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APPENDIX A
-- 57 Fed. Reg. 57093 1992

APPENDIX B
Presidential Documents
Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 251 / Friday, December 29, 2000 /
Presidential Documents 82889
Executive Order 13183 of December 23, 2000
Establishment of the President’s Task Force on Puerto Rico’s Status
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the
laws of the United States of America, including Public Law 106-346, it
is hereby ordered as follows:
Section 1. Policy. It is the policy of the executive branch of the
Government
of the United States of America to help answer the questions that the
people of Puerto Rico have asked for years regarding the options for the
islands’ future status and the process for realizing an option. Further,
it
is our policy to consider and develop positions on proposals, without
preference
among the options, for the Commonwealth’s future status; to discuss
such proposals with representatives of the people of Puerto Rico and the
Congress; to work with leaders of the Commonwealth and the Congress
to clarify the options to enable Puerto Ricans to determine their
preference
among options for the islands’ future status that are not incompatible
with
the Constitution and basic laws and policies of the United States; and
to implement such an option if chosen by a majority, including helping
Puerto Ricans obtain a governing arrangement under which they would
vote for national government officials, if they choose such a status.
Sec. 2. The President’s Task Force on Puerto Rico’s Status. There is
established
a task force to be known as ‘‘The President’s Task Force on Puerto
Rico’s Status’’ (Task Force). It shall be composed of designees of each
member of the President’s Cabinet and the Co-Chairs of the President’s
Interagency Group on Puerto Rico (Interagency Group). The Task Force
shall be co-chaired by the Attorney General’s designee and a Co-Chair of
the Interagency Group.
Sec. 3. Functions. The Task Force shall seek to implement the policy set
forth in section 1 of this order. It shall ensure official attention to
and
facilitate action on matters related to proposals for Puerto Rico’s status
and the process by which an option can be realized. It shall provide
advice
and recommendations on such matters to the President and the Congress.
It shall also provide advice and recommendations to assist the Executive
Office of the President in fulfilling its responsibilities under Public
Law
106-346 to transfer funding to the Elections Commission of the
Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico for public education on and a public choice among
options for Puerto Rico’s future status that are not incompatible with the
Constitution and the basic laws and policies of the United States.
Sec. 4. Report. The Task Force shall report on its actions to the
President
not later than May 1, 2001, and thereafter as needed but not less than
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82890 Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 251 / Friday, December 29, 2000 /
Presidential Documents
annually on progress made in the determination of Puerto Rico’s ultimate
status.
ÏÐ
THE WHITE HOUSE,
December 23, 2000.
[FR Doc. 00–33451
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APPENDIX C
Presidential Documents
Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 85 /Wednesday, May 2, 2001 / Presidential
Documents 22105
Executive Order 13209 of April 30, 2001
Amendment to Executive Order 13183, Establishment of the
President’s Task Force on Puerto Rico’s Status
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the
laws of the United States of America, and in order to extend by 3 months
the time in which the President’s Task Force on Puerto Rico’s Status is
to report to the President as directed in Executive Order 13183 of
December
23, 2000, it is hereby ordered that section 4 of Executive Order 13183
is amended by deleting ‘‘May 1, 2001’’ and inserting in lieu thereof
‘‘August
1, 2001’’.
W
THE WHITE HOUSE,
April 30, 2001.
[FR Doc. 01–11210
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APPENDIX
D
Presidential Documents
68233
Federal Register
Vol. 68, No. 235
Monday, December 8, 2003
Title 3—
The President
Executive Order 13319 of December 3, 2003
Amendment to Executive Order 13183, Establishment of the
President’s Task Force on Puerto Rico’s Status
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the
laws of the United States of America, it is hereby ordered that Executive
Order 13183 of December 23, 2000, as amended, is further amended as
follows:
(1) Section 2 is amended by deleting the second and third sentences,
and inserting in lieu thereof the following: ‘‘It shall be composed of
designees
of each member of the President’s Cabinet and the Deputy Assistant to
the President and Director for Intergovernmental Affairs. The Task Force
shall be co-chaired by the Attorney General’s designee and the Deputy
Assistant to the President and Director for Intergovernmental Affairs.’’
(2) By deleting section 4, and inserting in lieu thereof the following:
‘‘Sec. 4. Report. The Task Force shall report on its actions to the
President
as needed, but no less frequently than once every 2 years, on progress
made in the determination of Puerto Rico’s ultimate status.’’
W
THE WHITE HOUSE,
December 3, 2003.
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APPENDIX
E
U.S. Department of Justice
Office of Legislative Affairs
Washington, D.C. 20530
January 18, 2001
The Honorable Frank H. Murkowski
Chairman, Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
United States Senate
Washington, DC 205 10
Dear Mr. Chairman:
This is in response to your letter to President Clinton requesting that
the Administration
provide an analysis of the status options for Puerto Rico favored by the
three principle political
parties in Puerto Rico This letter provides comments on two proposals that
were voted on in
the December 1998 political status plebiscite in Puerto Rico, as well as a
third proposal outlined
by the Popular Democratic Party in its 2000 platform. The first proposal,
for Statehood, is
outlined in option number 3 in Puerto Rico's recent Petition to the
Government of ;he United
Stales. The second proposal, for Independence, is outlined in option
number 4 of that petition.
The third proposal, the "New Commonwealth" option, is described in the
Popular Democratic
Party platform documents. Given the complexity and number of proposals on
which our
comments nave been sought, we address only a limited number of issues
raised by the proposals,
most of them constitutional in nature.
1. Statehood
The Statehood option1 provides that Puerto Rico would become "a sovereign
state, with
rights, responsibilities and benefits completely equivalent to those
enjoyed by the rest of t k
The Statehood proposal contemplates a peti!ion to Congress asking it to
provide for the follo\ling:
The admission of Puerto Rico into the Union of the United States of
America as
a Iovereign state, with rights, responsibilities and benefits completely
equal to
hose enjoyed by the rest of the states. Retaining, furthermore, the
sovereignty
of Puerto Rico in those matters which are not delegaled by the
Constitution of
the United Stales lo the Federal Government. The rigllt to the
presidenlial vote
and equal representation in the Senate and proportional representation in
the
House of Representatives, mlhouc impairment to Llle representation of the
rest
of the states. Also maintaining Lhe present Constitution of Puerto Rico
and the
same Commonwealth laws, and with permanent United Slates citizenship
guaranteed by Lhe Constitution of the United Slates of America. The
provisions
of the Fedcrd law on the use of the English languzge in the agencies and
courts
of the Federal Govenrr.ect in ~e fifty sla:es of the Union shall apply
equally in
h e Slate of Puerio Rico, as at present.
stetes." The principle that a new State stands on "equal fociing wiih the
o~ginaSl tates in all
respects whatsoever" has been recognized since the first days of the
republic. Coyle v. Sn~ifh2,2 1
U.S. 559, 567 (1 91 I) (quoting 1796 declaration upon the admission of
Tennessee). Supreme
Court caselaw makes clear that, as a State, Pueno Rico would be "equal in
power, dignity, and
authority" to the other States. Id. This shift in status to statehood
would also have tax
consequences not fully articulated in the st3tehood proposal itself.
Currently, as an
unincorporated tenitory, Pueno Rico is not subject to the Tax Uniformity
Clause, which requires
that "all Duties, Imposts, and Excises" imposed by Congress "shall be
uniform throughout the
United States" US. Const. art. I, 5 8, cl. I; see Downer v. Bidwell, 182
U.S. 244 (1901). As a
result, it can be and is exempted from some federal tax laws (including
most federal income tax
laws), and it has other tax preferences not applicable to the States,
although it also does not
receive certain benefits such as the earned income tax credit. See 48
U.S.C. 5 734 (1994)
(providing that, with certain exceptions, "the internal revenue laws"
shall not apply in Puerto
Rico); 26 U.S.C. 5 32 (earned income tax credit). Were Puerto Rico to
become a State, however,
it would be covered by the Tax Uniformity Clause and many, if not all,
ofthese different tax
treatments could not constitutionally be preserved on a permanent basis.
See Politica~S tatus of
Puerto Rico: Hearings on S. 244 Before the Senate Comm. on Energy and
Natural Resources,
102d Cong. 189-90 (199 1) (testimony of Attorney General Richard
Thornburgh) ("Thornburgh
Testimony") (reaching this conclusion, but also noting that the Tax
Uniformity Clause permits the
use of narrowly tailored transition provisions under which Puerto Rico's
tax status need not be
altered immediately once the decision werz made to bring it into the Union
as a State).
In addition, the statement in the Statehood option that admitting Puerto
Rico as a State
would no; result in the "impailment of the representation of the rest of
the states" may be
inaccurate. If Puerto Rico gains representatives in Congress, it will
affect the representation of
the rest ofthe States in both the Senate and the House. In the Senate,
because granting Puerto
Rico two senators will increase the total membership of the Senate, the
representation of the other
States in the Senate will decline as a proportion ofthe whole, arguably "impair[inglW
their
representation. Similarly, if the total number of representatives in the
House of Representatives
were :o he increased btyond its iuirerlt number of435 with the addition of
representatives from
Puerto Rico, then the representation of current St~teass a proportion of
the whole would decline,
again arguably "impair[ingJ" their representation. If, on the other hand,
the total nilmber of
representatives were to remain fixed at 435, then the fact that Puerto
Rico had achieved
representation would necessarily mean that at least one State would have
fewer representatives.
The representation of that State (or States) would arguably be "impair[edIn
in two ways: its
number ofrepresentatives in the House would decline, and (like all the
other States) its
representation would decline as a proportion of the whole.'
2 In the past, Congress permanently increased the number of
reprerentativcs in the l-louse when new
States were admitted. Most recently, however, when Hawaii and Alaska were
admitted in 1959, [he number of
Members of Congress was tempolarily increased (from435 lo a total of437)
by the addition of a representalivc
from each oithese Stales; following the 1960 cennls, however, the number
oir:presenta:ives relurned lo 435, and
the Nouse was reapponioned. See Comptroller General, Puerlo Rico T
Polilicol Future:A Divisive Issue with
Many Dimensions 103 (1981).
Moreover, the clalise "maintaining the present Constitution of Puerto Rico
and the same
Commonwealth laws" contained in the Statehood option cou!d be read as
stating that the
admission of Puerto Rjco as a State would have no effect on the
constitution and laws of Puerto
Rico. Such a statement might not be entirely correct. Currently, not all
provisions of the United
States Constitution are hlly applicable to Puerto Rico. See Baizac v.
Porto Rico, 258 U.S. 298,
304-3 14 (1922) (Sixth Amendment right to jury trial not applicable in
Puerto Rico); Downes, 182
U.S. at 291 (White, J., concurring in the judgment) (explaining that only
constitutional provisions
that are "of so fundamental a nature that they cannot be transgressed"
apply to unincorporated
territories such as Puerto Rico). If Puerto Rico were to become a State,
however, it would then
be subject to the entirc Constitution. In that event, some aspects of
Puerto Rico's constitution
and laws might be preempted by the Constitution pursuant to the Supremacy
Clause, U.S. Const.
art. VI, cl. 2. Similarly, the admission of Puerto Rico as a State might
extend to Puerto Rico
some federal statutes that may be deemed not to apply to Puerto Rico at
present because:hey are
written to apply only in the several States. If so, then under the
Supremacy Clause those statutes
would also preempt aspects of Puerto Rican law with which they conflict
(although it. s-h ould be
noted that Congress currently has power to preempt laws of Puerto Rico).
