Living In Danger: A White Paper on Ace of Base’s 1994 Single and Its Interpretive Field

1. The text and its provenance

“Living in Danger” was written by Jonas Berggren and Ulf Ekberg and released in October 1994 as the final single from the group’s debut album (issued in North America as The Sign). It peaked at number 20 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and topped the Hot Dance Club Play chart in December 1994, later reaching number 18 on the UK Singles Chart. The song’s reach matters for the reception argument below: it was a hit chiefly in the Anglophone and Northern European markets, which means the “stranger” it names was decoded by audiences carrying their own cultural scripts about who strangers are and what they do.

Lyrically the track sets two moods against each other. The verses are an individualist exhortation — live for yourself, make your own decisions, pursue peace and harmony — while observing that people run in circles without logic and chase expectations no one can satisfy. The recurring hook then turns on the image of falsehood read in a stranger’s eyes, with the consequence that the listener will be “living in danger.” So the song is built on a deliberate tension: a sunny, reggae-inflected counsel of self-direction wrapped around a darker refrain of mistrust. The British columnist James Masterton caught this, calling it typical pop-driven dub-reggae that nonetheless carries a dark, almost gothic feel.

2. What kind of stranger? Three readings, including the band’s own

The song does not resolve who the stranger is, and the band’s two principal voices pull in different directions.

The chief songwriter offers the individualist reading. In interviews Jonas Berggren has said the song is about living on your own, advising listeners not to trust people too much because they will do better by themselves. On this account the stranger is simply the other person in the generalized sense — anyone whose interior you cannot verify, and on whom dependence is therefore a risk. The “lies in the eyes” image is epistemic: other minds are opaque, so self-reliance is the safe posture.

His sister gives a different reading. Jenny Berggren has described the song as being about social pressure to engage in dangerous behaviors such as smoking and drinking. Here the stranger shades into the crowd — the peer environment that lies about what is harmless and pressures the individual toward self-destruction. The danger is corruption by social influence, and the defense is, again, a fortified self.

The video supplies a third reading that quietly subverts the first two. It is set in a Stockholm metro station and follows four figures — a priest, a war veteran, a station worker, and a woman in the grip of paranoia. The frightened woman misreads the veteran as a threat and flees the train, falls, and is helped up and offered coffee by the worker, while the veteran and the priest — who, in flashback, had blessed him during the war — recognize each other and talk cheerfully. The visual narrative thus stages the feared strangers as benign and even connected to one another, and the only real casualty is the one produced by the protagonist’s own suspicion. The image-track says: the danger you see in strangers’ eyes may be the projection of your own fear.

These three readings — the unknowable other, the corrupting crowd, and the misjudged fellow-passenger — do not agree. That instability is itself the finding: “stranger” in this song is an open signifier onto which listeners, and even the writers, load different anxieties.

3. What danger is countenanced?

The danger the song gives face to is overwhelmingly social and epistemic rather than physical. In the verses there is no abductor, no violence — only deception, dependence, and the unmeetable demand. Commentators reading the lyric have stressed exactly this: the repeated line about lies in a stranger’s eyes is taken to dramatize the hazard of trusting people one does not know well, a creeping mistrust rather than a bodily threat.

There is also a second danger the song quietly accepts: the danger of standing apart. To “live for yourself” in a conformist social field is itself to court risk, and the title reframes that risk as something worth running. Several readings note this juxtaposition — the verses urge personal freedom and authenticity while the chorus warns that trust is scarce and danger waits at every turn — and treat the eyes of the stranger as a figure for the unknown one faces when stepping outside conventional expectations. The danger countenanced, then, is double: harm from others (their lies) and the exposure one chooses by going one’s own way.

4. The Swedish ear: autonomy, trust, and the welfare-state city

The strongest contextual claim one can responsibly make is that the song’s resolution of the trust problem — withdraw into the self-sufficient individual — reads as recognizably Nordic. Sweden presents an apparent paradox that scholars have named directly. Historians Henrik Berggren and Lars Trägårdh describe a model of “statist individualism,” in which the state supports the autonomy of the individual and thereby frees that individual to pursue authentic relationships. Their central thesis — what they call the Swedish theory of love — holds that genuine love, friendship, and solidarity can exist only between people who are independent and self-sufficient, with the welfare state designed to release individuals from dependence on family, church, and private charity.

Set against this framework, the lyric’s creed — do what you want, make your own decisions, you will do better on your own — is close to a pop distillation of the national ethos. It also dissolves the surface paradox of a high-trust society producing a song about distrust. Sweden’s social fabric runs on systemic trust, not on binding personal dependence; the stranger you need not lean on is precisely the person you need not lean on because the system, rather than the clan, secures you. Distrust of the individual stranger and trust in the order can coexist.

The shadow side of this ethos is also latent in the song. The 2015 documentary The Swedish Theory of Love by Erik Gandini foregrounds the dark side of statist individualism: alienation and loneliness. The track’s emotional doubleness — bright melody, gothic refrain — voices that shadow without naming it: self-sufficiency tipping toward isolation. The setting reinforces it. The chosen mise-en-scène is an underground metro and a worker in a ticket booth watching crowds pass unnoticed — the anonymous Nordic welfare-city where autonomy and solitude are the same coin. Even the musical idiom participates: the reggae and dub frame is a Swedish translation of a Jamaican form, a foreign sound domesticated for the Northern market — a stranger made familiar at the level of style.

A caution is in order. This is a cultural-context reading, not a claim of conscious intent; the writers gave us only the brief interview glosses noted above. The Swedish frame illuminates why the song’s particular answer to the stranger problem — fortify the self — would feel natural to its makers, not that they set out to illustrate a thesis.

5. The “stranger danger” the listener supplies

What an audience hears is governed less by authorial intent than by the scripts already in the room. For the Anglo-American market where the single charted, the dominant script in 1994 was the “stranger danger” panic.

As Paul M. Renfro documents, a moral panic over missing and exploited children built across the 1970s and 1980s through fingerprinting drives, the milk-carton campaign, and later AMBER Alerts and sex-offender registries — instruments that widened surveillance focused on children. Child-safety crusaders warned of a widespread kidnapping threat, claiming erroneously that as many as fifty thousand American children fell victim to stranger abductions each year. Scholarship now treats this largely as a myth sustained by media coverage, emotional parental appeals, and awareness campaigns, one that obscured the harder truth that most harm to children comes from people known to them.

A listener formed by that environment hears the word stranger paired with danger and supplies the predator — the lurid, physical, bodily threat. This is almost the opposite of what the song countenances. The track’s stranger is an opaque adult social other (Jonas) or the pressuring peer crowd (Jenny); the listener’s stranger is the abductor in the parking lot. A Swedish high-trust, autonomy-celebrating anthem is thus liable to be absorbed, in its largest market, into a low-trust structure of fear it did not originate. The irony is precise: the song that counsels self-direction gets re-heard as a warning to be vigilant against menace — vigilance being exactly the disposition the video’s paranoid woman embodies and the narrative gently rebukes.

6. A biblicist coda on the stranger

Scripture refuses the choice the song offers. It holds together two things the lyric splits apart: welcome of the stranger and discernment of the deceiver. The sojourner is to be loved as oneself (Leviticus 19:34; Deuteronomy 10:19), and hospitality may mean entertaining messengers unawares (Hebrews 13:2). At the same time the believer is told to test the spirits rather than trust every claim (1 John 4:1), because the heart is deceitful above all things (Jeremiah 17:9). The hook’s intuition — that lies can sit behind a stranger’s eyes — is in fact Jeremiah’s verdict on the human interior.

But where the song answers that diagnosis with retreat into the autonomous self — you’ll do better on your own — the biblical answer is neither naïve trust nor self-sufficient isolation. It is discernment exercised inside covenant community and open-handed welcome of the outsider. The very creed the lyric and the Swedish theory of love commend runs against the grain of “it is not good that the man should be alone” (Genesis 2:18) and “two are better than one” (Ecclesiastes 4:9–12). Jesus Christ neither flattered the crowd nor fled it; He saw what was in men (John 2:24–25) yet still received the stranger. The song correctly names the danger of human deceit and then prescribes the wrong remedy — the lonely self — which Gandini’s documentary independently identifies as the Swedish model’s own wound.


