The text as the prohibition’s strongest ground
If the emoluments regime is anywhere at its most formidable, it is on the page. The clauses are short, declarative, and categorical; they do not hedge, balance, or invite the weighing of interests. Whatever erosion the later papers in this series will trace—the standing barriers, the absent enforcer, the family channel, the political remedy—begins from a starting point that, read cold, looks like one of the firmest prohibitions in the constitutional text. This paper takes the clauses on their own terms, before the machinery fails them, and reconstructs the theory they encode. The aim is to state the stated rule at full strength, because only against that full statement can the operational drift the series documents be measured. A rule cannot be shown to have collapsed unless one first shows how high it stood.
Two clauses do the principal work, and they answer to two directions of danger. The Foreign Emoluments Clause faces outward, against capture by powers beyond the republic. The Domestic, or Presidential, Emoluments Clause faces inward, against capture of the President by the very institutions of his own government. Around these two sit a cluster of related provisions—the Title of Nobility prohibition, the Ineligibility and Sinecure Clauses governing members of Congress—that share a single underlying design. Reading the clauses closely, and reading them together, recovers what a piecemeal treatment loses: that the founders did not draft scattered anti-bribery rules but a connected architecture against a particular kind of corruption, the corruption of dependence.
The Foreign Emoluments Clause, word by word
The Foreign Emoluments Clause appears at Article I, Section 9, Clause 8, in the catalogue of things forbidden to the United States and its officers. It reads: “No Title of Nobility shall be granted by the United States: And no Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under them, shall, without the Consent of the Congress, accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State.” Each phrase carries load, and the prohibition’s reach depends on the sum of them.
“No Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under them” sets the class of the bound. The phrase is wide. It is not limited to elected officials, not limited to the great offices, not limited to those who handle money. An office of trust is any position carrying public confidence; an office of profit is any salaried post. The drafters chose a formulation that swept in the whole apparatus of federal office rather than naming particular dignitaries, which signals that the fear was structural rather than aimed at a few exposed figures. There is a live and consequential dispute, which the doctrinal paper will treat, over whether the President himself is among the persons holding an office under the United States for purposes of this clause—Seth Barrett Tillman has argued at length that he is not, and the question turns on usage the founders may or may not have shared—but on the broad and prevailing reading the President is squarely within the class, and the text gives no textual exemption to the highest officer.[^1]
“Shall, without the Consent of the Congress” is the clause’s valve, and it deserves more attention than it usually receives. The prohibition is not absolute; it is absolute-unless-licensed. The founders did not forbid the receipt of every foreign benefit forever. They forbade its receipt without the deliberate, public, recorded consent of the national legislature. This is a design choice of the first importance, because it locates the dispensing power in the one body least able to grant it quietly. To take a foreign present lawfully, an officer must ask Congress and Congress must agree, on the record. The mechanism converts a private temptation into a public question. Its theory is that sunlight and deliberation, not a flat ban, are the safeguard; the gift is dangerous when concealed and defensible when avowed and approved. The later papers will show how this valve, designed as a safeguard, becomes a weakness, because the body holding the dispensing power is also the body with the least incentive to police violations of the rule it administers. But as drafted, the consent requirement is a sophisticated instrument, not a loophole.
“Accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever” is the heart, and the most contested ground in the whole subject. Four objects are named—present, emolument, office, title—and they are followed by a phrase of deliberate amplitude, “of any kind whatever.” The drafters were not content to list categories; they appended a sweeping qualifier to forbid the reader from narrowing the list. A present is a gift. An office is an appointment under a foreign power. A title is an honor or rank. And an emolument—the word that anchors this entire series—is, on the founding-era evidence, profit, gain, advantage, or benefit. The decisive interpretive question is whether “emolument” carries that broad meaning or the narrow one urged by those it would restrain: profit arising specifically from office or employment, such that ordinary commercial revenue from a business an officer happens to own falls outside the prohibition entirely.
