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG"><w>[MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG]</w> Well, Your Honor, they relied on the Insular Cases since the beginning of the proceedings. Actually, the... the unsecured creditor... creditors are still relying on the Insular Cases at this point. Now it is very convenient for the other parties to not... to rely on the Insular Cases in the lower courts, where there is no authority to overrule those cases, but that... but then when we come before this Court to say that they are not relevant. Still, as I... as I was about to mention, the Insular Cases comply with all of the factors that this... that this Court established in... in Janus, especially the quality of the reasoning, because it is based purely on racial considerations, to say that some provisions of the Constitution <w>do</w><w>n't</w> apply to the unincorporated territories because they are of a different race. That's the... <w>that</w><w>'s</w> the root of that doctrine. Now, here...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> I thought the argument was that the Appointments Clause does apply to Puerto Rico, and the question is simply whether <w>it</w><w>'s</w> implicated on these particular facts with respect to this particular agency?</u>
<u loc="MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG"><w>[MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG]</w> Yes, Your Honor.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> So I... I guess, again, I just <w>do</w><w>n't</w> see the pertinence of the... of the Insular Cases.</u>
<u loc="MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG"><w>[MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG]</w> Well, as I... as I mentioned, and also... also, last term, this Court went ahead and overruled the Korematsu case. In the Trump versus Hawaii case, the Court said that the case had nothing to do with the Trump versus Hawaii case. But still it was a morally repugnant doctrine that was purely on the basis... considering the basis of race, and, therefore, it was overruled. The same here with the Insular Cases. And I cannot stress enough that the parties have relied on the Insular Cases in this... in this case. That is why <w>it</w><w>'s</w> the... the perfect opportunity to address them. Now...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> Can I ask you a question about the duties of the Board? If the duties of the Board and responsibilities are considered primarily local... I'll ask the same question I asked Mr. Olson... do you lose or do you have an alternative argument?</u>
<u loc="MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG"><w>[MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG]</w> Your Honor, I... I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think that we... that the... the... the authority of the Board can... can... can be considered purely local.</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAVANAUGH"><w>[JUSTICE KAVANAUGH]</w> I understand that. But, if... if we conclude otherwise, is there an alternative argument, or is that the end of the case?</u>
<u loc="MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG"><w>[MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG]</w> Well, I... I believe that there is the example of... of D.C. judges who were still considered to be officers of the United States in the... in the Weiss case. So there is... there are a couple other examples that this Court could... could take. Now I would like...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE GINSBURG"><w>[JUSTICE GINSBURG]</w> Which D.C.... which D.C. judges are you talking about? I thought the judges of the D.C. Superior Court and of the D.C. Court of Appeals are not... are not federal judges.</u>
<u loc="MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG"><w>[MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG]</w> Well, Your Honor, I'm... I'm talking about the... the Weiss case. And... but still the... the... the... the issue of... of the purely local affairs of... of... of the oversight board cannot stand if we look at the... the authority that it was vested on these officers through PROMESA. Now I would like to address the remedy because I think that it is very important for... for us to address that. My friends on the other side have mentioned the consequences of... of this... of this case in terms of millions of dollars. But they have forgot about the impact to the people. What the... what the opposing parties are asking this Court to validate through the de facto officer doctrine is a certification of the fiscal plan, which is not subject to judicial review, that imposes austerity measures on the people that has impaired contractual obligations, including the collective bargaining agreement of my clients, stripping them of... of workers' rights like salaries, overpaying... overpayment, and... and medical... medical benefits. But also we are talking about agreements with bondholders, with Dapapa, which is the UTIER's employers, that provides for the payment of the bond... of the bonds ahead of the salaries, ahead of the... of the contributions to the retirement system, and that it threatens the mere... the mere feasibility of such an instrumentality. We are talking about <w>7,000</w> labor claims that were stayed because of the Title III proceedings, proceedings that were filed at the sole discretion of the oversight board, and that were... that were left without a remedy. So... and... and... and like I mentioned, the... the budgets that establish the policy for the government of Puerto Rico, that it is done at the sole discretion of the oversight board because we cannot say that the government of Puerto Rico has participation. The... if... if the Board...</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> You can finish your sentence.</u>