References

A note on the surname coincidence: the academic framework’s Henrik Berggren and the band’s Jonas Berggren are different people; Berggren is a common Swedish name, and no relation is implied.

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Paper 10 — Gifts, Bribes, and the Office: A Scriptural Account of Self-Enrichment in Authority

Where the structural account ends

The preceding paper carried the analysis as far as institutional reasoning can take it. It showed that the gap between what the rules forbid and what officeholders extract is a stable equilibrium, produced by conflicted enforcement, definitional softness, individual framing, and a political remedy, and held in place by the lodging of enforcement power with the regulated party. That account is true, and it explains a great deal. But it stops at a wall it cannot pass. It can describe the arrangement of offices and incentives that lets self-enrichment persist, and it can show that effective reform would require the regulated to empower a neutral enforcer against themselves. What it cannot explain is why the men who hold that power decline, with such consistency across every era and every culture, to use it against their own interest. The structural account treats this as a fact about incentives, as though it were obvious that interest will not discipline itself. But that is precisely the thing requiring explanation, for men are capable of acting against their interest, of binding themselves, of refusing gain. The question the equilibrium leaves unanswered is why, in this domain, they so reliably do not.

Scripture answers at the level the structural account cannot reach. Its treatment of the officeholder who profits from position is older than any constitution and deeper than any analysis of incentives, and its central claim is not institutional but anthropological: that the gift corrupts the one who takes it, and corrupts him in his perception, so that he cannot see his own corruption. “The gift blindeth the wise, and perverteth the words of the righteous” (Exodus 23:8). The whole of this companion paper unfolds from that sentence, because it states, at the founding of Israel’s judicial order, the very thesis the structural analysis arrived at by another road. The taking blinds the taker. And a man blinded by what he has taken will not enforce against himself, not because the incentive structure forbids it but because he has lost the sight that would recognize the wrong. The equilibrium of offices is the outward shape of an inward blindness, and that is what the structural account, confined to externals, cannot say.

The gift that blinds: the law at the founding of the office

The Torah places its prohibition on the bribe not as an afterthought but at the institution of the judiciary, in the same way the emoluments clauses were placed at the founding of the constitutional order. In Exodus the command stands among the ordinances of justice given at Sinai: “And thou shalt take no gift: for the gift blindeth the wise, and perverteth the words of the righteous” (Exodus 23:8). In Deuteronomy it stands at the very appointment of judges and officers in the gates: “Thou shalt not wrest judgment; thou shalt not respect persons, neither take a gift: for a gift doth blind the eyes of the wise, and pervert the words of the righteous” (Deuteronomy 16:19), immediately followed by the charge, “That which is altogether just shalt thou follow” (Deuteronomy 16:20). The structural placement is deliberate. As a man enters the office of judgment, before he has heard a single cause, he is warned against the one thing that will unmake the office, and the warning is built into the constitution of the office itself.

The precise wording repays attention, and the two texts together sharpen the point. The Hebrew word rendered “gift” is shochad, the bribe, the thing given to one who holds power because he holds it. And the object of the blinding is striking. Exodus says the bribe blinds the piqchim, the clear-sighted, the open-eyed, those whose eyes are functioning; Deuteronomy says it blinds the chakamim, the wise.[^1] It is not the foolish or the ignorant whom the gift blinds, for they were never seeing clearly. It is the clear-sighted and the wise, the very men chosen for office because they could see, whom the gift deprives of sight. This is the anthropological core of the biblical account and the deepening it offers the structural one. The corruption does not merely tempt the officeholder to act wrongly while knowing it; it darkens his perception so that he no longer sees the wrong. The bribe does not buy a corrupt decision from a clear-eyed judge who knows he is selling; it blinds the clear eye, so that the judge comes to see the corrupt decision as just. The taking alters the taker’s vision, and this is why a captured enforcer cannot be expected to reform himself: the capture has taken his sight.

The character of the prohibition matches the prophylactic logic recovered in the second paper of this series. The command is categorical: take no gift. It does not say, take no gift given for a corrupt purpose, or take no gift that in fact perverts your judgment, which would require proof of the purpose or the perversion. It bars the receipt itself, full stop, because the receipt is what blinds, whatever the giver intended and whatever the taker believes about his own continued impartiality. The Torah forbids the conditions of corruption rather than waiting to catch corruption in the act, exactly as the broad reading of the emoluments clause forbids the receipt rather than demanding proof of a bargain. And the standard the law invokes is the character of God Himself, who “regardeth not persons, nor taketh reward” (Deuteronomy 10:17). The impartial God who takes no bribe is the pattern for the human officeholder, and the office is a participation in His justice, which is why its corruption by the gift is so grave: it makes the judge unlike the God whose justice he administers.

The law of the king: the highest office under a categorical bar

The Torah does not leave the highest office unaddressed, and its provision for the king is the closest scriptural analogue to the emoluments clauses, a categorical anti-accumulation rule placed upon the apex of power. The law of the king in Deuteronomy anticipates that Israel will one day set a king over itself, and it binds that king in advance: “he shall not multiply horses to himself… neither shall he multiply wives to himself… neither shall he greatly multiply to himself silver and gold” (Deuteronomy 17:16-17). The thrice-repeated phrase, “to himself,” names the precise danger: the conversion of the office into a means of private accumulation. The king is forbidden to multiply to himself the very things the office would let him gather, and the prohibition is flat, categorical, and prophylactic in the same manner as the law against the bribe.

The provision goes further, and its further requirement reaches the heart in a way no human enforcement could. The king is commanded to write for himself a copy of the law, to keep it by him, and to read in it all the days of his life, “that his heart be not lifted up above his brethren, and that he turn not aside from the commandment” (Deuteronomy 17:18-20). Here the Torah states, in a sentence, what the structural account of the prior paper could not supply. The purpose of the rule is to guard the king’s heart, to prevent the inward lifting-up that office breeds, and the means is not an external enforcer but the king’s own continual submission to the law that binds him. The biblical “emoluments clause” for the king is enforced, in the first instance, from inside the officeholder, by a heart kept low through daily reckoning with the word that restrains it. The contrast with the modern lattice is exact and instructive. The constitutional and statutory apparatus surveyed in this series tried to bind the officeholder from outside, through definitions, disclosures, recusals, and trusts, and the equilibrium absorbed every external control. The Torah binds the king from outside as well, but it knows that the outside binding will fail unless the heart is kept, and so it places at the center of the king’s duty a discipline aimed at the heart, which is the only place the corruption finally lives.

The two archetypes: the king who takes and the servant who took nothing

Scripture sets before the reader two figures who define the office by opposite relations to the taking, and their juxtaposition is the heart of the biblical analysis. The first is the king as Samuel describes him when Israel demands one. Warning the people what their king will be, Samuel speaks the “manner of the king,” and the description is built on a single verb, repeated until it becomes the king’s defining act: “He will take your sons… he will take your daughters… he will take your fields… he will take the tenth of your seed… he will take your menservants… he will take the tenth of your sheep: and ye shall be his servants” (1 Samuel 8:11-17). The king is the one who takes. This is not a prediction about a particular bad king but a statement of the structural tendency of the office itself, and it answers precisely to the continuity thesis established in the fifth paper of this series: that the office, across every era, tends reliably to the taking, whatever the rules erected against it. Samuel’s warning is the ancient form of that finding. The office will extract; the manner of the king is to take to himself; and the people, in demanding a king, are choosing the taking with open eyes.