The historical record on this point is unusually well documented, because the question was litigated in recent years and provoked careful scholarship. John Mikhail’s study of English language and legal dictionaries from 1523 to 1806 found that the dictionaries the founding generation actually owned and used—Johnson, Bailey, Dyche and Pardon, Ash, Entick—defined the word in the broad manner, as profit, gain, advantage, or benefit, and that the overwhelming majority of period dictionaries defined it exclusively in those broad terms with no reference to office or employment at all.[^2] The narrow, office-and-employment-specific reading, advanced by the Department of Justice in the Trump-era litigation and resting on two dictionaries Mikhail found little evidence the founders possessed or used, appears in only a small fraction of the period sources.[^3] The textual amplifier reinforces the lexical evidence: a drafter who writes “of any kind whatever” is not building a category that excludes the most common form gain takes. The narrow reading must treat “of any kind whatever” as decorative, which is the wrong way to read a constitution that elsewhere chooses its qualifiers with care.
“From any King, Prince, or foreign State” fixes the source. The danger the clause guards against is foreign, and the enumeration—king, prince, state—covers the forms foreign sovereignty took in the eighteenth century and, by the phrase “foreign State,” the forms it would take later. The Office of Legal Counsel has read corporations owned or controlled by a foreign government as presumptively foreign states for purposes of the clause, which extends the source-category to the instrumentalities through which modern states act commercially.[^4] The point of identifying the source so carefully is that the clause does not care what the foreign giver intends. It does not ask whether the king meant to corrupt. It bars receipt from the source, full stop, because the harm the founders identified inheres in the relationship the receipt creates, not in any provable purpose behind the giving. This is the prophylactic character introduced in the first paper, and the text makes it plain: there is no element of corrupt intent to prove, no quid pro quo to establish, only a forbidden source and a forbidden receipt.
The drafting and the practice it answered
The clause did not arise from abstraction. The framers wrote against a known European practice and an existing American precedent. It was customary for departing diplomats to receive gifts from the courts to which they had been posted—jeweled snuffboxes, portraits set in diamonds, sums of money—as marks of regard. The most cited instance in American memory is the diamond-encrusted snuffbox Louis XVI presented to Benjamin Franklin at the close of his ministry to France, a gift that troubled contemporaries precisely because it raised the question the clause would later answer: could a republic’s servant accept the bounty of a foreign crown without his judgment being clouded by it?[^5] The Articles of Confederation had already contained a prohibition of this kind, and the Constitutional Convention carried the principle forward, with Charles Pinckney among those pressing for its inclusion and the delegates treating the danger of foreign influence as too obvious to require extended debate. Edmund Randolph, in the Virginia ratifying convention, explained the clause as a guard against the corruption that gifts from abroad could work, and the brevity of the founding discussion reflects not indifference but consensus: that foreign corruption was a settled danger and a written prohibition the proper answer.[^6]
That the framers chose to write the rule into the Constitution, rather than leave it to statute or to the honor of officeholders, is itself an argument about their seriousness. A constitutional prohibition is harder to repeal, harder to suspend, and meant to bind across the shifting incentives of ordinary politics. The drafters understood, as Hamilton put it in arguing that republics afford too easy an inlet to foreign corruption, that the danger was permanent and the safeguard therefore had to be entrenched.[^7] The irony the series develops—that entrenchment in text has not produced entrenchment in practice—does not diminish the design. It sharpens the question of why so deliberate a choice has yielded so little operative force.
The original meaning and the stakes of the definitional fight
It is worth dwelling on why the meaning of a single word governs so much, because the definitional fight is not lexical pedantry but the whole game. If “emolument” means any profit, gain, or advantage, then the clause reaches a President’s hotel revenues from foreign diplomats, a senator’s licensing fees from a foreign state, an official’s market-rate loans from a foreign bank—the ordinary channels through which a modern officeholder’s private wealth touches foreign sovereigns. If “emolument” means only compensation for services rendered in an official or quasi-official capacity, then nearly all of that falls outside the clause, and the prohibition shrinks to the narrow case of an officer formally employed by a foreign government. The same words, under the two readings, produce a rule that reaches most of the relevant conduct or almost none of it.