2. Independence
The Independence proposal contains certain provisions regarding
citizenship. Specifically,
it states:
The residents of Puerto Ilico shall owe allegiance to, and shall have the
citizenship
and nationality of, the Republic of Puerto Rico. Having been born in
Puerto Rico
or having relatives with statutory United States citizenship by birth
shall no longer
be grounds for United States citizenship; except for those persons who
already had
the United States citizenship, who shall have the statutory right to keep
that
citizenship for the rest of their lives, by right or by choice, as
provided by the laws
of the Congress of the United States.
This proposal could be read as hiving two possible meanings: it could mean
that persons already
holding United States citizenship based on their birth in Puerto Rico or
on the birth of their
relatives have a right to ihat citizenship and that Congress must
legislate in a way that makes
provision for that right; or, it could mean that Congress has discretion
to decide whether persons
who have United States citizenship by virtue of their birth in Puerto Rico
(or by virtue of having
United States citizen relatives) will retain that citizenship once Puerto
Rico becomes
inde~endent.A~t least the second reading raises the question whether
statutory United States
citizens residing in Puerto Rico at the time of independence would have a
constitutionally
3 We do not read the proposal to affect existing scaturcy provisic;,;
regerding U.S. citizenship for persons
born outside the United Slates to a U S. ciLizen parent or parents. See 8
U.S.C. 85 1401, i409,
protected right to retain that citizenship shotlld Congress seek to
terminatc it.'
Although the proposal speaks of a "statutory right" to retain
citizen~hit~he,~re is at least
an argument that individuals possessing United States citizenship would
have a constilutional
righ; to retaii~t hat citizenship, even if they continue to reside in
Puerto Rico after independence.
See Afroyirn v. Rusk, 387 1J.S. 253, 257 (1967) (rejecting the position
that Congress has a
"general power . . to take away an American citizen's citizenship without
his assent"). On the
other hand, there is also case law dating from the early republic
supporting the proposition that
nationality follows sovereignty. See American Insurance Co. v. Canter, 26
U.S. (1 Pet.) 5 11,542
(1828) (Marshdl, C.J.) (upon the cession of a territory the relations of
its inhabitants "with their
former sovereign are dissolved, and new relations are created between
them, and the government
which has acquired their territory. The same Act which transfers their
country, transfers the
allegiance of those who remain in it."); Boyd v. Nebraska ex rel. Thqyer,
143 U.S. 135, 162
(1892) ("Manifestly the nationality of the inhabitants of territory
acquired by . . . cession becomes
that of the government under whose dominion they pass, subject to the
right of election on their
part to retain their former nationality by removal, or otherwise, as may
be provided.");'~nited
States ex rel. Schwarzkopf v. Uhl, 137 F.2d 898, 902 (2d Cir. 1943)
(describing Canter as
recognizing a "generally accepted principle of international law" that "[ilf
the inhabitants [of a
newly independent nation] remain within the territory [of the new nation]
their allegiance is
trar,sferred to the new sovereign."). See also Restatenienl(7'hird) of The
Law of Foreign
Relations 9 208 (1987) (observing that "[nlormally, the transfer of
territory from one state to
another res~ltsin a corresponding change in nationality for the
inhabitants of that territory" aild
that, in some bases of territory transfer, inhabitants can choose k w e e
n retaining their former
nationality and acquiring that of the new state). In view ofthe tension
between Afroyim and cases
such as Canter, it is unclear whether the Independence proposal's possible
provision for
congressional revocation of United States citizenship passes
constitutional muster. See Treanor
Testimony at 19 (reserving the constitutional issue of whether, upon
independence, it would be
permissible to terminate non-consensually the United States citizenship of
residents of Puerto
If such persons do have z constitutionally protected right to retain their
United States
citizenship even as they acquire Puerto Rican citizenship, then Puerto
Ricar. independence could
result in a significant number of people acquiring dual citizenship. While
this letter does not
address the policy implications of such dual citizenship, we do not think
it would run afoul of any
constitutional stricture.
It is Ihe Department's position that the source of the citizenship of
those born in Pueno Rjco is not the
Fourieenlh Amendment, but federal statute, specifically 8 U.S.C. 5 1402
(1994). See Sbtement of William M.
Treanor, Deputy Assistant Anorney General, Office of Legal Connsel, Before
he House Comm. on Resources,
106th Cong. 18 (Oct. 4,2000) ("Treanor Tesrimony"); Fuerto Rico: Hearlngs
on KR. 856 and S 472 Before the
Senate Comm. on Energv and Natural Resources, 105th Cong. 148 (1998) (staiement
of Randolph D. Moss,
Acting Assisunt Attorney General, OfIice of Legal Counsel, U.S.
Deparlrnent of Justice). Tha: point is separate,
hcweier, f r ~ mthe question wheL5er iAe C~nsrir:tion protects that
citizenship or~ceil is statutorily conferred, and,
if so, to the same extent as it protects "Fourteenth Amendment
citizenship."
The Indepecdence proposal also provides that "Puerto Rico and the United
States shall
develop cooperation treaties, including economic and programmatic
assistance for a reasonable
period, free commerce and transit, and mili?ary force status." Viewing
this language as part of a
ballot option for the people of Puerto Rico, we understand it as a
possible proposal to be made by
Puerto Rico to Congress. We do not, therefore, read the use of the word
"shall" to impose on the
United States any obligation to enter into certain treaties with an
independent Puerto Rim.
Moreover, if the proposal did purport to impose such an obligation, we
would construeits
language as precatory, not binding, in order to prescrve the sovereign
prerogatives of the United
States. We discuss this point in greater detail infra at 7-9.
3. New Commonwealth7
The New Commonwealth proposal describes Puerto Rico as "an
autonornous~~litical
body, that is neither colonial nor territorial, in permanent union with
the United States under a
covenant that cannot be invalidated or altered unilaterally." Our analysis
of this proposal is based
on two general premises, which we will outline before proceeding to
address specific aspects of
the proposal.
The first premise is that the Constitution recognizes only a limited
number of options for
governance of an area. Puerto Rico could constitutionally become a
sovereign Nation, or it could
remain subject to United States sovereignty. It can do thelatter in only
two ways: it can be
admitted into the Union as a State, U.S. Const. art. TV, 5 3, cl. 1, or it
can remain subject to the
authority of Congress under the Territo~yC lause, U.S. Const. art. IV, 5
3, cl. 2. See National
Bank v. Counfyof Yankton, 101 U.S. 129, 133 (1879) ("All territory within
the jurisdiction of the
United States not included in any State must necessarily be governed by or
under the authority of
Congress."). The terms of the Constitution do not contemplate an option
other than sovereign
independence, statehood, or ter~itorials tatus.
Althoggh Puerto Rico currently possesses significant autonomy and powers
of selfgovernment
in local matters pursuant to the Puerto Rican Federal Relations Act, Pub.
L. No. 8 1-
600, 64 Stat. 3 19 (1950) (codified at 48 U.S.C. $5 73lb-731e (1994))
("Public Law 600n), that
statute did not take Puerto Rico outside the ambit of the Territory
Clause. In Harris 1. Rosario,
6 It should be noted that in 1991 the Department of Justice did not Lreat
this question as unsettled. See
Thornburgh Testimony at 206-07 (suggesting that should Puerto Rico become
independent, its residents "should be
required to elect between retaining United States citizeoship (and
ultimately taking up residence within the United
States . . . ),"and citizenship in the new republic of Pueno Rico.).
Our commpnts on the New Commonnvallh proposal arc tascd in part on, and
are intended to be
consistent wlth, tile October 4, 2000 testimony of Deputy Assisrant
Attorney General William Ad. Treanor before
the House Committee on Resources. See Treanor Testimony, sllpro at n 5
446 iJ.S. 65 1 (1980) (per curiam), for example, the Court sustained a
!eve1 of assistance for
Puerto Rico under the Aid to Families with Dependent Chi!dren program
lower thm that which
States received, and explained that "Congress, which is empowered under
the Territory Clause of
the Constitution to 'make all needfi~lR ules and Regulations respecting
the Territory. . . belonging
to the United States,' may treat Puerto Rico differently from States so
long as there is a rational
basis for its actions." Id at 651-52 (internal citation omitted). See also
Califano v. Torres, 435
U.S. 1 , 3 n.4 (1978) (per curiam) ("Congress has the power to treat
Puerto Rico differently, and
. . every federal program does not have to be extended to it."). The
Department of Justice has
long taken the same view,' and the weight of appellate case law provides
further support for it.
See, e.g., Mercado v. Commomvealth ojPuerfoRico, 214 F.3d 34, 44 (1 st
Cir. 2000) (''Mnder
the Territorial Clause, Congress may legislate for Puerto Rico differently
than for the states.");
Davila-Perez v. LockheedMartin Corp., 202 F.3d 464,468 (1st Cir. 2000)
(affirming that Fuerto
Rico "is still subject to the plenary powers ofcongress under the
territorial clause."); Uiiited
States v. Sanchez, 992 F.2d 1143, 1152-53 (I l t h Ci. 1993) ("'Congress
continues to be the
ultimate source of power [over Puerto Rico] pursuant to the Territory
Clause of the
Constitution."') (quoting United States v. Andino, 83 1 F.2d 1164, 1 176
(1 st Cir. 1987)
(Tonuella, J., concurring), cert. denied, 486 U.S. 1034 (1988)), cert.
denied, 510 U.S. 11 10
(1994).9
8 This positinn has been expressed in briefs filed in federal court by
past Solicitors Geiieral. See, e g.,
Jurisdictional Statement of the United Swies at 10-1 I, Harris v. Rosario,
446 U.S. 65 1 (1980) (No. 79-1294). It
has also ben taken in memoranda and opinions issued by the Ofice of Legal
Counsel. See, e.g., Memoranda for
Liida Cinciona, Director, Office of Attorney Personnel Management, from
Richard L. Shzrin, Deputy Assislant
Anomey General, Office of Legal Counsel, Re. Interpretation of the Term "Terrilov"
in the Deparlment of .
JusticeAppropriolronsAct (July 31. 1997); Memorandum for Lawrencc E.
Walsh, Deputy Attorney General, from
Paul A. Sweeney, Acting Assistant Atiorne! General, Office of'legal
Counsel, Re: HR. 5926, 86Ih Cong.. I" Sess.,
a bill "To provide foramendn~cnts to the conipnct bemeen the people
oft'uerlo Rico and the L'nited States" (June
5, 1959). In a 1963 opinion, the Ofice of Legal Counsel treated the legal
conspquences of Public Law 600 as an
open questi~nar id dld cot resolve :I. See .Me>norcndu:r Re: Pgwer 3f the
Ui;iled Stcles to Conclu3e ~!,irthhe
Comn~onweolfhoJ Puerto Rico a Compact Which Couid Be Modz$edOnl~ by Mutual
Consent (July 23,1963).
We acknowledge, howevcr, that !he First Circuit has not always spoken with
a single voice on this
question. See, e.g., United S!ates v Andino, 83 1 F.2d 1164 (1st Cir.
1987) (prevailing opinion), cert. denied, 486
U.S. 1034 (1988)); UnztedSIates v. Quinones, 758 F.2d 40,42 (1st Cir.
1985) ("[ljn 1952, Puertn Rico ceased
being a temtory of the United States subject to the p!enary powers of
Congress as provided in the Federal
Constitution."); Cordova & Sir~ronpietriI ns Agency I~icv. . Chase
ManhatIan Bank N.A., 649 F.2d 36, 41 (1st Cir.
1981) (Breyer, J.) (stating that follorving thcpassage ofhblic Law 600,
"Puerto Kico's status changed from Lha~ of
a mere lerrilory to the unique slatus of Commoniveallh."); Figueroa v.