Against this stands Samuel himself, and his farewell is the positive archetype, the officeholder who took nothing and submits the fact to public audit. Laying down his judgeship, Samuel calls Israel to witness against him: “Whose ox have I taken? or whose ass have I taken? or whom have I defrauded? whom have I oppressed? or of whose hand have I received any bribe to blind mine eyes therewith? and I will restore it you” (1 Samuel 12:3). The people answer, on the record, “Thou hast not defrauded us, nor oppressed us, neither hast thou taken ought of any man’s hand” (1 Samuel 12:4). Two features of this scene deserve emphasis. The first is the recurrence of the blinding image, now self-applied: Samuel measures his integrity by whether he took any bribe “to blind mine eyes,” confirming that the blinding of the seer is the very thing a faithful officer guards against. The second is the form of the accounting. Samuel offers a voluntary, witnessed, public reckoning, and invites restitution if any taking can be shown. It is, in modern terms, a disclosure, but a disclosure that does what the modern disclosure regime examined in the seventh and eighth papers of this series cannot: it constrains. The difference is the heart behind it. The modern regime illuminates holdings without restraining conduct, because illumination falls upon officers whom no inward standard binds. Samuel’s disclosure exonerates because it rests upon a heart that took nothing; the visibility is the confirmation of an integrity already present, not a substitute for an integrity absent. Disclosure constrains only the man already constrained from within.

The family channel in Scripture

The biblical account knows the channel the sixth paper of this series isolated, the flow of corruption through the officeholder’s family, and it presents it in the same scene that gives us Samuel’s integrity, with deliberate irony. The reason Israel demands a king at all is that Samuel’s own sons, whom he had made judges, were corrupt: “his sons walked not in his ways, but turned aside after lucre, and took bribes, and perverted judgment” (1 Samuel 8:3). The man who could say he had taken nothing could not pass his integrity to his sons, and the office he held faithfully became, in their hands, the very instrument of the taking the law forbade. The family channel is thus biblically attested at the founding of the monarchy, and it carries the same lesson the structural analysis drew: that the office is corrupted through the relatives even when the officeholder himself is clean, because integrity is of the heart and the heart is not inherited.

The pattern recurs in the priestly office. The sons of Eli “were sons of Belial; they knew not the LORD” (1 Samuel 2:12), and their corruption was a taking, seizing by force the portions of the sacrifices that were not theirs, treating the office of the altar as a means of private appetite, “wherefore the sin of the young men was very great before the LORD” (1 Samuel 2:17). In both the judicial and the priestly cases the office descended through the family and was corrupted in the descent, and in both the faithful father, Samuel, Eli, proved unable to prevent it. Scripture presents the family channel not as a scandal of particular houses but as a structural feature of inherited office, which is exactly how the sixth paper of this series presented it: the durable route by which benefit reaches the officeholder’s orbit through persons the formal rule does not reach.

The secret and the deferred: Gehazi and Judas

The channels the later papers named informational and deferred, the gain taken secretly or collected by a servant after the principal has refused it, also have their scriptural types, and in them the blinding-and-cursing of the taker is dramatized. When Naaman the Syrian is healed and presses gifts upon the prophet Elisha, Elisha refuses them utterly, standing in the line of Samuel as the officeholder who takes nothing: “As the LORD liveth, before whom I stand, I will receive none” (2 Kings 5:16). But Gehazi, Elisha’s servant, runs after Naaman secretly, takes the silver and garments his master had declined, and hides them. Confronted, he lies; and the leprosy that had left Naaman cleaves to Gehazi and his seed for ever (2 Kings 5:20-27). The narrative is a parable of the secret taking: the gain the officeholder publicly refused is taken privately by one close to him, concealed, then exposed and judged, and the curse falls not on the giver but on the taker and his family. The taking blinds and then marks the taker.

Judas Iscariot completes the type in the assembly of Christ’s own disciples. He held the bag, and “was a thief, and had the bag, and bare what was put therein” (John 12:6), and his end was the thirty pieces of silver taken to betray innocent blood, the price of the deferred and hidden gain that destroyed the man who took it. The Torah had pronounced the curse in advance: “Cursed be he that taketh reward to slay an innocent person” (Deuteronomy 27:25). Judas walked into that curse with his eyes blinded by the bag he had long been pilfering, and the small habitual taking prepared the great betraying one. Scripture thus knows the layering the ninth paper described, the combination of channels that places conduct beyond any single control: the secret theft becomes the deferred betrayal, and the man cannot see, until too late, what the taking has made of him.

The prophet as the enforcer from outside

The most direct convergence between the scriptural and the structural accounts concerns the problem of enforcement when the enforcers are themselves corrupt. The prophets bring their indictment precisely because the human courts, the institutions ordained to enforce the law against the bribe, have themselves been bought, so that no enforcer remains inside the captured system. Isaiah arraigns the rulers of Judah: “Thy princes are rebellious, and companions of thieves: every one loveth gifts, and followeth after rewards: they judge not the fatherless, neither doth the cause of the widow come unto them” (Isaiah 1:23). The taking of gifts and the abandonment of the fatherless and the widow are named together, for the one produces the other: the judge whose eyes are blinded by the gift cannot see the cause of those who have no gift to give. Micah brings the same charge against the whole leadership class at once: “The heads thereof judge for reward, and the priests thereof teach for hire, and the prophets thereof divine for money” (Micah 3:11), the threefold corruption of ruler, priest, and prophet, every office for sale. And Micah names the collusion by which the bought officers cover for one another: “the prince asketh, and the judge asketh for a reward; and the great man, he uttereth his mischievous desire: so they wrap it up” (Micah 7:3), the weaving-together of the powerful that the structural analysis called the porous lattice, here seen from inside as a conspiracy of mutual protection.

The prophetic indictment supplies what the ninth paper identified as the rare lever that pierces the equilibrium: a neutral enforcer from outside the captured institution. The judges will not judge themselves, for they are bought; the kings will not restrain themselves, for they take; the priests will not correct the matter, for they teach for hire. Into this closed system the prophet speaks, owing nothing to the bought officers and standing outside their web, and he brings the charge no insider will bring. But the scriptural account is more sober than the structural one about what this outside enforcement can accomplish within history. The prophet announces the indictment and the coming judgment; he does not, as a rule, impose an institutional sanction, because the institutions that would impose it are the very ones corrupted. The enforcer of last resort, in the biblical account, is God Himself, who alone stands wholly outside the system and whose judgment alone the bought officers cannot evade. And here Micah names the deepest expression of the blindness: the corrupt leaders, having taken until they cannot see, “lean upon the LORD, and say, Is not the LORD among us? none evil can come upon us” (Micah 3:11). The taking has so blinded them that they believe themselves safe under the favor of the very God whose justice they have sold. This is the self-concealing corruption in its terminal form: not merely that the taker cannot see his wrong, but that he has come to mistake his guilt for innocence and his danger for security. No external enforcer can reach a man so blinded, because he does not know he needs reaching.

The deepening of the structural account

The scriptural analysis both confirms the structural one and locates beneath it the cause the structural one cannot name. The ninth paper found that the gap between prohibition and practice persists because enforcement power is lodged with the regulated party, who will not use it against himself. Scripture grants the institutional observation and presses underneath it to ask why the regulated party so reliably spares himself, and answers: because he loves the gain, and the gain he loves has blinded him. “Every one loveth gifts, and followeth after rewards” (Isaiah 1:23). The love of the gift comes first; the blindness follows from the love; and the institutional arrangement, in which men design enforcement to spare themselves, is the outward construction of that inward love and blindness. The equilibrium of offices is not the root but the fruit. Men arrange enforcement to spare themselves because they will not surrender the gain, and they cannot see that they should, because the taking has darkened the sight that would tell them so. “A gift destroyeth the heart” (Ecclesiastes 7:7); “he that is greedy of gain troubleth his own house” (Proverbs 15:27). The corruption is anthropological before it is institutional, and this is why no lattice of rules has ever closed the gap and no reform of enforcement machinery has ever held. The machinery is built by, and operated by, hearts that the gift has already blinded, and a blinded builder cannot construct a barrier against the thing he cannot see.