The federal district court that reached the question in 2018 held that the broad reading was correct—that an emolument is any profit, gain, or advantage, including profit from ordinary market transactions—before the litigation was overtaken by events and ended without a controlling appellate resolution.[^8] That outcome is itself a specimen of the pattern the series tracks: the one court to construe the word read it broadly, in line with the founding-era evidence, yet the absence of a final, binding holding meant the narrow reading was never authoritatively buried and remains available to be revived whenever the clause is invoked. The text, the dictionaries, and the lone holding favor breadth. The operational reality is that breadth has never been locked in, because the structure that would lock it in—sustained litigation to a binding judgment—keeps failing for reasons that have nothing to do with the merits of the word.
The Domestic Emoluments Clause and the inward danger
The second clause faces the opposite direction. Article II, Section 1, Clause 7 provides: “The President shall, at stated Times, receive for his Services, a Compensation, which shall neither be increased nor diminished during the Period for which he shall have been elected, and he shall not receive within that Period any other Emolument from the United States, or any of them.” Where the foreign clause guards against capture from outside the republic, this clause guards against capture of the President from within it—by Congress, which sets and could manipulate his pay, and by the states, which might court his favor.
The structure has two parts. The first fixes the President’s compensation and forbids its increase or diminution during his term. The reasoning, which Hamilton set out in defending the provision, is that a legislature able to raise or lower the executive’s salary at will holds a lever over him; it could starve a President into compliance or bribe him into it, and either way his independence would be compromised. The fixed salary removes the lever. The President is to be paid, paid adequately, and paid in a sum that neither his rewarders nor his punishers in Congress can adjust while he serves.[^9] The second part forbids the President from receiving “any other Emolument from the United States, or any of them”—the phrase “or any of them” reaching the several states. This closes the channels the fixed federal salary leaves open: special grants, state-conferred benefits, profitable arrangements with state governments, any gain from a domestic public source beyond the constitutional compensation itself.
The inward-facing clause is in one respect even stricter than the foreign one, because it contains no consent valve. A foreign present may be accepted with the consent of Congress; a domestic emolument to the President admits no such license. The reason is structural. The foreign clause trusts Congress to police gifts from outside because Congress’s interest and the nation’s interest there roughly align—neither wants the republic’s officers bought by foreign crowns. But where the danger is Congress itself, or the states, capturing the President, there is no neutral body to whom the dispensing power could safely be given, and so the framers gave it to no one. The President simply may not take it. That the inward clause is the more absolute of the two, precisely because the conflicted party could not be trusted with a valve, is a piece of design logic worth holding onto, because the foreign clause’s valve—handed to a body that is conflicted in a different way—is exactly where its enforcement will later founder.
The wider architecture: nobility, ineligibility, and sinecure
The two emoluments clauses do not stand alone. They are members of a connected set of provisions aimed at the same disease, and reading them in isolation obscures the design. Three companions complete the architecture.
The Title of Nobility Clause shares a sentence with the Foreign Emoluments Clause and is no accident of placement. A title from a foreign crown was understood as the soft beginning of dependence—the honor that flatters an officer into a court’s interest—and the prohibition on the United States granting titles, paired with the prohibition on officers accepting them from abroad, expresses a single conviction: that the republic would have no hereditary or honor-bound class whose loyalties ran to crowns rather than to the public. The nobility prohibition is the emoluments principle applied to the currency of honor rather than the currency of money, and the framers treated the two as facets of one danger.
The Ineligibility and Sinecure Clauses, at Article I, Section 6, Clause 2, apply the same logic to members of Congress: “No Senator or Representative shall, during the Time for which he was elected, be appointed to any civil Office under the Authority of the United States, which shall have been created, or the Emoluments whereof shall have been encreased during such time; and no Person holding any Office under the United States, shall be a Member of either House during his Continuance in Office.” The first half (the Sinecure or Emoluments Clause) forbids a legislator from being appointed to an office he helped create, or whose pay he helped raise, during his term—closing the corrupt circuit in which members vote profitable offices into being and then occupy them. The second half (the Incompatibility Clause) forbids holding executive office and a legislative seat at once, separating the powers and the purses. Here again the concern is dependence: a member who can fashion a lucrative post and step into it, or who serves two masters at once, is a member whose judgment is for sale to his own ambition.