People ofPuerto Rico, 232 F.2d 615,620
(1st Cir. 1956) (Magrudrr, J.) (maintaining that to say that Public Law
600 was "just another Organic Act" for
Puerto Rico would be to say lhat Congress had perpetrated a "monumental
hoax" on Ule Puerto Riwn pmple).
Nohrithslanding these inconsistencies. we believe the more recent First
Circuit and other appellate decisions
correctly slate lhe law and properly recognize that the Supremc Court's
decision ill Horris is controllmg.
We also acknowledge that the Federal Circuit's opinion inRoirlero v.
United Slotes, 38 F.3d 1204 (Fed.
Cir. 1994), found that, for purposes of 5 U.S.C. 4 55 17, Puerto Rico is
n6; a "St3te." "!erritory," or "possession."
We read that opinion as addressing questions regarding the terms of that
particular statute alnne.
The second premise is that, as a matter of domestic constitutional iaw,
the United States
cannot irrevocably surrender an esseiltial attribute of its sovereignty
See Clr~itedStatevs. Winr~or
Csrp., 518 U.S. 839, 885 (1996) (The United States "may not contract away
'an essential
attribute of its sovereignty."') (quoting UnitedStates Trust Co. v. New
Jersey, 43 1 U.S. 1, 23
(1977)); Burnet v. Brooks, 288 U.S. 378, 396 (1933) ("As a nation with all
the attributes of
sovereig~tyt,h e United States is vested with all the powers ofgovcmment
necessary to maintain
an effective control of international relations."). This premise is
reflected in the rule that, in
general, one Congress cannot irrevocably bind subsequent Congresses. See
Marbuy v. Madison,
5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177 (1803) (Marshall, C.J.) (noting that
legislative acts are "alterable
when the legislature shall please to alter [them]."); see also Fletcher v.
Peck, 10 U.S. (6 Cranch)
87, 135 (1810) (Marshall, C.J.) (recognizing the general rule that "one
legislature is competent to
repeal any act which a former legislature was competent to pass; and that
one legislature cannot
abridge the powers of a succeeding legislature," while holding that vested
rights are protected
against subsequent congressional enactments). Moreover, as the Supreme
Court has recognized,
treaties and other covenants to which the United States is party stand,
for constitutional purposes,
on the samefooting as federal legislation. See Breardv. Greene, 523 U.S.
371,376 (1'998) (per
curiam) ("We have held 'that an Act of Congress . . . is on a full parity
with a treaty, and that
when a statute which is subsequent in time is inconsistent with a treaty,
the statute to the extent of
conflict renders the treaty null."') (quoting Reid v. Cover!, 354 U.S. 1,
18 (1 957) (plurAi!y
opinion)). Thus, to the extent a covenant to which the United States is
party stands on no
stronger footing than an Act of Congress, it is, for purposes of federal
constitutional law, subject
to unilateral alteration or revocation by subsequent Acts of Congress. As
the Court explained in
Whimey v. Roberrson, 124 U.S. 190, 194 (1 888):
When the stipulations [of a treaty] are not self-executing they can only
be enforced
pursuant to legislation to carry them into effect, and such legislation is
as much
subject to modification and repeal by Congress as legislation upon any
other
subject. Ifthe treaty contains stipulations which are self-executing, that
is, require
no legislation to make thcm operative, to that extent they have the force
and effect
of a legislative enactment. Congress may rnoditjr such provisions, so far
as they
bind the United States, or supersede tnem altogether.
This second premise applies to the exercise of presidential powers as well
as to the
exercise of congressional powers. Thus, a compact could not
constitutionally limit the President's
power to terminate treaties by requiring that he not exercise that power
in the context of that
compact without first obtaining the consent of the other signatories to
the compact. Cj: United
States v. Curtiss- Wright Export Corp., 299 U.S. 304, 320 (1936)
(President has "plenary and
exclusive power . . . as the sole organ of the federal government in the
field of international
relations"); Goldwuter v Carter, 617 F.2d 697, 703-09 (D.C. Cir.) (en
banc), rev'don olher
grounds, 444 U.S. 996 (1979) (finding that the President has
constitutional authority to terminate
a treaty); Goldwafer, 441 U.S. at 1007 (Brennan, J., dissenting)
(President's power to recognize
the People's Republic of China entailed power to abrogate existing defense
treaty with T-iwan!.
With these two premises established, we turn now to analyzing the New
Con~monwealth
proposal. The threshold point to consider is what type oi status the
proposal contemplates for
Puerto Rico. Parts of :he New Commor~wealthp roposal appear to contemplate
Puerto Rico's
becoming an independent Nation," while others contemplate Puerto Rico's
remaining subject to
United States sovereignty to scme degree." To the extent that the proposal
would thereby create
for Puerto Rico a hybrid status, it runs afoul of the tirst premise
discussed above. The proposal
must be assessed against the constitutionally permissible status
categories that exist, and the
precise nature ofthe constitutional issues raised by the proposal turns in
part on whether it is
understood to recognize Puerto Rico as a sovereign nation or to maintain
United States
sovereignty over Puerto Rico.
First, regardless of whether the New Commonwealth proposal contemplates
full Puerto
Rican independence or continued United States sovereignty over Puerto
Rico, the proposal's
mutual consent provisions are constitutionally unenforceable. Article X of
the proposal specifies
that the New Commonwealth will be implemented pursuant to an "agreement
between the people
of Puerto Rico and the government of the United States," and provides that
the agreement will
have the force of a "bilateral covenant . ~ . based on mutual consent,
that cannot be unilaterally
renounced or altered."I2 If the proposal is read to maintain United States
sovereignty over Puerto
Rico, then, since the "enhanced" Commonwealth it contemplates would not be
a State, it would
necessarily remain subject to ccngressional power under the Territory
Clause. It follows, then,
that Congress could later unilaterally alter t'ne terms of the covenant
between the United States
and Puerto Rico. See Disfricl of Columbia v. John R. niorn~sonC o., 346
U.S. 100, 106 (1953)
(explaining that delegaticns of power from one Congress to the government
of a territory are
generally subject to revision, alteration, or revocation by a later
Congress); see also Thornburgh
Testimony at 194 (stating that proposed legislation conferring on Puerto
Rico "sovereignty, like a
State" and making that status irrevocable absent mutual consent was
"totally inconsistent with the
10 See, eg..P reamble (referring to P~~erRruic o a a "n-.tion," and
describing the "natural right to self
government" and "free will" of the people of Pucrto Rico as "ultimate
sources of their political power"); Articlc
V@) (referring to Puerlo Rico's authority over international rnaners),
11 See, e.g., Preamble (describing Puerto Rico as being "in permanent
union with the United States");
Article I1 (prwiding for continued United States citizenship for persons
born in Puerto Rico); Arlicle VIIl
(providing for federal court jurisdiction over matters arising from
"provisions of the Constitution of the United
Staces and of the Federal !aws that apply to Pueno Rico consistent with
this Covenant and not in violation [of] the
laws of the Constitution of Puerlo Rico"); Anicle XI11 (providing that the
Resident Cornmissioner of Pueno Rico
shall be "considered a Member of the U S House of Representatives" for
certain purposes).
12 This mutual consent requirement appears in a number of places
throughout the proposal. The
Preamble states that Puerto Rico shall remain "in permanent union with the
United States under a covenant that
cannot be invalidated or altered unilateraily." Article 11(A) provides
that "lpleople born in Puerto Rico will
continue to be citizens of the United States by bier and specifies that
this mle "will not be u~laterally
revokable"). See olso ACicle XlIl(e) fprchibiting unilater~l; Iferati3r.
of the covenant try the Uni~edS tates by
pruviding hat "[alny change lo the terms of thiscovenant will have to be
approved by the people of Pueno Rico in
a special vote conducted consistent with its democratic processes and
institutions.").
If Puerto Rico is to become an independent naticn under the New
Commonwealth
proposal, then the relationship between the United States and Puerto Rico
would necessarily be
subject t o subsequent action by Congress or the President, even without
Puerto Rico's consent.
As a general matter, a treaty cannot, for purposes of domestic
constitrltional law, ir~evocablyb ind
the United States. See supra at 7-8 In particular, because the power to
make and unmake
treaties is "inherently inseparable from the conception" of national
sovereignty, Curtiss-Wright
Export Corp., 299 U.S. at 318, it can not be contracted away. Thus, if
Puerto Rim were to
become independent, the New Commonwealth proposal's mutua! consent
requirements would be
constitutionally unenforceable against the United States l4
The New Commonwealth proposal also contains certain provisions regarding
the retention
of United States citizenship. Specifically, it provides that "[pleople
born in Puerto Rim will
continue to be citizens of the United States by birth and this citizenship
will continue to be
protected by the Constitution of the United States and by this Covenant
and will not beunilaterally
revokable."
13 Under the approach set forch in Fletcher v. Peck, 10 U.S. (6 Cranch) 87
(1810), a different result
would be warranted if the covenant called for in the New Commonwealth
proposal had the effect of vesting rights
in Puerto Rim's status as a commonwealth or in an element of thal status,
such as the mutual consent requirement.
It is true that in 1963, the Office of Legal Counsel concluded that a
mutual consent provision would be
constitutional because Congress could vest rights in political status. See
Memorandum Re: Power of (he Uniled
Slates to Conclude wilh the Co~nnronweallho f Puerro Rico o Co~npac~t
vhichC ould be Modijed Only by Muruol
Consent (July 23, 1963). But the Justice Department al~eredit s position
on that question during the administration
of President Bush, see Thornburgh Testimony at 194, and the Ofice ofLegal
Counsel now adheres to that
position. See TreanorTestimony at 15-16; Memorandum for the Special
Representative for Guam from Teresa
Roseborough, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel,
Re: Mutuol Consent Provisions in /he
Guanr Commonweolrh Legislorion (July 28, 1994).
Two independent gi.ounds support olii current posiiion [ha: rigl;ls Gay
not be vested in pclitiwl status.
First, after the issuance of the Department's 1963 opinion, the Supreme
Court concluded that the Fifth
Amendment's guarantee of due process applies only to persons and not to
States. See South Carolino v.
Karzenbach, 383 U.S. 301,323-21 (1966). While Kotrenbach was col~cernedw
ith a State, its rationale suggests
that a governmental body, including a :emtory such as Puerto Rico, could
not assert rights under the Due Process
Clause. Second, [he modern Supreme Court case law cor~cerningv ested
rights 1s limited in scope. While the
Court has recog~zedth at economic rights are protected vnder the Due
Process Clause, see, e.g., Lynch v. Uniled
Stales, 292 U.S. 57 1 (1934). the case law does not suppori the view Ihat
there would be Fifth Amendment vested
rights in a political slatus for a governmental body that is not itself
provided for in the Constitution. CJ Bowen v.
Public Agencies Opposed lo Social Securiry Entrop17len1, 477 U.S. 4 1, 55
(1986) ("[Tlhe contractual right at issue
in ibis case bearslittle, if any, resemblance to rights held to constitute
'propem' within the meaning of the Fifth
Amendment. . . . ?he provision simply cannot be viewed as conferring any
sort of 'vested right' in the fact of
precedent concerning the effect of Congress' reserved power on agreements
entered into under a statute conlaining
the language of reservation.").
'' It is a sepsrate question whether, or tc what extent, the New
Com~;nwealtt! propcsal's mutual coneect
requirements would be binding under interna~ionall aw, and wc do not
addrrss thatquestion here.