This is the precise deepening the biblical account offers, and it is also a limit upon every merely structural reform. The ninth paper concluded that effective reform would require relocating enforcement to an actor independent of the regulated party. Scripture agrees that the law commends such structures, Jehoshaphat’s judicial reform charged the judges, “take heed what ye do… there is no iniquity with the LORD our God, nor respect of persons, nor taking of gifts” (2 Chronicles 19:6-7), and Jethro’s counsel set the qualification for office as men “fearing God, men of truth, hating covetousness” (Exodus 18:21). But it also knows that the independent enforcer, if himself a man, is himself a heart the gift can blind, so that the reform must regress until it reaches an enforcer no gift can reach, which is God. The structural solution is true and necessary as far as it extends, and it does not extend far enough, because every human enforcer is a candidate for the same blinding. The qualification “hating covetousness” names the only durable safeguard: not a better cage around the officeholder but an officeholder whose heart hates the gain, in whom the corruption finds nothing to work upon.

The King who gives

The biblical account does not end in the indictment, and its resolution is the figure who stands as the perfect contrary to the king of Samuel’s warning. Where the manner of the earthly king is to take, the manner of the true King is to give. Jesus Christ, the Messiah, defines His own kingship against the takers: “the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many” (Matthew 20:28), and the apostle states the whole inversion of the office in a sentence: “though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich” (2 Corinthians 8:9). The office that the law of the king tried to bind from without, and that every human holder bent toward the taking, is in Christ fulfilled by a King in whom there is no taking to bind, whose relation to His subjects is wholly gift. He is the officeholder Samuel was in shadow and the sons of Samuel were not, the One who can say, with no possibility of contradiction, that He took nothing and gave everything. In Him the corruption of the office is not merely restrained but undone, because the heart that the gift destroys is, in Him, a heart the gift cannot reach.

This is why the apostolic instruction for office in the assembly returns, at every point, to the heart and not to the machinery. The overseer must be “not greedy of filthy lucre” (1 Timothy 3:3; Titus 1:7); the elders are to shepherd the flock “not for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind” (1 Peter 5:2); and when Simon offered money to purchase the power of God, Peter’s answer was not a procedure but a diagnosis of the heart: “Thy money perish with thee… thy heart is not right in the sight of God” (Acts 8:20-21). The biblical answer to the emoluments problem is, in the end, neither the constitutional clause nor the statutory lattice, indispensable as the law holds external restraints to be, but the transformation of the officeholder into one who hates the unjust gain, after the pattern of the King who gives. That transformation is the only enforcer that operates from inside the office, in the one place the gift does its blinding, and it is the only safeguard the gift cannot corrupt, because it has already surrendered the love on which the gift works.

The taking blinds the taker

The series began with a prohibition strong on the page and inert in operation, and traced the gap between them through text, doctrine, enforcement, history, family, information, the surrounding machinery, and the structural account of why the gap endures. This final paper has shown that the gap, and the reason for it, were named at the founding of Israel’s judicial order in a single sentence: “the gift blindeth the wise.” The structural analysis, working from incentives and institutions, rediscovered in the language of capture and equilibrium what the Torah stated as anthropology, that the taking blinds the taker, that the office tends to the taking, and that no arrangement of offices can finally cure a corruption that lives in the heart and conceals itself from the very eyes it has darkened. The emoluments clauses, and the whole apparatus of which they are the highest member, are the necessary and insufficient external restraints upon a danger that is internal before it is institutional. They are right to forbid the receipt, for the receipt blinds; and they fail, as every merely external restraint must fail, against hearts the receipt has already blinded. The hope the Scriptures hold out is not a better lattice but a different kind of officeholder, and a King who came not to take but to give, in whose service the office is restored to what it was meant to be: a participation in the justice of the God who regardeth not persons, nor taketh reward.


Notes

[^1]: The two foundational texts use distinct objects for the verb of blinding, and the distinction strengthens the point. Exodus 23:8 reads that the shochad (bribe) blinds the piqchim, the clear-sighted or open-eyed, those whose vision is sound. Deuteronomy 16:19 reads that it blinds the chakamim, the wise. The bribe is not described as deceiving the foolish, who never saw clearly, but as blinding the seeing and the wise, the very persons selected for judicial office because of their discernment. The biblical claim is therefore not that corruption tempts a clear-eyed judge to decide wrongly while knowing it, but that the taking darkens the discernment itself, so that the corrupt judgment comes to appear just to the one who renders it. This is the scriptural form of the series’ thesis that the taking blinds the taker, and it locates the corruption in perception rather than only in will.

[^2]: Samuel’s challenge in 1 Samuel 12:3, that he took no bribe “to blind mine eyes,” employs the same sight-imagery, here in the form of hiding or averting the eyes. The continuity of the eye-and-sight language across Exodus 23:8, Deuteronomy 16:19, and 1 Samuel 12:3 is not incidental; it marks a coherent biblical understanding that the receipt of the gift operates upon the officeholder’s capacity to see, which is why the faithful officer measures his integrity precisely by whether his sight remains unbought.

[^3]: The law of the king (Deuteronomy 17:14-20) functions as the scriptural analogue to the emoluments clauses examined in Paper 2: a categorical anti-accumulation rule placed upon the highest office at the constitutional founding (“neither shall he greatly multiply to himself silver and gold”). Its distinctive feature, absent from the modern constitutional apparatus, is the requirement that the king continually read the law “that his heart be not lifted up,” which directs the restraint at the heart and locates the primary enforcement inside the officeholder rather than in an external mechanism. The comparison illuminates, by contrast, the limitation traced through Papers 4 and 8: the modern lattice binds only from outside, and the equilibrium of Paper 9 absorbs external restraint.

[^4]: The treatment of corruption as dependence formed beneath the level of a provable bargain, central to the broad reading defended in Paper 2 and to the structural synthesis of Paper 9, finds its scriptural ground in the categorical and prophylactic form of the biblical prohibition: “take no gift,” without inquiry into the giver’s purpose or proof of the judgment’s perversion, because the receipt itself is what blinds. The convergence of the modern anti-dependence theory (Teachout, 2014) with the ancient anti-bribe law is noted not to baptize the former but to observe that the structural analysis, pressed to its root, arrives where the Torah began.

References

Brown, F., Driver, S. R., & Briggs, C. A. (1906). A Hebrew and English lexicon of the Old Testament. Clarendon Press.

The Holy Bible, King James Version. (1769). (Original work published 1611).

Teachout, Z. (2014). Corruption in America: From Benjamin Franklin’s snuff box to Citizens United. Harvard University Press.

Scripture cited: Exodus 18:21; 23:8. Deuteronomy 10:17; 16:18–20; 17:14–20; 27:25. 1 Samuel 2:12–17; 8:1–3, 11–17; 12:1–5. 2 Kings 5:15–27. 2 Chronicles 19:5–7. Proverbs 15:27; 17:23. Ecclesiastes 7:7. Isaiah 1:23. Micah 3:11; 7:3. Amos 5:12. Ezekiel 22:12. Matthew 20:28. John 12:6. Acts 8:18–23. 2 Corinthians 8:9. 1 Timothy 3:3. Titus 1:7. 1 Peter 5:2.


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Paper 9 — Why Hard Rules Under-Deliver: A Structural Synthesis

The question the survey leaves

Eight papers have established two facts that sit uneasily together. The formal prohibitions against officeholder self-enrichment are broad, old, and in the constitutional case categorical; and the operational norm, what officeholders and their families have in fact been able to extract without consequence, has run roughly constant across the republic’s history, largely indifferent to the proliferation of rules erected against it. The text is strong and the practice persists. This paper asks why, and it argues that the answer is not a catalogue of separate failures to be fixed one by one but a single structural account: the gap between prohibition and practice is a stable equilibrium, produced by the interaction of four reinforcing mechanisms, and held in place by the fact that the power to enforce the rules is lodged with, or close to, the parties the rules restrain.