Set side by side, the provisions form a coherent system. The republic will grant no titles and its officers will accept none. Its officers will take no foreign gain without the recorded consent of Congress. Its President will be paid a fixed, unmanipulable sum and take no other domestic gain at all. Its legislators will not feather offices for themselves nor hold incompatible posts. Each provision closes a particular channel of dependence—foreign, executive-legislative, honorific, pecuniary—and the architecture as a whole expresses a theory of corruption far broader than the criminal law of bribery. It is this theory, more than any single clause, that the series treats as the stated rule against which operational practice is measured.
The anti-dependence principle
What unifies the architecture is a principle that recent scholarship has named the anti-corruption principle, and that this series prefers to call, more precisely, the anti-dependence principle. Zephyr Teachout has argued that the framers were preoccupied—her word is obsessed—with corruption, understood not narrowly as the criminal exchange of money for an official act but broadly as the diversion of public office toward private interest, the slow turning of a servant of the public into a servant of his benefactors.[^10] On this understanding the emoluments clauses are not anti-bribery rules with the proof requirements bribery law imposes. They are prophylactic structural rules that forbid the conditions under which dependence forms, without waiting for dependence to ripen into a provable corrupt bargain. The framers feared the gift precisely because it works beneath the level of agreement: the recipient need promise nothing, and may consciously intend nothing, yet his judgment bends toward the giver all the same. To require proof of a bargain would be to miss the harm, which is the bending, not the bargain. So the clauses require no such proof. They bar the receipt.
This reading is contested. Seth Barrett Tillman has challenged both the breadth of Teachout’s anti-corruption principle and its application, arguing for narrower constructions of the clauses’ scope and of the offices they reach.[^11] The doctrinal paper that follows will give that challenge its due, because a fair statement of the stated rule must include the strongest case against the broad reading. But the burden of the present paper is to show that the broad, anti-dependence reading is the one the text, the architecture, and the founding-era evidence most naturally support. The clauses are categorical, the term is broad on the period evidence, the qualifier “of any kind whatever” resists narrowing, the architecture is systemic, and the founders’ stated fear was dependence rather than bribery. Taken together, these point toward a prohibition of considerable reach—which is what makes the gap between that reach and the regime’s actual operation the problem worth studying.
The seams already visible in the text
Even at full strength, the text shows the seams along which it will later give way, and naming them here connects this paper to the enforcement analysis without anticipating it. Three are visible in the words themselves.
The first is the consent valve. The foreign clause hands the dispensing power to Congress, on the theory that publicity and deliberation are the safeguard. But the same body that may grant consent is the body that would have to police a failure to seek it, and a legislature that declines to act on a violation has, by its silence, effectively granted the consent it never voted. The valve designed to channel foreign gifts into the open can, through congressional inaction, become the route by which they pass unexamined. The mechanism’s safety depends entirely on Congress having the will to use it, which the text assumes and cannot compel.
The second is the individual framing. Both clauses speak of the officer—the person holding the office, the President—as the one who must not receive. They were drafted for a picture in which a person and his finances are one thing, and they do not contemplate the modern apparatus of family enterprises, holding entities, and household wealth through which gain now travels. The text bars the officer from receiving; it does not, in terms, bar a benefit that lands on his company, his children, or his household. Whether the prohibition reaches those channels is a question the words do not plainly answer, and the silence is not a deliberate exemption but a gap left by a simpler conception of how a person profits. The family channel that a later paper treats at length lives in this gap.
The third is the undefined term. The Constitution uses “emolument” and does not define it, and the founding-era breadth of the word, however well attested, has never been fixed by a binding holding into law that future officers must accept. A term whose meaning is well evidenced but never authoritatively settled is a term that can be argued down whenever the stakes are high enough to make the argument worth funding. The strength of the text, in the end, is only as durable as the institutions willing to enforce the text’s meaning, and the word sits exposed precisely where those institutions are weakest.