This provision could be read in two different ways. First, it could be
read as concerned
ody with persons born in Puerto Rico after the New Commonwealth proposal
goes into effect.
llnderstood as limited to these individuals, the proposal would confer
United States citizenship on
them unless and until Puerto Rico and the United States mutually agree to
revoke it. Second, the
text could be read as addressing the United States citizenship of all
persons born in Puerto Rico,
whether before or after the New Commonwealth proposal goes into effect."
Under this second
reading, the proposal would preserve these individuals' citizenship
subject to revocation by the
mutual consent of Puerto Rico and the United States.
With respect to either reading, the mutual consent stipulation (i.e. that
the grant of
citizenship cannot be altered except by mutual consent) is, for the
reasons discussed above, see
supra at 8-9, constitutiond!y unenforceable. IS that stipulation is set
aside, the provision then
reads as a simple grant of citizenship to certain persons born in Puerto
Rico - either those born in
Puerto Rico after the New Commonwealth proposal goes into effect, or all
those born in Puerto
Rico before and after such time. We see no constitutional impediment with
that provision,
regardless of how broadly it is read. However, whether that provision is
itself alterabie by a
subsequent Act of Congress becomes a question of whether the United States
citizenship of the
persons covered by the provision is constitutionally protected. The answer
to that question
depends on how the provision is read (that is, whether it is read as
addressing those born in
Puerto Rico in the future, or as covering those already born in Puerto
Rico, or both),16 and may
also depend on whether the New Commonwealth proposal in general is
understood as creating an
independent nation or as maintaining United States sovereignty over Puerto
Rico.
We first address whether there would be any constitutional constraints on
Congress's
authority to provide that persons born in Puerto Rico in the future would
not acquire United
States citizenship by virtue of their birth in Puerto Rico. If Puerto k c
o is to become an
independent nation, thcn, while Congress may well have the power to
provide (as the New
Commonwealth proposal appears to contemplate) that persons born in Puerto
Rico in the future
shall acquire United States citizenship, we think Congress could also
change that rule and provide
that, in the hture, birth in Puerto Rico shall no longer be a basis for
United States citizen.chip.17
Lf, however, Pucrto RICOis to remain subjeci to United States sovereignty,
then the answer is less
clear. We are unaware of any case addressing the power of Congress to
withhold prospectively
non-Fourteenth Amendment citizenship from those born in an area subject to
united Statcs
l5 One limitation lo the scope of the clause should be noted: presumably
it is not intended lo apply to those
residing outside of Puerio Rico at the lime the proposal look effect.
Thc proposal might also be read lo refer to people born in Puerto Rico in
the future, but before any
future action by Congress to cease extending citizenship to persons born
in Puerro Pico. Idrnufying Ihe precise
constitutional considerations relevant to that reading of the pi~posawl
ould require further study.
We do not, however, address whether Congress could also exclude residenu
of Pur.to Kco lrvm otlfier
statutory squrces of Uilited Sla:es ciLiZe2S!ip, such as being 3001 abrcad
to a United Slates citizen parent or
parents.
sovcreigniy, w!ren persotis previousiy borr. in that area received
stztutory citizenship by birthright,
and we think it is unclear how a court would resolve that issue.
Next, we consider whether the Ccnstitution would permit Congress to revoke
the United
States citizenship of persons who already have such citizenship because
they were born in Puerto
Rico. If the New Commonwealth proposal is understood to maintain United
States sovereignty
over Puerto Rico, then we think Congress could not revoke the United
States citizenship of
persons who already possess that citizenship by virtue of their birth in
Puerto Rico. As the Court
explained in Afroyim, Congress lacks a "general power . . . to take away
an American citizen's
citizenship without his assent." 387 U.S. at 257 While cot squarely faced
with a case of
statutory citizenship, the Court in Afroyim did nct limit its decision to
persons whose citizenship
is based on the Fourteenth Amendment, and we think it should not be so
confined." Accordingly,
while we find no constitutional impediment in the New Commonwealth
proposal's provision that
those born in Puerto Rico will retain their citizenship in the future, we
do think that to the extent
Puerto Rico is to remain subject to IJnited States sovereignty, the
provisionis redundant (or at
best declaratory) of an underlying constitutional requirement that such
citizenship not be revoked
once it is granted. If, on the other hand, Puerto Rico were to become an
independent nation
under the New Commonwealth proposal, then, as we noted in our discussion
of the Independence
proposal's treatment of citizenship, see supra at 4-5, it is unclear
whether Congress could revoke
the US. citizenship of persons elready holding such citizenship at the
time of independence.
There is an argument that the Constitution would ensure that those who
possessed United States
citizenship at the time of Puerto Rican independence must be able to
retain that citizenship after
independence, see Ajoyim, 387 U.S. at 257, but there is also case law
supporting the proposition
that nationaiity follows the flag. See Canter, 26 U.S. at 542. As noted,
it is unclear how a court
would resolve this issue.
The New Commonwealth proposal also provides for the election of aResident
Commissioner to "represent Puerto Iiico before the Government of the
United States and who
will be considered a Member of the U.S. House of Representatives for
purposes of all legislative
matters :hat have to do with Puerto Rico" The appl~cablep rovision cf the
Constitution - Article
18 A counter-argument might be made based on the Supreme Court's decision
inRogers v. Belle;, 40 1
U.S. 815 (1971), which upheld the loss of citizenship of an individual who
was born in Ilaly and who acquired
citizenship under a federal statute because one of his parents was an
American citizen. The sutule required that
person. ilainurlg citizenship on that basis meet certain requirements of
residency in lhe United Slates prior lo their
hventy-eighth birthday. The Rogers Court upheld the statute's provision
for loss of citizenship for Ulose who failed
to meet the residency requirement. While be Rogers Court criticized
.4jroyim's language concerning non-
Fourteenth Amendment citizenship and based its own holding in part on the
fact that Bellel's citizenship was not
conferred pursuant lo the Fourteenth Amendment, see 401 U.S. at 835,
Rogers is best understood as addressing the
legitimacy of preemblished requirements for statutorily conferred
citizenship (including conditions sobsequent
sucli as the residency by age 28 requirement) when Congress grants
citizenship lo those who would not otherwise
receive it directly by operation of the Fourteenth Amendment. That issue
-of the legitimacy of pre-esublished
requirements - is nor relevant lo Congress's pxvers to divest citizenship
cnc: it h s been unconditionally
confe:errsd. Afioyim 1hus appears to be the most relevant precedent, and
it supports the view that, sa long as Puerto
Rico remains under United Stares sovereignty, cilizcnship ha1 has been
granted is constitutionally protecled.
1, Section 2, Clause 1 - provides that the Housc cf Represel~tatives"
shall be composed of
Members chosen every second Year by the People ofthe several .Stotez."
(emphasis added). On
its face, that provision wo~llds eem to mean that the Resident
Cammissioner from Puerto Kco
could not be "considered a Member" of the House because, under the New
Commonwealth
proposal, Puerto Rico would not be a "State" While Congress has the
ability to pennit
participation by representatives of the territories, see Michelv.
Anderson, 14 F.3d 623, 630-32
@.C. Cir. 1994) (holding that the House of Representatives had the
authority to permit a
territorial delegate (including the Resident Commissioner from Puerto
Rico) to vote in the
House's committees, including the Committee of the Whole), there are
constitutional limits to the
participation that would be permitted
The New Commonwealth proposal contains a number of other provisions that
may raise
particular constitutional concerns if the proposal contemplates Puerto
Rico remaining subject to
United States sovereignty. The proposal authorizes Puerto Rico to "enter
into commercial and
tax agreements, among others, with other countries," and to "enter into
international agreements
and belong to regiond and international organizations." The Constitution
vests the foieign
relations power of the United States, which ir~cludesth e power to enter
into treaties, in the federal
government. Curtiss-Wright Export Corp., 299 U.S. at 318. Specifically,
Article I, Section 10,
Clause I (the "Treaty Clause") prohibits States from entering into "any
Treaty, Alliance, or
Confederation." Under Article I, Section 10, Clause 3 (the "Compact
Clause"), however, States
are permitted, if authorized by Congress, to "enter into any Agreement or
Compact . . . with a
foreign Power." Read against the backdrop of these constitutional
provisions, the New
Commonwealth proposai raises several issues.
First, it is unclear whether either the Treaty Clause or the Compact
Clause applies to
Puerto Rico, since both clauses refer only to "State[s]." What little case
law there is on this
question is not in agreement. Conzpnre Vennble v. Thornburgh, 766 F. Supp.
1012, 1013 (D.
Kan. 1991) (stating in dicta that "the compact clause addresses agreements
between the states,
territories and the District of Columbia."), with Mora v. Torres, 113 F.
Supp. 309, 3 15 @.P.R)
(concluding that "Puerto Rico is not a State, and the compact clause, as
such, is not applicable to
it."), afl'd, 206 F.2d 377 (1st Cir. 1953). If the two clauses do apply to
Puerto Kco, then
presumably the Compact Clause's probision for congressional authorization
to enter into
"Agreernent[s] or Compact[s]" applies to Puerto Rico. Second, even if
Congress may consent to
Puerto Rico's entry into "Agreement[s] or Compact[s]," it is not clear
that theKcomniercial and
tax agreements" and "international agreementsand . . . regional and
international orgailizations"
referred to in the New Commonwealth proposal would all constitute "Agreement[s]
or
Compact[s]" to which Congress may give its consent As the Supreme Court
has notcd, the
constitutional distinction be~ween" Agreement[s] [and] Compact[s]," on the
one hand, and
"Treat[ies], Alliance[s], [and] Confederation[s]," on the other, is not
easily discerned. See US.
SfeelCorp v. Mulfisfafe Tau Comm'n, 434 U.S. 452, 461-62 (1978) (noting
that "the Framers
used the words 'treaty,' 'compact,' and 'agreement' as terms of art, for
which no explanation was
required and with which we are ~nfamiliar.").'~S cme "commercial and tax
zgreements" u.c;~;ld be
likely to qualify as "Agreernent[s] or Compact[s]" under Article I,
Section 10, Clause 3 of the
Constitution. If so, then Congress may be able to authorize Puerto Rico to
enter intc such
aereements. The status ofthe "international agreements and. . . iegional
and internationzl
orgar~zations" referred to in the New Commonwealth proposal, however, is
less clear. At least
some of the agreements embraced in this phrase might constitute "Treat[ies],
Alliance[s], or
Confederation[sIn under Article I, Section 10, Clause 1. If so, then
Puerto R~com ay not
constitutionally enter into them, with or without congressional consent.
Third, even assuming
Congress may authorize Puerto Rico to enter into at least some of the
types of international
agreements referenced in the New Commonwealth proposal, it is unclear
whether Congress could,
as apparently contemplated by the proposal, give Puerto Rico prospective
blanket authorization to
conclude such agreements. Nthough it is our view that, under the Compact
Clause, Congress
may consent in advance t 3 a State's entering into certain international
agreements," there would
still be a question whether advance consent over such a broad and
unspecified range of
agreements as is contemplated here would be an impermissible use of
Congress's pow. e.r .21
l9 On one account (which traces back to Justice Story) of the distinction
between the Treaty and Compact
Clauses, the Treaty Clause's categorical prohibition refers to agreements
of a political character such as one Nation
wouia make with another, while the conditional prohibition of the Compact
Clause on agreements wih foreign
countries refers to arrangemen& regarding the private rights of
sovereigns, such as adjusting boundaries, making
territorial acquisitions in mother State, or harmonizing the internal
regulations of bordering States. See Louisiono
v. Texas, 176 U.S. 1, 16-18 (1900) (outlining Story's theory); Virginia v.