The claim that the gap is an equilibrium rather than a defect is the central contribution of the paper, and the word is meant in its precise sense. An equilibrium is an arrangement that persists because the forces acting on it hold one another in balance, so that a push against any one element is resisted by the others and the system returns to its resting state. The argument is that the under-delivery of self-enrichment rules has exactly this character. It is not that the rules happen to be weak and could be strengthened by better drafting or more vigorous prosecution. It is that the weakness is the resting state of a system whose elements reinforce one another, and that the reforms which would disturb it require the cooperation of the very actors the reforms would bind. The paper develops this account in three movements: it identifies the four mechanisms, shows how they interlock into an equilibrium, and then offers a typology of the four channels of evasion as a diagnostic instrument usable beyond the emoluments case.

The four mechanisms

Four features recur across the doctrinal, historical, and statutory analysis, and each is a mechanism by which a categorical prohibition becomes a negotiable standard.

The first is conflicted enforcement. The power to enforce the self-enrichment rules is, at nearly every turn, held by actors who are the regulated party or aligned with it. The Foreign Emoluments Clause lodges its dispensing power in Congress, the body least motivated to police its own (Papers 2 and 4). The congressional-trading statute is a law by which Congress regulates Congress, drafted and amended by the regulated party acting as its own regulator (Paper 7). The executive ethics overseer can advise and certify but cannot compel, discipline, or prosecute, while the bodies that can enforce, the agencies policing their own and the Department of Justice weighing the prosecution of officials, carry their own conflicts (Paper 8). And the ultimate remedy against a sitting President is impeachment, a proceeding controlled by political actors (Paper 4). This is the public-choice insight applied to ethics law: where the regulated control the regulator, the rule will be written and enforced to leave room, not from conspiracy but from the ordinary operation of interest.[^1] Conflicted enforcement is the master mechanism, and the other three can be understood as the forms its operation takes.

The second is definitional softness. The constitutional prohibition turns on a term, “emolument,” that has never been authoritatively fixed, and the one judicial construction of it was erased before it could bind (Papers 2 and 3). A prohibition whose central term has no settled meaning is not, in the operative sense, a rule at all; it is a standard awaiting a standard-setter who never arrives. The legal theory of rules and standards clarifies the stakes. A rule fixes its content in advance and applies mechanically; a standard leaves content to be determined at the moment of application, case by case.[^2] The emoluments prohibition is written as a rule, a flat categorical bar, but operates as a standard, because its key term is contested at the core and must be relitigated each time it is invoked. The conversion of the rule into a standard is decisive, because a standard with no accumulated holding to anchor it is argued from the ground up in every dispute, and the party with the resources to mount the more elaborate historical argument enjoys an advantage the categorical text was supposed to deny. Softness at the level of meaning dissolves the hardness at the level of form.

The third is the individual framing. The prohibitions are written around the officer as a single natural person who must not receive, and they were drafted for a world in which a man and his finances were one thing (Papers 2 and 6). They do not, in terms, reach the benefit that lands on a relative, a household, or an enterprise, and the conduit theory that might bridge the gap reintroduces the proof of purpose that the prophylactic prohibition was built to avoid, collapsing the broad rule back into the narrow bribery rule it was meant to surpass (Paper 6). The individual framing thus supplies a structural channel, the family and the entity, through which benefit flows around the text, not because anyone authorized that route but because the text was written for a simpler picture of how a person profits. The mismatch between an individual-framed prohibition and the entity-and-household structure of modern wealth is a permanent gap, and it widens as wealth grows more corporate and more dynastic.

The fourth is the political character of the ultimate remedy. The only mechanism with undisputed reach to a sitting President is impeachment, a political proceeding governed by political incentives rather than the neutral application of a rule (Paper 4). To say that the final backstop is political is to say that the prohibition binds an officer in proportion to the strength of his adversaries and their willingness to spend it, rather than in proportion to his conduct. A legal remedy binds evenly, regardless of who is watching; a political remedy binds unevenly, as a function of coalition arithmetic. The substitution of a political contest for a legal one at the decisive moment means that even a flagrant violation, fully exposed, produces sanction only when the violator’s opponents command the necessary supermajority and choose to use it, which converts the prohibition from a rule that constrains into a weapon that opponents may or may not wield.

The interaction: why these form an equilibrium

The four mechanisms are usually discussed, when discussed at all, as a list of separate problems, each with its own proposed fix: define the term, empower an enforcer, reach the family, legalize the remedy. The deeper claim of this paper is that they are not a list but a system, and that their interaction is what makes the gap stable. Each mechanism removes the pressure that might correct another, so that the whole arrangement is self-perpetuating.

Consider the linkages. Definitional softness makes litigation pointless even where a plaintiff has standing, because the merits dissolve into a contest no court will resolve with finality; this removes the incentive to litigate, which removes the pressure that sustained litigation might exert to harden the definition. Conflicted enforcement, in turn, ensures that no actor with both the standing and the will pursues the matter to a binding holding, which perpetuates the softness, since a term is fixed into law only by an authority willing to fix it, and the authorities are conflicted. The individual framing supplies a ready channel, the family and the entity, for whatever benefit the softness and the enforcement vacuum leave nominally prohibited, so that even conduct the rule formally reaches can be rerouted around it. And the political remedy ensures that on the rare occasion when exposure is complete and outrage is high, the matter is adjudicated by the least neutral tribunal available, so that exposure does not reliably yield sanction, which removes the deterrent that might otherwise raise the cost of the operational norm.

The result is an arrangement in which every element is defended by the others, and in which reform of any single element is resisted by the rest. To harden the definition, one needs a binding holding; to obtain a binding holding, one needs enforcement carried to judgment; but the enforcers are conflicted and will not carry it. To repair enforcement, one needs the conflicted actors to empower a neutral enforcer against themselves; but the conflicted actors are precisely those who would be enforced against, and they will not. To reach the family and entity channels, one must abandon the prophylactic structure and prove conduits and purposes; but that proof requirement collapses the broad rule into the narrow bribery rule and forfeits the advantage the prohibition was meant to confer. To replace the political remedy with a legal one, one needs the political actors to subject themselves to a neutral tribunal; but they hold the power to decline. Every avenue of reform terminates at the same wall: the change requires the cooperation of the actors the change would bind. This is the precise sense in which the gap is an equilibrium. It persists not because no one has thought of the fixes but because the power to implement the fixes is held by those the fixes would constrain, and they have no reason to use it against themselves.

The unifying variable: who holds the power to enforce

The synthesis reduces to a single variable. Across all four mechanisms and their interaction, the operative fact is that the power to enforce the self-enrichment rules is held by, or lies close to, the regulated party. This is the thread that runs through the consent valve in conflicted congressional hands, the self-regulating trading statute, the toothless ethics overseer, the reluctant prosecutor, the political remedy, the unfixed definition that no conflicted enforcer will fix, and the individual framing that no conflicted legislature will broaden against its own families. The earnestness of the text is not the variable that determines its force; the structure of enforcement is. A prohibition meant with perfect conviction at its drafting will bind no one if those who must enforce it are those it would restrain, and a modest rule backed by a neutral and motivated enforcer will bite. The emoluments regime is a clean specimen of the principle precisely because, at the apex of power, the regulated and the regulator converge into the same office, the President who is exempt from the conflict statute, not required to divest, largely outside the gift rules, and reachable in principle only by the constitutional clauses that cannot be enforced (Paper 8). Where the regulated party is the enforcer, the rule is whatever the regulated party finds convenient, and the operational norm is the real law.

This restates, at the level of general theory, the distinction that has organized the series from the first paper: the difference between the stated rule and the operational norm. The stated rule is the text and the formal doctrine; the operational norm is what officeholders may in fact do without consequence; and the distance between them is set by enforcement structure. The synthesis adds that the distance is not a measure of how badly the rules are drafted but of how completely the enforcement power has been captured by, or conceded to, those the rules address. Read this way, the emoluments problem is a special case of a general law of institutional design: a constraint is only as strong as the independence and motivation of those who enforce it, and a constraint enforced by its own subjects is no constraint at all.

A typology of evasion

The survey has surfaced four distinct channels through which benefit flows around the prohibitions, and naming them as a typology converts the descriptive findings into a diagnostic instrument. The typology asks, of any arrangement: through which channel does the benefit travel? The answer predicts which control, if any, applies, and why it is likely to fail.