These seams do not weaken the case that the stated rule is strong. They locate, within the strong rule, the points of future failure—and they mark the transition to the next paper, which takes up how the clauses have actually been construed in the absence of courts: through advisory opinion, executive practice, and accreted soft law rather than binding doctrine. The text, read here at its full height, is the measure. What the doctrine has made of it, and what enforcement has failed to make of it, is the distance the rest of the series travels.
Notes
[^1]: The dispute over whether the President holds an “Office of Profit or Trust under” the United States within the meaning of the Foreign Emoluments Clause is genuine and unresolved at the level of binding precedent. Tillman’s position is that the phrase, in founding-era usage, referred to appointed rather than elected officials and so did not reach the President; the prevailing scholarly and litigating view is that the President is plainly covered, both because the office is one of the highest trust and because exempting the chief executive would invert the clause’s evident purpose. The point is developed in the doctrinal paper (Paper 3).
[^2]: Mikhail’s tabulation found that of the period dictionaries surveyed, the broad definition (profit, gain, advantage, benefit) predominated overwhelmingly, with a large majority defining the term exclusively in those terms and without reference to office or employment. The dictionaries he identifies as actually used by the founding generation uniformly favor the broad reading.
[^3]: The narrow definition relied upon in the Department of Justice’s motion to dismiss in the CREW litigation rested on a small number of period sources—principally Barclay and Trusler—that Mikhail found little or no evidence the founders possessed or consulted, and that do not appear in the major founding-era databases of correspondence and debate.
[^4]: The Office of Legal Counsel concluded in 2009 that corporations owned or controlled by a foreign government are presumptively foreign states for purposes of the Foreign Emoluments Clause—an interpretation that extends the clause’s source-category to state-owned commercial instrumentalities and is one of the principal pieces of executive-branch soft law construing the clause. Its status as soft law, not binding doctrine, is taken up in Paper 3.
[^5]: The Franklin snuffbox is the canonical illustration of the danger the clause answers and was treated as such by contemporaries. Its narrative force lies in the very point the clause encodes: the gift troubled observers not because Franklin had been proven corrupt but because the receipt itself threatened to cloud his judgment.
[^6]: The brevity of the Convention’s discussion of the foreign-emoluments provision reflects consensus rather than inattention; the precursor in the Articles of Confederation and the European diplomatic practice the framers knew made the danger familiar and the remedy obvious. Randolph’s explanation at the Virginia ratifying convention frames the clause as a guard against foreign corruption.
[^7]: Hamilton’s observation that republics afford “too easy an inlet to foreign corruption” appears in Federalist No. 22 and states the permanence of the danger that justified entrenching the safeguard in the constitutional text rather than leaving it to statute.
[^8]: The 2018 federal district court decision construing “emolument” broadly—as any profit, gain, or advantage, including profit from ordinary market transactions—is the closest the question has come to authoritative construction. The litigation in which it arose was later overtaken and ended without a controlling appellate resolution of the definitional question, leaving the broad reading well supported but not finally settled.
[^9]: Hamilton’s defense of the fixed presidential compensation appears in Federalist No. 73, which argues that a legislature able to vary the executive’s support holds a means of influence over him incompatible with his independence, and that fixing the sum for the term removes that means.
[^10]: Teachout, Corruption in America (2014), and her earlier article “The Anti-Corruption Principle” (2009), argue that the framers understood corruption broadly and built structural safeguards, the emoluments clauses among them, to forestall the conditions of corruption rather than only to punish its consummated forms.
[^11]: Tillman’s challenge runs along two lines: that the offices the Foreign Emoluments Clause reaches are narrower than the broad reading assumes (excluding, on his view, the President), and that ordinary business transactions do not yield “emoluments” in the constitutional sense. The challenge is addressed on the merits in Paper 3; it is noted here so that the statement of the stated rule does not proceed as though the broad reading were uncontested.
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U.S. Const. art. I, § 6, cl. 2.
U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 8.
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