<u loc="MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG"><w>[MS. MENDEZ-COLBERG]</w> Yes, thank you. If the Board understands that the... that the fiscal plan, which is the blueprint for all of these proceedings, or the budgets, are inconsistent with PROMESA, the Board can substitute for its own at its sole discretion. Thank you.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Thank you, counsel. 2 Three minutes, Mr. Verrilli.</u>
</p>
<p id="REBUTTAL ARGUMENT OF DONALD B. VERRILLI, JR., ON BEHALF OF THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO">
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> Thank you, Mr. Chief Justice. I want to make one overarching point on the merits and one point on remedy. On the merits, I want to go at the sum of each question. I think, if you think the sum of each, I <w>do</w><w>n't</w> think you can resolve it based on effects. I mean, if you think about it, the effects we're talking about here are not the Board's actions. It was the issuance of the bonds and then the default by the government of Puerto Rico, the elected representatives of Puerto Rico. So, if its effect is then <w>they</w><w>'re</w> officers of the United States, that <w>can</w><w>'t</w> be right and <w>it</w><w>'s</w> just not an administrable test. It <w>can</w><w>'t</w> be whether they are enforcing federal law. Mr. Olson raised the Limtiaco case. That case proves our point. The statute he's talking about in that case requiring fiscal solvency was enforced by the governor and the legislature, who are not appointed in conformity with the Appointments Clause but elected. So, if he's right about that, Guam's government is unconstitutional. And it also would mean that the D.C. government, from the... from the beginning until home rule, was unconstitutional because they were enforcing federal statutes. So that <w>can</w><w>'t</w> be right. It <w>can</w><w>'t</w> be based on the source of authority. They're really not arguing that anymore. And even if you wanted to accept the intermediate authority point, you... and try to carve out Puerto Rico that way, you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> save Guam, you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> save the Virgin Islands, you <w>can</w><w>'t</w> save home rule in D.C. You basically blow everything else up if you adopt that standard, which is why they <w>do</w><w>n't</w> really advocate for it. So really it needs to be our test. Our test is one <w>that</w><w>'s</w> faithful to the text, <w>it</w><w>'s</w> faithful to the history, it rests on principle, it avoids threats to home rule, and <w>it</w><w>'s</w> administrable. Maybe there are going to be hard questions on the margin and we discussed those today. This is not a hard case. This is exclusively territorial authority. Now, on remedy, I think Mr. Olson's answer to Justice Alito's question tells you all you need to know about what's going to happen next. They brought this suit because they want a different Board. They're perfectly entitled to do that. They've every right to do that. But <w>that</w><w>'s</w> what they want because they <w>do</w><w>n't</w> like the way this Board is working out the debt problems. And so what you can be sure of, if we're in the remedies phase and I hope that we are not, but what you can be sure of if we are is that they are going to fight ratification by the Board tooth and nail for years and years and do everything possible to keep this thing in a situation in which they... they... they have the hope to get a different Board that will accomplish their objectives. So <w>that</w><w>'s</w> what will happen if we go down that path. And I would strongly urge the Court not to do that. If you do reach the remedial issue, then I think the de facto officer doctrine, a perfectly reasonable judgment, but more fundamentally, there is no reason to reach the remedial issue...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> Mr.... Mr. Verrilli...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... to support as...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> ... let...</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> ... constitutional...</u>
<u loc="JUSTICE KAGAN"><w>[JUSTICE KAGAN]</w> ... <w>let</w><w>'s</w> say it is your test. But <w>let</w><w>'s</w> also say that the crux of this statute... there are some other things in it, but the crux of the statute is that it sets up a scheme for restructuring the debt of a bankrupt territory and... on... with the backdrop that that could not have been done under pre-PROMESA federal law by local officials themselves. Why is it primarily local?</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> May I answer, Mr. Chief Justice?</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Yes.</u>
<u loc="MR. VERRILLI"><w>[MR. VERRILLI]</w> Two things. First, you <w>would</w><w>n't</w> think that the mayor of Detroit was converted into a federal official because he took Detroit into bankruptcy under Chapter 9. He's still exercising his local power. Same with the Board. And, second, again, the question I think has to be whose interests is... is the Board advancing in that process? It's the court, the Article III court, that engages in the broad adjustment of interests here to achieve a... a nationwide result. The Board's job, as the statute expressly says, is to act on behalf of the people of Puerto Rico and the government of Puerto Rico as its representative. It's an advocate for Puerto Rico, and <w>that</w><w>'s</w> why <w>it</w><w>'s</w> territorial authority. Thank you.</u>
<u loc="CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS"><w>[CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS]</w> Thank you, counsel. The case is submitted.</u>
</p>
</text>