The first channel is direct. The benefit reaches the officer in his own person, as a gift, a payment, or a commercial advantage to a business he personally owns. This is the channel the prohibitions were written for, and the only one the constitutional text plainly reaches. It is therefore the channel most exposed to the formal rule and, for that reason, the channel through which the crudest and most provable conduct, the bribe, can occasionally be punished. But where the direct benefit is structured as ordinary commercial revenue rather than a labeled gift, the definitional softness and the enforcement vacuum disable the prohibition even here, which is why the direct channel remains usable for all but the most flagrant transfers.

The second channel is familial. The benefit reaches the officer’s spouse, children, siblings, in-laws, or family enterprise rather than the officer himself (Paper 6). This channel evades the individual framing of the prohibitions, and the conduit theory that might attribute the relative’s gain to the officer founders on the proof-of-purpose problem. The familial channel is the most reliable of the four across the republic’s history, because every officeholder has relatives, those relatives have lives and enterprises of their own, and the line the rules draw, at the spouse and the dependent child, leaves the wider family and the family business almost entirely open.

The third channel is informational. The benefit reaches the officer as knowledge rather than money, the market-moving fact learned through the office and converted to trading gain (Paper 7). This channel is not a receipt from a source in the constitutional sense and so falls outside the emoluments clauses entirely, reached if at all by statute, and the statute that addresses it was built on disclosure rather than prohibition and hollowed in operation. The informational channel is distinctive because the gain is self-realized from the market rather than handed over by a benefactor, which makes it both harder to prove and easier to disguise as the product of public information.

The fourth channel is deferred. The benefit reaches the officer after he leaves office, as the post-employment position, the revolving-door payoff, the lucrative advising arrangement collected from those he favored or the industry he regulated (Paper 8). This channel escapes the in-office prohibitions by timing, and the controls on it, the cooling-off periods and lobbying-registration rules, are short and porous, evaded most easily by the shadow advising that monetizes access without triggering registration. The deferred channel is the patient form of the emolument, paid not at the moment of the favor but at the convenient later date, when the officer is no longer in office and the in-office rules no longer apply.

The four channels map onto the four mechanisms. The direct channel is the one the rule reaches and the enforcement vacuum disables; the familial channel exploits the individual framing; the informational channel falls outside the constitutional definition and into a hollowed statute; the deferred channel uses timing to escape the in-office rules. As a diagnostic, the typology is used by asking which channel an arrangement employs and then reading off the structural reason the relevant control will likely fail. Its further value is that it makes visible the technique of layering. The channels can be combined, a deferred familial benefit, an informational gain realized through a relative’s account, a direct commercial benefit deferred until after office, and each combination places the conduct further from any single control, because no one control was designed for the intersection. The more channels an arrangement combines, the further it sits from the reach of the lattice, and the layering is itself the most sophisticated form of the operational norm. The typology thus does more than classify; it predicts, and it exposes the combinatorial space in which the most careful self-enrichment operates.

Objections and limits

The argument’s method, set out in the first paper, requires that the limits of the claim be stated as plainly as the claim, and three objections deserve answer.

The first is that deterrence by unenforced rules is real, and that the equilibrium account may understate how much the prohibitions shape conduct even without enforcement. The objection is sound and is granted. The existence of a categorical prohibition, the rhetoric of the emoluments clauses, the norm that officers should not enrich themselves, surely deters some officials some of the time, and the deterrence is real precisely because it is unmeasurable, operating in the conduct that never occurs and leaves no trace. The claim of the series is not that the rules deter no one but that the gap between prohibition and practice has persisted structurally across every era regardless of the rules’ proliferation, and that the persistence is explained by enforcement structure. The equilibrium account is compatible with marginal deterrence; it explains the durable residue the deterrence does not reach.

The second objection is that the narrow lines the rules draw, at the spouse and the dependent child, at the recusable conflict, at the registrable lobbying contact, are partly principled rather than merely captured, reflecting genuine competing values: relatives have independent lives, presidential recusal across whole domains is impractical, and an overbroad rule would be unjust (Papers 6 and 8). This too is granted, and it sharpens rather than weakens the account. The equilibrium does not depend on bad faith. The narrowness of the lines is overdetermined, produced both by capture and by principle, and the two produce the same evadable result. That a narrow line is defensible on principle does not make it less evadable in practice, and the operational norm settles into the space the line leaves open whether the line was drawn from conviction or from interest. The equilibrium is an emergent property of independently reasonable choices, each control defensible in isolation, each actor’s incentive intelligible, which is exactly why it is so stable and so resistant to the charge that it could be fixed by exposing villainy. There is often no villainy to expose, only structure.

The third objection is that the account proves too much: if the rules under-deliver as thoroughly as claimed, why is there any enforcement at all, and why are some officeholders prosecuted and punished? The answer locates the ceiling of the operational norm. The crudest direct conduct, the provable bribe, the embezzlement, the labeled quid pro quo, is criminalized and occasionally punished, and the rare successful prosecution marks the upper boundary of what the equilibrium tolerates. The gap is the space below that ceiling: the lawful channels, the unenforced prohibitions, the conduct structured to fall just short of the prosecutable. The equilibrium does not produce total lawlessness; it produces a tolerated zone of self-enrichment bounded above by the flagrant crime that even conflicted enforcers cannot ignore, and the operational norm lives in that zone, which is wide.

What the equilibrium implies for reform

The series is diagnostic rather than prescriptive, but the equilibrium account carries an implication for reform too direct to leave unstated. If the gap is set by enforcement structure rather than by the text, then reforms that do not change who enforces will fail, and the historical record of reform confirms it. The congressional-trading statute was passed under pressure, built on disclosure, and hollowed, because it left the conflicted enforcer, Congress regulating itself, in place (Paper 7). The disclosure system illuminates without constraining because its overseer cannot enforce (Paper 8). The recurring proposals to bar officeholder trading outright stall or dilute because the body that must enact the bar is the body the bar would bind (Paper 7). Each of these is a reform of the stated rule that leaves the enforcement structure untouched, and each is absorbed by the equilibrium without disturbing it.

The implication is that effective reform would have to relocate the enforcement power to an actor independent of the regulated party: a fixed statutory definition that removes the term from contestation, a neutral enforcement body with standing and remedial authority that does not depend on the conflicted gatekeeper, a reach that extends to the family and the entity, and a legal rather than political remedy. But the equilibrium account also explains why such reform is rare: each of these changes requires the cooperation of the actors it would constrain, who hold the power to withhold it. The one historical pattern that has occasionally pierced the equilibrium, the determined independent investigation backed by public pressure that produced, for instance, the rare imprisonment of a cabinet officer (Paper 5), is the exception that confirms the rule, because it operated precisely by introducing a more neutral enforcer, a tenacious committee or a special counsel, into a structure that normally lacks one. The lever that works is the lever the equilibrium is designed to withhold, and it is pulled only under conditions of extraordinary exposure that cannot be relied upon. Reform that does not change the enforcer is reform of the text alone, and the text was never the binding constraint.

The gap as equilibrium

The synthesis can be stated in a sentence. The under-delivery of officeholder self-enrichment rules is not a series of fixable failures but a stable equilibrium, produced by conflicted enforcement, definitional softness, individual framing, and a political remedy, each reinforcing the others, and held in place by the lodging of enforcement power with the regulated party; and the emoluments regime is the cleanest specimen of the equilibrium because at the apex of power the regulated and the regulator are the same office. The four channels of evasion, direct, familial, informational, and deferred, are the routes through which the operational norm flows around the stated rule, and they may be layered to place conduct beyond the reach of any single control. The gap between what the rules forbid and what officeholders extract is therefore not a measure of poor drafting or weak prosecution but a measure of how completely the power to enforce has been captured by, or conceded to, those the rules address. A constraint enforced by its own subjects is no constraint, and the prohibition that opened the series, categorical on the page and inert in operation, is the constitutional embodiment of that truth.