Tennessee, 148 U.S. 503,519-20 (1 893)
(same). Agreements between Puerto Rico and foreign countries regarding
taxation and commerc? seem onlikely to
concern private sovereign rights; o fortiori, international agreements and
membenhip in international or regional
organizations would seem to be political in character. On this theory,
therefore, the Treaty Clause, if applicable to
Puerto Rico, could well bar oll folms of international agreements
mentioned in the bill.
*' See Letter for the Horn Caspar W. Weinberger, Director, Ofice of
Management & Budge4 from Ralph
E. Erickson, Deputy Auorney General (Sept. 19, 1972); Memorandum for
Nicholas den. Katzenbach, Deputy
Attorney General, from Norben A. Schiei, Assistant Attorney General,
Oftice cf Legal Counsel, Re: Drojr biil "To
axlhorize :hr conslructisn cf cer!oin irternotionol bridges, "/he
proposedlnternoliond Bridge Ad of 1963 (July
18, 1963). The case law accords with that conclusion. See Cuyler v. Adam,
449 U.S. 433.441 (1981) (advance
congressional consent to cemn interstaie compacts relating to crime
prevention and law enforcement); Seallle
Mosler Builders Ass 5r v. Pocijic Norlhwesl Power ond Conservolion
Council, 786 F.2d 1359, 1363 (9th Cir. 1986)
(even if advance congressional consent were "unusual," it would not be
unconstihltional), cerf. denied, 479 U.S.
1059 (1987); see generally Virginia v. Tennessee, 148 U.S. at 52 1 ("The
Constitution does no! stzte when the
consent of congress shall be given, whether it shall precede or may follow
the compact made. . . . In many cases
the consent will usually precede the compact or agreement.").
21 We have found little authority addressing the scope of permissible
congressional delegation under the
Compact Clause, and we note that potential "delegation" problems might
arise whether or not the Compact Clause
were thought to apply to Puerto Rico. Compare Milk Indusfry Found. v.
Glickman, 132 F.3d 1467, 1473-78 @.C.
Cir. 1998) (analyzing issue arising under Compact Clause of delegation of
authority to Executive Department).
with Philippine Islonds-PostolService, 29 Op. Att'y Gen. 380 (1912)
(analyzing without reference to Compact
Clause whether Congress could delegate to government of Plulippine Islands
authority 10 negatiate ar.d en:;r into
internatinnal pslal conventions). In eith~cra se, the breadth cf the
delegation mntemp!ated here might raise
constitutional concerns.
Pinslly, if Puerto &GO remains subject to United Statcs sovereigntjr, tne
provision that
Puerto Rico would "retain[] all the powers that have not been dc1ega:ed to
the United States"
rests on a constitutionally flawed premise. This provision appears to
attempt to create for Puerto
Rico an analogue to the Tenth Amendment. But the legislative powers of a
non-State region
under the sovereignty of the United States are entirely vssted in
Congress. Because territories arz
created by the Nation, as a matter of constitutional law they can not
delegate power to the
Nation. As Chief Justice Marshall explained in Canter, "[iln legislating
for [the territories],
Congress exercises the combined powers of the general, and of a staie
government." 26 U.S. at
546 And while Congress may deiegate some of its powers over a territory to
the temtory itself,
such delegation is, as discussed supra at 7-8, always subject to
Congress's own plenary power to
revise, alter, or revoke that authority. See Thompson, 346 U.S. at 106,
109; United States v.
Sharpnack, 355 U.S. 286,296 (1958)."
We hope this information is helphl to you. Please do not hesitate to
contact me if I can
be of hrther assistance.
Sincerely,
Assistant Attorney General
cc: The E o n o r a b l e Jeff Bingaman
R a n k i n g Minority Member
22 Other provisions of Ihe Commonwealth proposal may present
constitutional concerns. Aliicle VIII
makes jurisdiction of federal courts subjcl 10 Lhe provisions of the
Conslilr~lioo of Puerto Rico, and article Xlll
concerns ;he creation ofa mechanism bj. which application of Uniled Slates
laws to Puerlo Rico will he subject lo
the laws of Puerlo Ria. APPENDIX
F
MUTUAL CONSENT PROVISIONS IN THE GUAM COMMONWEALTH
LEGISLATION
Sections of the Guam Commonwealth Bill requiring the mutual consent of the
Government of the
United States and the Government of Guam raise serious constitutional
questions and are legally
unenforceable.
July 28, 1994
MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE
FOR GUAM COMMONWEALTH
The Guam Commonwealth Bill, H.R. 1521, 103d Cong., 1st Sess. (1993)
contains two
sections requiring the mutual consent of the Government of the United
States and the
Government of Guam. Section 103 provides that the Commonwealth Act could
be amended
only with mutual consent of the two governments. Section 202 provides that
no Federal laws,
rules, and regulations passed after the enactment of the Commonwealth Act
would apply to
Guam without the mutual consent of the two governments. The
Representatives of Guam insist
that these two sections are crucial for the autonomy and economy of Guam.
The former views of
this Office on the validity or efficacy of mutual consent requirements
included in legislation
governing the relationship between the federal government and non-state
areas, i.e. areas under
the sovereignty of the United States that are not States,1 have not been
consistent.2 We therefore
have carefully reexamined this issue. Our conclusion is that these clauses
raise serious
constitutional issues and are legally unenforceable.3
1 Territories that have developed from the stage of a classical territory
to that of a Commonwealth with a
constitution of their own adoption and an elective governor, resent being
called Territories and claim that that legal
term and its implications are not applicable to them. We therefore shall
refer to all Territories and Commonwealths
as non-state areas under the sovereignty of the United States or briefly
as non-state areas.
2 To our knowledge the first consideration of the validity of mutual
consent clauses occurred in 1959 in
connection with proposals to amend the Puerto Rico Federal Relations Act.
At that time the Department took the
position that the answer to this question was doubtful but that such
clauses should not be opposed on the ground that
they go beyond the constitutional power of Congress. In 1963 the
Department of Justice opined that such clauses
were legally effective because Congress could create vested rights in the
status of a territory that could not be
revoked unilaterally. The Department adhered to this position in 1973 in
connection with then pending
Micronesians status negotiations in a memorandum approved by then
Assistant Attorney General Rehnquist. On the
basis of this advice, a mutual consent clause was inserted in Section 105
of the Covenant with the Northern Mariana
Islands. The Department continued to support the validity of mutual
consent clauses in connection with the First
1989 Task Force Report on the Guam Commonwealth Bill. The Department
revisited this issue in the early 1990’s
in connection with the Puerto Rico Status Referendum Bill in light of
Bowen v. Agencies Opposed to Soc. Sec.
Entrapment, 477 U.S. 41, 55 (1986), and concluded that there could not be
an enforceable vested right in a political
status; hence that mutual consent clauses were ineffective because they
would not bind a subsequent Congress. We
took the same position in the Second Guam Task Force Report issued during
the last days of the Bush
Administration in January 1993.
3 Mutual consent clauses are not a novel phenomenon; indeed they antedate
the Constitution. Section 14 of
the Northwest Ordinance contained six “articles of compact, between the
original States and the people and States in
the said territory, and [shall] forever remain unalterable, unless by
common consent.” These articles were
incorporated either expressly or by reference into many early territorial
organic acts. Clinton v. Englebrecht, 80 U.S.
(13 Wall.) 434, 442 (1872). The copious litigation under these
“unalterable articles” focussed largely on the
question whether the territories’ obligations under them were superseded
by the Constitution, or when the territory
Opinions of the Office of Legal Counsel
In our view, it is important that the text of the Guam Commonwealth Act
not create any
illusory expectations that might mislead the electorate of Guam about the
consequences of the
legislation. We must therefore oppose the inclusion in the Commonwealth
Act of any
provisions, such as mutual consent clauses, that are legally
unenforceable, unless their
unenforceability (or precatory nature) is clearly stated in the document
itself.
I.
The Power of Congress to Govern the Non-State
Areas under the Sovereignty of the United States
is Plenary within Constitutional Limitations
All territory under the sovereignty of the United States falls into two
groups: the States
and the areas that are not States. The latter, whether called territories,
possessions, or
commonwealths, are governed by and under the authority of Congress. As to
those areas,
Congress exercises the combined powers of the federal and of a state
government. These basic
considerations were set out in the leading case of National Bank v. County
of Yankton, 101 U.S.
129, 132-33 (1880). There the Court held:
It is certainly now too late to doubt the power of Congress to govern the
Territories. There have been some differences of opinion as to the
particular
clause of the Constitution from which the power is derived, but that it
exists has
always been conceded.4
* * *
All territory within the jurisdiction of the United States not included in
any State must necessarily be governed by or under the authority of
Congress.
The Territories are but political subdivisions of the outlying dominion of
the
United States. Their relation to the general government is much the same
as that
which counties bear to the respective States, and Congress may legislate
for them
as a State does for its municipal organizations. The organic law of a
Territory
takes the place of a constitution as the fundamental law of the local
government.
It is obligatory on and binds the territorial authorities; but Congress is
supreme,
and for the purposes of this department of its governmental authority has
all the
became a State, as the result of the equal footing doctrine. We have,
however, not found any cases dealing with the
question whether the Congress had the power to modify any duty imposed on
the United States by those articles.
4 Some derived that power from the authority of the United States to
acquire territory, others from the mere
fact of sovereignty, others from the Territory Clause of the Constitution
of the United States (Art. IV, Sec. 3, Cl. 2)
pursuant to which Congress has “Power to dispose of and make all needful
Rules and Regulations respecting the
Territory or other Property belonging to the United States”. See e.g.
American Insurance Co. v. Canter, 26 U.S.
(1 Pet.) 511, 542 (1828); Mormon Church v. United States, 136 U.S. 1,
42-44 (1890); Downes v. Bidwell, 182 U.S.
244, 290 (1901).
At present, the Territory Clause of the Constitution is generally
considered to be the source of the power of
Congress to govern the non-state areas. Hooven & Allison Co. v. Evatt, 324
U.S. 652, 673-674 (1945); Examining
Board v. Flores de Otero, 426 U.S. 572, 586 (1976); Harris v. Rosario, 446
U.S. 651 (1980); see also Wabol v.
Villacrusis, 958 F.2d 1450, 1459 (9th Cir. 1992), cert. denied 506 U.S.
1027 (1992). (Footnote supplied.)
-2Mutual
Consent Provisions in the Guam Commonwealth Legislation
powers of the people of the United States, except such as have been
expressly or
by implication reserved in the prohibitions of the Constitution.
Yankton was anticipated in Chief Justice Marshall’s seminal opinion in
American
Insurance Co. v. Canter, 26 U.S. (1 Pet.) 511, 542-43, 546 (1828). The
Chief Justice explained:
In the mean time [i.e. the interval between acquisition and statehood],
Florida continues to be a territory of the United States; governed by
virtue of that
clause in the Constitution, which empowers Congress “to make all needful
rules
and regulations, respecting the territory, or other property belonging to
the United
States.”
Perhaps the power of governing a territory belonging to the United States,
which has not, by becoming a state, acquired the means of self-government,
may
result necessarily from the facts, that it is not within the jurisdiction
of any
particular state, and is within the power and jurisdiction of the United
States.
* * *
In legislating for them [the Territories], Congress exercises the combined
powers
of the general, and of a state government.
Id. at 542-43, 546.