This completes the structural account that the eight preceding papers built toward. One movement remains, and it approaches the same subject from a direction the structural analysis cannot reach. The equilibrium account explains the institutions, the incentives, and the channels, but it locates the corruption in the arrangement of offices and powers, in the externals of enforcement and design. Scripture, treating the same subject, locates it deeper. The biblical material on the gift that blinds the wise and perverts the words of the righteous (Exodus 23:8; Deuteronomy 16:19), on the king who will take (1 Samuel 8), and on the rulers and judges who judge for reward (Micah 3:11; Isaiah 1:23), reaches the insight that this paper has approached structurally: that enrichment through office corrupts beneath the level of any provable bargain, and that the taking blinds the taker to his own corruption. Where the structural account ends at the limits of what institutions can enforce, the scriptural account begins, locating the failure not only in the design of offices but in the heart of the officeholder, which no lattice of rules can reach and no enforcer can compel. The final paper takes up that account, and shows how the ancient diagnosis both anticipates the modern structural one and deepens it, by naming what the equilibrium leaves unexplained: why the men who hold the power to enforce the rules against themselves so reliably decline to use it.


Notes

[^1]: The public-choice account of regulation, in which the regulated capture or shape the regulator to serve their own interest, originates with Stigler (1971) and has become a standard lens in the analysis of regulatory design. Its application here is to the ethics and emoluments context: where the enforcement power over self-enrichment rules is held by the regulated party (Congress over its own trading and consent functions, the executive over its own conduct), the rules will be drafted and enforced to leave room, as a matter of ordinary incentive rather than conspiracy.

[^2]: The distinction between rules, which fix legal content in advance and apply mechanically, and standards, which leave content to be determined at the point of application, is developed in Kaplow (1992). The argument here is that the emoluments prohibition, categorical in form, functions as a standard because its central term is unfixed and must be construed afresh in each application, which transfers decisional power to the moment of dispute and advantages the better-resourced litigant. A “rule” with an unsettled core term is, operationally, a standard.

[^3]: The conception of corruption as dependence, the bending of an officeholder’s judgment toward those who enrich him, beneath the level of any provable bargain, is developed in Teachout (2014) and, in the contemporary context of campaign finance and institutional incentives, in Lessig (2011). The structural synthesis of this paper rests on that conception: the prohibitions are prophylactic because the harm they address forms without an agreement, which is why requiring proof of an agreement (the conduit problem of Paper 6) defeats them.

[^4]: The four-channel typology (direct, familial, informational, deferred) synthesizes the findings of Papers 5 through 8 and is offered as a diagnostic rather than a doctrinal classification. Its analytic payoff is predictive: identifying the channel an arrangement employs indicates which control nominally applies and why it is structurally likely to fail, and it exposes the combinatorial space in which layered arrangements evade every single-channel control.

References

Kaplow, L. (1992). Rules versus standards: An economic analysis. Duke Law Journal, 42(3), 557–629.

Lessig, L. (2011). Republic, lost: How money corrupts Congress—and a plan to stop it. Twelve.

Stigler, G. J. (1971). The theory of economic regulation. The Bell Journal of Economics and Management Science, 2(1), 3–21.

Teachout, Z. (2014). Corruption in America: From Benjamin Franklin’s snuff box to Citizens United. Harvard University Press.

U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 8.

U.S. Const. art. II, § 1, cl. 7.


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Paper 8 — The Adjacent Machinery: Conflicts of Interest, the Revolving Door, Gifts, Disclosure, and Blind Trusts

The constitutional clause and its statutory family

The emoluments clauses do not stand alone. They are the oldest and highest members of a large family of controls against officeholder self-dealing, a family that grew over two centuries from two constitutional sentences into a dense apparatus of criminal statutes, regulations, disclosure requirements, and devices of avoidance. To understand the emoluments problem fully, one must see the clauses in their family setting, because the apparatus that surrounds them shares their defining weakness and exhibits it in forms that illuminate the constitutional core. This paper surveys that apparatus, the conflict-of-interest statutes and recusal, the gift regime, the revolving-door and post-employment rules, the financial-disclosure system, and the blind trust, and advances a single organizing claim: each control guards one channel of benefit while leaving others open, so that the aggregate is a porous lattice rather than a seal, and the porosity is greatest precisely at the apex of power, where the controls loosen or vanish at the very office for which the emoluments clauses were most concerned.

The lattice metaphor is meant precisely. A lattice is a structure of separate members with gaps between them; it screens without sealing, and what it screens depends on the size and placement of its gaps. The American apparatus against self-dealing is built this way, control by control, each enacted in response to a particular exposed channel and shaped to address that channel, with the result that the controls do not interlock into a continuous barrier but leave the spaces between them open. The operational norm the series has tracked lives in those spaces. And the largest spaces, this paper will show, are located at the top.

The conflict-of-interest core and its great exemption

The center of the statutory apparatus is the criminal financial-conflict statute, which forbids an executive-branch officer from participating personally and substantially in a particular government matter in which he has a financial interest, and which, as Paper 6 discussed, imputes to him the interests of his spouse, his minor children, a general partner, an organization in which he serves as an officer or director, and a prospective employer.[^1] The statute’s remedy is recusal: the conflicted officer must step aside from the matter. This is a genuine and often effective control for the ordinary executive employee, whose conflicts can be identified, whose recusal can be monitored, and whose violation can be prosecuted. For the bureaucrat and the agency official, the lattice is reasonably tight at this point.

But the statute carries an exemption that reshapes the entire analysis. By the terms of the definitional provision governing the criminal conflict statutes, the words “officer” and “employee” do not include the President, the Vice President, a Member of Congress, or a federal judge.Under the governing definitions, the terms “officer” and “employee” in the principal criminal conflict-of-interest statutes do not include the President, the Vice President, a Member of Congress, or a federal judge. The financial-conflict statute therefore does not apply to the President or the Vice President at all.The financial-conflict statute applies generally to officers and employees of the executive branch and the independent agencies but does not apply to the President or the Vice President. This is not a recent loophole. The Department of Justice took the position as early as 1974 that the statute did not reach the President, reasoning from the legislative history that it was never intended to, and Congress codified the exemption for the President and Vice President in 1989.The Justice Department concluded in 1974 that the conflict statute did not apply to the President, and Congress expressly codified the exemption of the President and Vice President in 1989. The rationale offered is not frivolous: the breadth of the President’s responsibilities makes mandatory recusal impractical, since a President cannot step aside from whole domains of national policy the way a mid-level official can step aside from a single contract, and the Office of Government Ethics has long held that while the President and Vice President are not legally bound by the recusal statute, they should as a matter of policy conduct themselves as if they were.The exemption rests on the view that the breadth of the President’s responsibilities makes mandatory recusal impractical, with the ethics office maintaining that the President and Vice President, though not legally bound, should as a matter of policy act as if they were.

The consequence is the first and most important instance of the pattern this paper traces. The core conflict-of-interest control, the one that forces ordinary officials to step aside from matters touching their finances, simply does not bind the highest officer in the executive branch. The officer with the most power to convert position into gain is the officer the central recusal statute exempts. And even where the statute does apply, its force is qualified by the waiver mechanism examined in Paper 6, under which the appointing authority may excuse a conflict it deems too small to affect the integrity of the officer’s service, and by regulatory exemptions that remove whole categories of interest, diversified mutual funds and holdings deemed too remote, from the statute’s reach.The statute permits the appointing authority to grant waivers for interests deemed unlikely to affect the integrity of an officer’s services, and the ethics regulations exempt categories of interest such as diversified mutual funds and holdings considered too remote to matter. The recusal control is real for the rank and file and porous for the powerful.