The power of Congress to govern the non-state areas is plenary like every
other
legislative power of Congress but it is nevertheless subject to the
applicable provisions of the
Constitution. As Chief Justice Marshall stated in Gibbons v. Ogden, 22
U.S. (9 Wheat.) 1, 196
(1824), with respect to the Commerce Power:
This power [the Commerce Power], like all others vested in Congress is
complete
in itself, may be exercised to its utmost extent, and acknowledges no
limitations,
other than are prescribed in the constitution. (Emphasis added.)
This limitation on the plenary legislative power of Congress is
self-evident. It
necessarily follows from the supremacy of the Constitution. See e.g.,
Hodel v. Virginia Surface
Mining and Reclamation Assoc., 452 U.S. 264, 276 (1981). That the power of
Congress under
the Territory Clause is subject to constitutional limitations has been
recognized in County of
Yankton, 101 U.S. at 133; Downes v. Bidwell, 182 U.S. 244, 290-91 (1901);
District of Columbia
v. Thompson Co., 346 U.S. 100, 109 (1953).
Finally, the power of Congress over the non-state areas persists “so long
as they remain
in a territorial condition.” Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U.S. 1, 48 (1894). See
also Hooven & Allison
Co. v. Evatt, 324 U.S. 652, 675 (1945) (recognizing that during the
intermediary period between
the establishment of the Commonwealth of the Philippine Islands and the
final withdrawal of
United States sovereignty from those islands “Congress retains plenary
power over the territorial
government”).
The plenary Congressional authority over a non-state area thus lasts as
long as the area
retains that status. It terminates when the area loses that status either
by virtue of its admission
-3Opinions
of the Office of Legal Counsel
as a State, or by the termination of the sovereignty of the United States
over the area by the grant
of independence, or by its surrender to the sovereignty of another
country.
II.
The Revocable Nature of Congressional Legislation
Relating to the Government of Non-State Areas
While Congress has the power to govern the non-state areas it need not
exercise that
power itself. Congress can delegate to the inhabitants of non-state areas
full powers of selfgovernment
and an autonomy similar to that of States and has done so since the
beginning of the
Republic. Such delegation, however, must be “consistent with the supremacy
and supervision of
National authority”. Clinton v. Englebrecht, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) 434, 441
(1872); Puerto Rico v.
Shell Co., 302 U.S. 253, 260, 261-62 (1937). The requirement that the
delegation of
governmental authority to the non-state areas be subject to federal
supremacy and federal
supervision means that such delegation is necessarily subject to the right
of Congress to revise,
alter, or revoke the authority granted. District of Columbia v. Thompson
Co., 346 U.S. 100, 106,
109 (1953).5 See also United States v. Sharpnack, 355 U.S. 286, 296
(1958), Harris v. Boreham,
233 F.2d 110, 113 (3rd Cir. 1956), Firemen’s Insurance Co. v. Washington,
483 F.2d 1323, 1327
(D.C. Cir. 1973). The power of Congress to delegate governmental powers to
non-state areas
thus is contingent on the retention by Congress of its power to revise,
alter, and revoke that
legislation.6 Congress therefore cannot subject the amendment or repeal of
such legislation to
the consent of the non-state area.
This consideration also disposes of the argument that the power of
Congress under the
Territory Clause to give up its sovereignty over a non-state area includes
the power to make a
partial disposition of that authority, hence that Congress could give up
its power to amend or
repeal statutes relating to the governance of non-state areas. But, as
shown above, the retention
of the power to amend or repeal legislation delegating governmental powers
to a non-state area
is an integral element of the delegation power. Congress therefore has no
authority to enact
legislation under the Territory Clause that would limit the unfettered
exercise of its power to
amend or repeal.
The same result flows from the consideration that all non-state areas are
subject to the
authority of Congress, which, as shown above, is plenary. This basic rule
does not permit the
5 Thompson dealt with the District of Columbia’s government which is
provided for by Art. I, Sec. 8, Cl. 17
of the Constitution, rather than with the non-state areas as to whom the
Congressional power is derived from the
Territory Clause. The Court, however, held that in this area the rules
relating to the Congressional power to govern
the District of Columbia and the non-state areas are identical. Indeed,
the Court relied on cases dealing with nonstate
areas, e.g., Hornbuckle v. Toombs, 85 U.S. (18 Wall.) 648, 655 (1874), and
Christianson v. King County, 239
U.S. 365 (1915), where it held that Congress can delegate its legislative
authority under Art. I, Sec. 8, Cl. 17 of the
Constitution to the District, subject to the power of Congress at any time
to revise, alter, or revoke that authority.
6 Congress has exercised this power with respect to the District of
Columbia. The Act of February 21,
1871, 16 Stat. 419, gave the District of Columbia virtual territorial
status, with a governor appointed by the
President, a legislative assembly that included an elected house of
delegates, and a delegate in Congress. The 1871
Act was repealed by the Act of June 20, 1874, 18 Stat. 116, which
abrogated among others the provisions for the
legislative assembly and a delegate in Congress, and established a
government by a Commission appointed by the
President.
-4Mutual
Consent Provisions in the Guam Commonwealth Legislation
creation of non-state areas that are only partially subject to
Congressional authority. The plenary
power of Congress over a non-state area persists as long as the area
remains in that condition and
terminates only when the area becomes a State or ceases to be under United
States sovereignty.
There is no intermediary status as far as the Congressional power is
concerned.
The two mutual consent clauses contained in the proposed Commonwealth Act
therefore
are subject to Congressional modification and repeal.
III.
The Rule that Legislation Delegating Governmental Powers to a
Non-State Area Must be Subject to Amendment and Repeal is but a
Manifestation of the General Rule that one Congress Cannot Bind
a Subsequent Congress, Except where it Creates Vested Rights
Enforceable under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment
The rule that Congress cannot surrender its power to amend or repeal
legislation relating
to the government of non-state areas is but a specific application of the
maxim that one Congress
cannot bind a subsequent Congress and the case law developed under it.
The rationale underlying that principle is the consideration that if one
Congress could
prevent the subsequent amendment or repeal of legislation enacted by it,
such legislation would
be frozen permanently and would acquire virtually constitutional status.
Justice Brennan
expressed this thought in his dissenting opinion in United States Trust
Co. v. New Jersey, 431
U.S. 1, 45 (1977), a case involving the Impairment of the Obligation of
Contracts Clause of the
Constitution (Art. I, Sec 10, Cl. 1):
One of the fundamental premises of our popular democracy is that each
generation of representatives can and will remain responsive to the needs
and
desires of those whom they represent. Crucial to this end is the assurance
that
new legislators will not automatically be bound by the policies and
undertakings
of earlier days . . . . The Framers fully recognized that nothing would so
jeopardize the legitimacy of a system of government that relies upon the
ebbs and
flows of politics to “clean out the rascals” than the possibility that
those same
rascals might perpetuate their policies simply by locking them into
binding
contracts.
Nonetheless, the maxim that one Congress cannot bind a future Congress,
like every legal
rule, has its limits. As early as 1810, Chief Justice Marshall explained
in Fletcher v. Peck, 10
U.S. (6 Cranch) 87, 135 (1810):
The principle asserted is that one legislature is competent to repeal any
act
which a former legislature was competent to pass; and that one legislature
cannot
abridge the powers of a succeeding legislature.
The correctness of this principle, so far as respects general legislation,
can
never be controverted. But, if an act be done under a law, a succeeding
legislature cannot undo it. The past cannot be recalled by the most
absolute
power. Conveyances have been made, those conveyances have vested legal
-5Opinions
of the Office of Legal Counsel
estates, and if those estates may be seized by the sovereign authority,
still, that
they originally vested is a fact, and cannot cease to be a fact.
When, then, a law is in its nature a contract, when absolute rights have
vested under that contract, a repeal of the law cannot devest [sic] those
rights.
The powers of one legislature to repeal or amend the acts of the preceding
one are limited
in the case of States by the Obligation of Contracts Clause (Art. I, Sec.
10, Cl. 1) of the
Constitution and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and
in the case of
Congressional legislation by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment. This principle
was recognized in the Sinking-Fund Cases, 98 U.S. 700, 718-19 (1879):
The United States cannot any more than a State interfere with private
rights, except for legitimate governmental purposes. They are not included
within
the constitutional prohibition which prevents States from passing laws
impairing
the obligation of contracts, but equally with the States they are
prohibited from
depriving persons or corporations of property without due process of law.
They
cannot legislate back to themselves, without making compensation, the
lands they
have given this corporation to aid in the construction of its railroad.
Neither can
they by legislation compel the corporation to discharge its obligations in
respect
to the subsidy bonds otherwise than according to the terms of the contract
already
made in that connection. The United States are as much bound by their
contracts
as are individuals. (emphasis supplied.)
See also Bowen v. Agencies Opposed to Soc. Sec. Entrapment, 477 U.S. 41,
54-56 (1986).
IV.
The Due Process Clause Does Not Preclude Congress from
Amending or Repealing the Two Mutual Consent Clauses
The question therefore is whether the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment
precludes a subsequent Congress from repealing legislation for the
governance of non-state areas
enacted by an earlier Congress under the Territory Clause. This question
must be answered in
the negative.
The Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment provides:
No person shall . . . be deprived of life, liberty, or property without
due process of
law. (emphasis supplied.)
This Clause is inapplicable to the repeal or amendment of the two mutual
consent clauses
here involved for two reasons. First, a non-state area is not a “person”
within the meaning of the
Fifth Amendment, and, second, such repeal or amendment would not deprive
the non-state area
of a property right within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment.
A.
A non-state area is not a person in the meaning of the Due Process Clause
of the Fifth
Amendment.
-6Mutual
Consent Provisions in the Guam Commonwealth Legislation
In South Carolina v. Katzenbach, 383 U.S. 301, 323-24 (1966), the Court
held that a
State is not a person within the meaning of the Due Process Clause of the
Fifth Amendment. See
also Alabama v. EPA, 871 F.2d 1548, 1554 (11th Cir.), cert. denied, 493
U.S. 991 (1989) (“The
State of Alabama is not included among the entities protected by the due
process clause of the
fifth amendment”); State of Oklahoma v. Federal Energy Regulatory Comm.,
494 F.Supp. 636,
661 (W.D. Okl. 1980), aff'd, 661 F.2d 832 (10th Cir. 1981), cert. denied,
sub. nom. Texas v.
Federal Energy Regulatory Comm., 457 U.S. 1105 (1982).
Similarly it has been held that creatures or instrumentalities of a State,
such as cities or
water improvement districts, are not persons within the meaning of the Due
Process Clause of
the Fifth Amendment. City of Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. v. Andrus, 532 F.
Supp. 157, 167 (D.D.C.
1980); El Paso, County Water Improvement District v. IBWC/US, 701 F. Supp.
121, 123-24
(W.D. Tex 1988).
The non-state areas, concededly, are not States or instrumentalities of
States, and we have
not found any case holding directly that they are not persons within the
meaning of the Due
Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. They are, however, governmental
bodies, and the
rationale of South Carolina v. Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 301, appears to be
that such bodies are
not protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Moreover,
it is well
established that the political subdivisions of a State are not considered
persons protected as
against the State by the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment. See,
e.g., Newark v. New
Jersey, 262 U.S. 192, 196 (1923); Williams v. Mayor of Baltimore, 289 U.S.
36, 40 (1933);
South Macomb Disposal Authority v. Township of Washington, 790 F.2d 500,
505, 507 (6th Cir.
1986), and the authorities there cited. The relationship of the non-state
areas to the Federal
Government has been analogized to that of a city or county to a State. As
stated, supra, the
Court held in National Bank v. County of Yankton, 101 U.S. 129, 133
(1880):
The territories are but political subdivisions of the outlying dominion of
the
United States. Their relation to the general government is much the same
as that
which counties bear to the respective States . . . .
More recently, the Court explained that a non-state area is entirely the
creation of
Congress and compared the relationship between the Nation and a non-state
area to that between
a State and a city. United States v. Wheeler, 435 U.S. 313, 321 (1978). It
follows that, since
States are not persons within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment and since
the political
subdivisions of States are not persons within the meaning of the
Fourteenth Amendment, the
non-state areas are not persons within the meaning of the Due Process
Clause of the Fifth
Amendment.
B.
Legislation relating to the governance of non-state areas does not create
any rights or
status protected by the Due Process Clause against repeal or amendment by
subsequent
legislation.
As explained earlier, a subsequent Congress cannot amend or repeal earlier
legislation if
such repeal or amendment would violate the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment, i.e., if
such amending or repealing legislation would deprive a person of property
without due process
of law. It has been shown in the preceding part of this memorandum, that a
non-state area is not
a person within the meaning of the Due Process Clause. Here it will be
shown that mutual
-7Opinions
of the Office of Legal Counsel
consent provisions in legislation, such as the ones envisaged in the Guam
Commonwealth Act,
would not create property rights within the meaning of that Clause.
Legislation concerning the governance of a non-state area, whether called
organic act,
federal relations act, or commonwealth act, that does not contain a mutual
consent clause is
clearly subject to amendment or repeal by subsequent legislation. A
non-state area does not
acquire a vested interest in a particular stage of self government that
subsequent legislation could
not diminish or abrogate. While such legislation has not been frequent, it
has occurred in
connection with the District of Columbia. See District of Columbia v.
Thompson Co., 346 U.S.
100, 104-05 (1953); supra n.6. Hence, in the absence of a mutual consent
clause, legislation
concerning the government of a non-state area is subject to amendment or
repeal by subsequent
legislation.
This leads to the question whether the addition of a mutual consent
clause, i.e. of a
provision that the legislation shall not be modified or repealed without
the consent of the
Government of the United States and the Government of the non-state area,
has the effect of
creating in the non-state areas a specific status amounting to a property
right within the meaning
of the Due Process Clause. It is our conclusion that this question must be
answered in the
negative because (1) sovereign governmental powers cannot be contracted
away, and (2) because
a specific political relationship does not constitute “property” within
the meaning of the Fifth
Amendment.
1. As a body politic the Government of the United States has the general
capacity to
enter into contracts. United States v. Tingey, 30 U.S. (5 Pet.) 115, 128
(1831). This power,
however, is generally limited to those types of contracts in which private
persons or corporations
can engage. By contrast sovereign “governmental powers cannot be
contracted away,” North
American Coml. Co. v. United States, 171 U.S. 110, 137 (1898). More
recently the Supreme
Court held in connection with legislation arising under the Contract
Clause (Art. I, Sec. 10, Cl.
1) of the Constitution that “the Contract Clause does not require a State
to adhere to a contract
that surrenders an essential attribute of its sovereignty.” United States
Trust Co. v. New Jersey,
431 U.S. 1, 23 (1977).7 In a similar context Mr. Justice Holmes stated:
One whose rights, such as they are, are subject to state restriction,
cannot
remove them from the power of the State by making a contract about them.
Hudson Water Co. v. McCarter, 209 U.S. 349, 357 (1908).8
Agreements or compacts to the effect that the Congress may not amend
legislation
relating to the government of a non-state area without the consent of the
latter, or that federal
legislation shall not apply to Guam unless consented to by the Government
of Guam would
unquestionably purport to surrender essential powers of the federal
government. They are
7 Cases arising under the Contract Clause holding that a State cannot
contract away a sovereign power are
also applicable to the contracts made by the federal government because
the Contract Clause imposes more rigorous
restrictions on the States than the Fifth Amendment imposes on the federal
government. Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corp. v. R.A. Gray Co., 467 U.S. 717, 733 (1984); National Railroad
Passenger Corp. v. A.T. & S.F. Ry.., 470 U.S.
451, 472-73 n.25 (1985). Hence, when state legislation does not violate
the Contract Clause, analogous federal
legislation is all the more permissible under the Due Process Clause of
the Fifth Amendment.
8 Cited with approval with respect to federal legislation in Norman v. B.
& O.R., 294 U.S. 240, 308 (1935).
-8Mutual
Consent Provisions in the Guam Commonwealth Legislation
therefore not binding on the United States and cannot confer a property
interest protected by the
Fifth Amendment.9
More generally, the Supreme Court held in Bowen v. Agencies Opposed to
Soc. Sec.
Entrapment, 477 U.S. 41 (1986), that the contractual property rights
protected by the Due
Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment are the traditional private
contractual rights, such as
those arising from bonds or insurance contracts, but not arrangements that
are part of a
regulatory program such as a State’s privilege to withdraw its
participation in the Social Security
system with respect to its employees. Specifically, the Court stated:
But the “contractual right” at issue in this case bears little, if any,
resemblance to rights held to constitute “property” within the meaning of
the Fifth
Amendment. The termination provision in the Agreement exactly tracked the
language of the statute, conferring no right on the State beyond that
contained in §
418 itself. The provision constituted neither a debt of the United States,
see Perry
v. United States, supra, nor an obligation of the United States to provide
benefits
under a contract for which the obligee paid a monetary premium, see Lynch
v.
United States, supra. The termination clause was not unique to this
Agreement;
nor was it a term over which the State had any bargaining power or for
which the
State provided independent consideration. Rather, the provision simply was
part
of a regulatory program over which Congress retained authority to amend in
the
exercise of its power to provide for the general welfare.
Id. At 55. Agreements that the Guam Commonwealth Act may not be amended
without the
consent of the Government of Guam, or that future federal statutes and
regulations shall not
apply to Guam without the consent of the Government of Guam clearly do not
constitute
conventional private contracts; they are elements of a regulatory system.
In the past the Department of Justice at times has concluded that a
non-State area may
have a vested interest in a specific status which would be immune from
unilaterial Congressional
amendment or repeal.10 We cannot continue to adhere to that position in
view of the rulings of
the Supreme Court that legislation concerning the governance of a
non-state area is necessarily
subject to Congressional amendment and repeal; that governmental bodies
are not persons within
the meaning of the Due Process Clause; that governmental powers cannot be
contracted away,
and especially the exposition in the recent Bowen case that the property
rights protected by the
9 Cases such as Lynch v. United States, 292 U.S. 571 (1934), and Perry v.
United States, 294 U.S. 330
(1935), are not contrary to this conclusion. Both cases involved
commercial agreements (Lynch: insurance; Perry:
Government bonds) In Lynch the Court held that Congress could not amend
the contract merely to save money
“unless, indeed the action falls within the federal police police power or
some other paramount power.” 292 U.S. at
579. Perry involved bonds issued by the United States under the authority
of Art. I, Sec. 8, Cl. 2 of the Constitution,
to borrow money on the credit of the United States. The Court held that
Congress did not have the power to destroy
the credit of the United States or to render it illusory by unilaterally
abrogating one of the pivotal terms of the bonds
to save money. While the Court held that the United States had broken the
agreement, it nevertheless held that
plaintiff could not recover because, as the result of regulations validly
issued by the United States, he had not
suffered any monetary damages.
10 Cf. n.2.
-9Opinions
of the Office of Legal Counsel
Due Process Clause are those arising from private law or commercial
contracts and not those
arising from governmental relations.11
Sections 103 and 202 therefore do not create vested property rights
protected by the Due
Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.12 Congress thus retains the power
to amend the Guam
Commonwealth Act unilaterally or to provide that its legislation shall
apply to Guam without the
consent of the government of the Commonwealth. The inclusion of such
provisions, therefore,
in the Commonwealth Act would be misleading. Honesty and fair dealing
forbid the inclusion of
such illusory and deceptive provisions in the Guam Commonwealth Act.13
Finally, the Department of Justice has indicated that it would honor past
commitments
with respect to the mutual consent issue, such as Section 105 of the
Covenant with the Northern
Mariana Islands, in spite of its reevaluation of this problem. The
question whether the 1989
Task Force proposal to amend Section 103 of the Guam Commonwealth Act so
as to limit the
mutual consent requirement to Sections 101, 103, 201, and 301 constitutes
such prior
commitment appears to have been rendered moot by the rejection of that
proposal by the Guam
Commission.
TERESA WYNN ROSEBOROUGH
Deputy Assistant Attorney General
Office of Legal Counsel
11 It is significant that the circumstances in which Congress can
effectively agree not to repeal or amend
legislation were discussed in the context of commercial contracts. Bowen,
477 U.S. at 52.
12 Bowen, it is true, dealt with legislation that expressly reserved the
right of Congress to amend, while the
proposed Guam Commonwealth Act would expressly preclude the right of
Congress to amend without the consent of
the Government of Guam. The underlying agreements, however, are not of a
private contractual nature, and, hence,
are not property within the meaning of the Due Process Clause. We cannot
perceive how they can be converted into
“property” by the addition of a provision that Congress foregoes the right
of amendment.
13 The conclusion that Section 202 of the Guam Commonwealth Act
(inapplicability of future federal
legislation to Guam without the consent of Guam) would not bind a future
Congress obviates the need to examine
the constitutionality of Section 202. In Currin v. Wallace, 306 U.S. 1,
15-16 (1939), and United States v. Rock
Royal Co-op. 307 U.S. 533, 577-78 (1939), the Court upheld legislation
that made the effectiveness of regulations
dependent on the approval of tobacco farmers or milk producers affected by
them. The Court held that this approval
was a legitimate condition for making the legislation applicable.
Similarly, it could be argued that the approval of
federal legislation by the Government of Guam is a legitimate condition
for making that legislation applicable to
Guam. Since, as stated above, a future Congress would not be bound by
Section 202, we need not decide the
question whether the requirement of approval by the Government of Guam for
every future federal statute and
regulation is excessive and inconsistent with the federal sovereignty over
Guam.
-10 APPENDIX
G
STATEMENT OF C. KEVIN MARSHALL
DEPUTY ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL
OFFICE OF LEGAL COUNSEL
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON RESOURCES,
UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
HEARING ON THE REPORT BY THE PRESIDENT’S TASK FORCE
ON PUERTO RICO’S STATUS
APRIL 27, 2006
Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Ranking Member Rahall, for inviting me to
discuss the
work and report of the President’s Task Force on Puerto Rico’s Status.
President Clinton
established the Task Force in December 2000, and President Bush has
continued it through
amendments of President Clinton’s Executive Order. The Task Force consists
of designees of
each member of the President’s Cabinet, and the Deputy Assistant to the
President and Director
for Intergovernmental Affairs, Ruben Barrales. I am a Deputy Assistant
Attorney General in the
Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel. As the Attorney General’s
designee on the Task
Force, I serve as its Co-Chair, along with Mr. Barrales.
The status of Puerto Rico, and the options regarding that status, have
been issues for
many years. In 1992, for example, President George H.W. Bush issued a
Memorandum that
recognized Puerto Rico’s popularly approved Commonwealth structure as
“provid[ing] for selfgovernment
in respect of internal affairs and administration,” described Puerto Rico
as “a
territory,” and directed the Executive Branch to treat Puerto Rico as much
as legally possible “as
if it were a State.” He also called for periodically ascertaining “the
will of its people regarding
their political status” through referenda.
President Clinton, in his order establishing the Task Force, made it the
policy of the
Executive Branch “to help answer the questions that the people of Puerto
Rico have asked for
years regarding the options for the islands’ future status and the process
of realizing an option.”
He charged the Task Force with seeking to implement that policy. We are
required to “consider
and develop positions on proposals, without preference among the options,
for the
Commonwealth’s future status.” Our recommendations are limited, however,
to options “that
are not incompatible with the Constitution and basic laws and policies of
the United States.”
On the same day that he issued his Executive Order, President Clinton also
issued a
Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies regarding
the Resolution of
Puerto Rico’s status. That memorandum added that “Puerto Rico’s ultimate
status has not been
determined” and noted that the three major political parties in Puerto
Rico were each “based on
different visions” for that status. Although Puerto Rico held a plebiscite
in 1998, none of the
proposed status options received a majority. Indeed, “None of the Above”
prevailed, because of
objection to the ballot definition of the commonwealth option.
Some in Puerto Rico have proposed a “New Commonwealth” status, under which
Puerto
2
Rico would become an autonomous, non-territorial, non-State entity in
permanent union with the
United States under a covenant that could not be altered without the
“mutual consent” of Puerto
Rico and the federal Government. In October 2000, a few months before
President Clinton
established the Task Force, this Committee held a hearing on a bill (H.R.
4751) incorporating a
version of the “New Commonwealth” proposal. William Treanor, who held the
same position in
the Office of Legal Counsel that I now hold, testified that this proposal
was not constitutional.
Thus, the Task Force’s duties were to determine the constitutionally
permissible options
for Puerto Rico’s status and to provide recommendations for a process for
realizing an option.
We had no duty or authority to take sides among the permissible options.
The Task Force considered all status options objectively, without
prejudice. We also
attempted to develop a process for realizing one of the options. We sought
input from all
interested parties. The members met with anyone who requested a meeting. I
myself had
several meetings with representatives of various positions, and also
received and benefited from
extensive written materials.
The Task Force issued its report last December and concluded that there
were three
general options under the Constitution for Puerto Rico’s status: (1)
continue its current status as
a largely self-governing territory of the United States; (2) admit Puerto
Rico as a State, on an
equal footing with the existing 50 States; or (3) make Puerto Rico
independent of the United
States.
As indicated in my discussion of the 1998 plebiscite and the origins of
the Task Force,
the primary question regarding options was whether the Constitution
currently allows a
“Commonwealth” status that could be altered only by “mutual consent,” such
that Puerto Rico
could block Congress from altering its status. Since 1991, the Justice
Department has, under
administrations of both parties, consistently taken the position that the
Constitution does not
allow such an arrangement. The Task Force report reiterates that position,
noting that the Justice
Department conducted a thorough review of the question in connection with
the work of the
Task Force. The report is of course not a legal brief. But it does outline
the reasoning, and it
includes as appendices two extended analyses by the Clinton Justice
Department. The second of
these, a January 2001 letter to the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural
Resources, also was
sent to this Committee on the same date. The report also cites additional
materials such as Mr.
Treanor’s testimony and the 1991 testimony of the Attorney General.
The effect of this legal conclusion is that the “New Commonwealth” option,
as we
understand it, is not consistent with the Constitution. Any promises that
the United States might
make regarding Puerto Rico’s status as a commonwealth would not be
binding. Puerto Rico
would remain subject to Congress’s authority under the Constitution “to
dispose of and make all
needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory . . . belonging to
the United States.”
Puerto Rico receives a number of benefits from this status, such as
favorable tax treatment. And
Puerto Rico may remain in its current Commonwealth, or territorial, status
indefinitely, but
always subject to Congress’s ultimate authority to alter the terms of that
status, as the
3
Constitution provides that Congress may do with any U.S. territory.
The other two options, which are explained in the report, merit only brief
mention here.
If Puerto Rico were admitted as a State, it would be fully subject to the
U.S. Constitution,
including the Tax Uniformity Clause. Puerto Rico’s favorable tax treatment
would generally no
longer be allowed. Puerto Rico also would be entitled to vote for
presidential electors, Senators,
and full voting Members of Congress. Puerto Rico’s population would
determine the size of its
congressional delegation.
As for the third option of independence, there are several possible ways
of structuring it,
so long as it is made clear that Puerto Rico is no longer under United
States sovereignty. When
the United States made the Philippines independent in 1946, the two
nations entered into a
Treaty of General Relations. Congress might also provide for a closer
relationship along the
lines of the “freely associated states” of Micronesia, the Marshall
Islands, and Palau.
With regard to process, the Task Force focused on ascertaining the will of
the people of
Puerto Rico. In particular, we sought to ascertain that will in a way
that, as the report puts it,
“provides clear guidance for future action by Congress.” The keys to
providing clear guidance
are, first, to speak unambiguously about the options the Constitution
allows and, second, to
structure the process so that popular majorities are likely. The
inconclusive results of the 1998
plebiscite, as well as an earlier one in 1993, did not strike us as
providing much guidance to
Congress.
We therefore have recommended a two-step process. The first step is simply
to
determine whether the people of Puerto Rico wish to remain as they are. We
recommend that
Congress provide for a federally sanctioned plebiscite in which the choice
will be whether to
continue territorial status. If the vote is to remain as a territory, then
the second step, one
suggested by the first President Bush’s 1992 memorandum, would be to have
periodic plebiscites
to inform Congress of any change in the will of the people. If the first
vote is to change Puerto
Rico’s status, then the second step would be for Congress to provide for
another plebiscite in
which the people would choose between statehood and independence, and then
to begin a
transition toward the selected option. Ultimate authority of course
remains with Congress.
Two points about this recommended process merit brief explanation. First,
consistent
with our presidential mandate, it does not seek to prejudice the outcome,
even though it is
structured to produce a clear outcome. At least once before, Puerto Ricans
have voted by a
majority to retain their current Commonwealth status. They may do so
again. But it is critical to
be clear about that status. Second, our recommended process does not
preclude action by Puerto
Rico itself to express its views to Congress. At the first step, we
recommend that Congress
provide for the plebiscite “to occur on a date certain.” We did not, of
course, specify that date.
But if Congress wished to ensure that some action occurred but not
preclude the people of Puerto
Rico from taking the initiative, it could allow a sufficient period for
local action before that “date
certain.” If such action occurred and produced a clear result, there might
be no need to proceed
with the federal plebiscite.
4
The Task Force knows well the importance of the status question to the
loyal citizens of
Puerto Rico and to the nation as a whole. We appreciate the Committee’s
commitment to this
matter and the opportunity to share our views.
STATEMENT OF C. KEVIN MARSHALL
DEPUTY ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL
OFFICE OF LEGAL COUNSEL
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON ENERGY AND NATURAL RESOURCES
UNITED STATES SENATE
HEARING ON THE REPORT BY THE PRESIDENT=S TASK FORCE
ON PUERTO RICO=S STATUS
NOVEMBER 15, 2006
Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Ranking Member Bingaman, for inviting me to
discuss the
work and report of the President=s Task Force on Puerto Rico=s Status.
President Clinton
established the Task Force in December 2000, and President Bush has
continued it through
amendments of President Clinton=s Executive Order. The Task Force consists
of designees of
each member of the President=s Cabinet, and the Deputy Assistant to the
President and Director
for Intergovernmental Affairs, Ruben Barrales. I am a Deputy Assistant
Attorney General in the
Justice Department=s Office of Legal Counsel. As the Attorney General=s
designee on the Task
Force, I serve as its Co-Chair, along with Mr. Barrales.
The status of Puerto Rico, and the options regarding that status, have
been issues for
many years. In 1992, for example, President George H.W. Bush issued a
Memorandum that
recognized Puerto Rico=s popularly approved Commonwealth structure as
Aprovid[ing] for selfgovernment
in respect of internal affairs and administration,@ described Puerto Rico
as Aa
territory,@ and directed the Executive Branch to treat Puerto Rico as much
as legally possible Aas
if it were a State.@ He also called for periodically ascertaining Athe
will of its people regarding
their political status@ through referenda.
President Clinton, in his order establishing the Task Force, made it the
policy of the
Executive Branch Ato help answer the questions that the people of Puerto
Rico have asked for
years regarding the options for the islands= future status and the process
of realizing an option.@
He charged the Task Force with seeking to implement that policy. We are
required to Aconsider
and develop positions on proposals, without preference among the options,
for the
Commonwealth=s future status.@ Our recommendations are limited, however,
to options Athat are
not incompatible with the Constitution and basic laws and policies of the
United States.@
On the same day that he issued his Executive Order, President Clinton also
issued a
Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies regarding
the Resolution of
Puerto Rico=s status. That memorandum added that APuerto Rico=s ultimate
status has not been
determined@ and noted that the three major political parties in Puerto
Rico were each Abased on
different visions@ for that status. Although Puerto Rico held a plebiscite
in 1998, none of the
proposed status options received a majority. Indeed, ANone of the Above@
prevailed, because of
objection to the ballot definition of the commonwealth option.
Some in Puerto Rico have proposed a ANew Commonwealth@ status, under which
Puerto
2
Rico would become an autonomous, non-territorial, non-State entity in
permanent union with the
United States under a covenant that could not be altered without the
Amutual consent@ of Puerto
Rico and the federal Government. In October 2000, a few months before
President Clinton
established the Task Force, the House Committee on Resources held a
hearing on a bill (H.R.
4751) incorporating a version of the ANew Commonwealth@ proposal. William
Treanor, who
held the same position in the Office of Legal Counsel that I now hold,
testified that this proposal
was not constitutional.
Thus, the Task Force=s duties were to determine the constitutionally
permissible options
for Puerto Rico=s status and to provide recommendations for a process for
realizing an option.
We had no duty or authority to take sides among the permissible options.
The Task Force considered all status options, including the current status
and the New
Commonwealth option, objectively and without prejudice. We also attempted
to develop a
process for Congress to ascertain which of the constitutional options the
people of Puerto Rico
prefer. We sought input from all interested parties, including Governor
Acevedo-Vilá. The
members met with anyone who requested a meeting. I myself had several
meetings with
representatives of various positions, and also received and benefited from
extensive written
materials.
The Task Force issued its report last December and concluded that there
were three
general options under the Constitution for Puerto Rico=s status: (1)
continue Puerto Rico=s
current status as a largely self-governing territory of the United States;
(2) admit Puerto Rico as
a State, on an equal footing with the existing 50 States; or (3) make
Puerto Rico independent of
the United States.
As indicated in my discussion of the 1998 plebiscite and the origins of
the Task Force,
the primary question regarding options was whether the Constitution
currently allows a
ACommonwealth@ status that could be altered only by Amutual consent,@ such
that Puerto Rico
could block Congress from altering its status. Since 1991, the Justice
Department has, under
administrations of both parties, consistently taken the position that the
Constitution does not
allow such an arrangement. The Task Force report reiterates that position,
noting that the Justice
Department conducted a thorough review of the question in connection with
the work of the
Task Force. The report is of course not a legal brief. But it does outline
the reasoning, and it
includes as appendices two extended analyses by the Clinton Justice
Department. The second of
these is a January 2001 letter to this Committee, a copy of which was sent
to the House
Committee on Resources on the same date. The report also cites additional
materials such as Mr.
Treanor=s testimony and the 1991 testimony of the Attorney General.
The effect of this legal conclusion is that the ANew Commonwealth@ option,
as we
understand it, is not consistent with the Constitution. Any promises that
the United States might
make regarding Puerto Rico=s status as a commonwealth would not be
binding. Puerto Rico
would remain subject to Congress=s authority under the Territory Clause of
the Constitution Ato
dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the
Territory . . . belonging |