The gift regime and the statutory softening of the constitutional bar

The gift apparatus is the statutory cousin of the Foreign Emoluments Clause, and comparing the two reveals how a categorical constitutional prohibition becomes a managed administrative channel when reduced to statute. Two regimes operate. For foreign-government gifts, the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act, discussed in Paper 6, permits an officer to retain only gifts below a periodically adjusted minimal-value threshold; gifts above it must be refused or turned over to the United States.[^2] For domestic gifts, the executive-branch ethics regulations bar employees from accepting gifts from prohibited sources or given because of official position, subject to exceptions including a modest per-occasion and annual aggregate allowance from any single source.[^3] The congressional chambers maintain their own gift rules with their own exceptions.

Two features of the gift regime matter for the larger argument. The first is that the foreign-gift statute does not forbid the relationship the Foreign Emoluments Clause was written to prevent; it manages it. The clause, on its broad reading, bars the receipt of a foreign benefit categorically, because the dependence it creates is the harm. The statute, by contrast, sets a dollar threshold below which foreign gifts may be kept and above which they must be surrendered to the government rather than refused outright, converting a categorical bar into an accounting rule. The statutory cousin thus permits, with conditions, much of what the constitutional clause prohibits, which is a clean example of the operational softening of a hard rule when the rule is implemented through ordinary administrative machinery. The second feature is the now-familiar apex exemption: the President operates largely outside the executive gift regulations that bind subordinate employees, and may accept gifts in many circumstances where a lower official could not.Presidents are permitted to accept gifts in many circumstances in which subordinate executive employees could not. Once again the control tightens on the clerk and loosens on the chief.

The revolving door and the deferred emolument

The post-employment apparatus addresses a channel the in-office controls cannot: the benefit collected after leaving office, the deferred emolument paid by those an officer favored while in power, or by the industry he regulated, in the form of a lucrative private position once he departs. The principal control is the criminal post-employment statute, which imposes a lifetime bar on a former officer’s switching sides to represent a private party on a particular matter in which he participated personally and substantially in government, a shorter bar on matters that were under his official responsibility, and cooling-off periods during which senior and very senior officials may not lobby their former agencies; former members of Congress are subject to their own cooling-off periods before lobbying their former chamber.[^4] Alongside the criminal statute sits the lobbying-registration regime, which requires those who lobby above a threshold of effort to register and disclose their activity.[^5]

The revolving door is the channel through which the deferred emolument flows, and the controls on it are notably porous in two respects that the later synthesis will name as a distinct mode of evasion. First, the cooling-off periods are short, typically a year or two, and they bar contact and representation rather than the underlying movement; an official may pass directly from regulating an industry to working for it, restricted only from certain communications for a limited time, after which the restriction lapses entirely. Second, and more corrosively, the lobbying-registration threshold has produced a large practice of what observers call shadow lobbying, in which former officials provide strategic advice and counsel to clients seeking to influence government without themselves making the registrable contacts that would trigger the statute, monetizing their access and judgment while remaining below the line that would subject them to disclosure or the cooling-off bars.[^6] The deferred emolument, in other words, is collected through a channel the controls reach only partially and late, and the most valuable form of the payoff, the former official’s access and counsel sold as advice rather than as registered lobbying, falls largely outside the apparatus altogether. The revolving door lets an officer take the gain the in-office prohibitions might have reached, in a form and at a time that places it beyond them.

Disclosure and the toothless referee

The financial-disclosure system is the apparatus’s principal instrument of transparency, requiring senior officials to report their assets, income, and transactions, and those of their spouses and dependent children, on annual and periodic forms, as Papers 6 and 7 discussed.[^7] Disclosure rests on the same bet examined in the context of the congressional-trading statute: that visibility deters, and that what is seen will be checked. The bet’s weakness here is twofold and worth stating in its own right.

First, disclosure illuminates but does not prohibit. A disclosure regime tells the public what an officer holds; it does not forbid the holding, the conflict, or the benefit. It is a precondition of accountability, not accountability itself, and it accomplishes nothing unless some other actor acts on what it reveals. Second, the agency at the center of executive-branch ethics, the Office of Government Ethics, is an overseer and adviser without enforcement power. It certifies disclosure reports, issues guidance, approves trust arrangements, and counsels officials, but it cannot compel compliance, impose discipline, or prosecute; enforcement, where it occurs, falls to the agencies through administrative discipline or to the Department of Justice through criminal prosecution.[^8] The referee of the ethics system, in other words, can blow no whistle that stops play. It can describe a violation and refer it; it cannot punish it. This is the conflicted-and-toothless-enforcer problem of Paper 4 in administrative form: the body most expert in the rules is the body least able to enforce them, and the bodies able to enforce, the agencies policing their own and the Justice Department weighing prosecution of officials, carry the conflicts the doctrinal papers described.

The blind trust and the illusion of the remedy

The blind trust is the apparatus’s signature device of avoidance, the instrument an official is supposed to use to neutralize a conflict by placing his assets beyond his own knowledge and control. Examined closely, it is also the apparatus’s clearest illustration of a remedy that cannot reach the conflicts that matter most. Under the Ethics in Government Act and its regulations, a qualified blind trust transfers an official’s assets to an independent trustee, one who may not be a relative, friend, employee, or business partner and who must be a financial institution, licensed adviser, or attorney unaffiliated with the official; the official surrenders control, may not communicate with the trustee about specific holdings, and the arrangement must be approved by the Office of Government Ethics.A qualified blind trust requires an independent trustee who is not a relative, friend, employee, or business partner of the official, who must be a financial institution, licensed adviser, or attorney, with the official surrendering control and communication about specific holdings and the arrangement approved by the ethics office. The trust is called blind because, over time, as the trustee sells the transferred assets and reinvests in holdings the official is never told about, the official loses knowledge of what the trust contains, and a conflict cannot influence an officer who does not know what he owns.The trust achieves “blindness” only over time, as the independent trustee sells the original transferred assets and acquires new ones whose identity is not communicated to the official, eventually shielding the officer from knowledge of the trust’s holdings.

The device has three limits that, taken together, render it nearly useless against the conflicts of the most powerful officials. The first is temporal: blindness develops only gradually, because the official knows the initial corpus he transferred and remains aware of it until the trustee has disposed of those assets and replaced them. Until then the trust is not blind at all. The second is the nature of the assets. Blindness requires that the trustee be able to sell the official’s holdings and replace them with assets unknown to him; identifiable-conflict assets must be divested within a reasonable period.A qualified blind trust requires that assets creating identifiable conflicts be divested within a reasonable period. But this is impossible for assets that are unique, illiquid, or eponymous, a family enterprise, a portfolio of named real estate, a business that bears the official’s own name. The official always knows he owns his eponymous business; it cannot be made invisible to him by handing it to a trustee, because its identity is inseparable from his own. A blind trust can blind a stock portfolio, which the trustee can liquidate and replace with anonymous holdings; it cannot blind a signature enterprise, which the official knows he owns by definition. The third limit is that the device is voluntary. No official is required by statute to use a blind trust or to divest at all; for the President, the Vice President, and members of Congress, who are not required to recuse, public disclosure and the publicity it invites is the principal method of conflict regulation, and the choice to neutralize a conflict through a blind trust or divestiture is theirs to make or decline.Officials are not required to sell their assets or place them in a blind trust; for the President, Vice President, and members of Congress, who are not required to recuse, public disclosure and its attendant publicity is the principal method of conflict regulation.

The three limits converge on the same conclusion. The blind trust works for the liquid portfolio of an official willing to use it, which is to say for the modest conflicts of the cooperative. It does not work for the illiquid, eponymous, signature assets that constitute the great fortunes most likely to generate the gravest conflicts, and it cannot be required of anyone. An arrangement marketed as a blind trust but holding the same known assets under the management of the official’s own relatives is not a blind trust in the legal sense at all; it provides none of the blindness the device exists to create, because the assets remain known and the trustees are not independent. The remedy, in the cases where it would matter most, is an illusion.

The convergence at the apex

The survey yields a capstone observation that organizes the entire apparatus and returns the series to its constitutional core. Run down the lattice control by control and a single pattern emerges: each control binds the ordinary official and loosens at the apex of power. The financial-conflict statute applies to the executive employee and exempts the President and Vice President. The gift regulations bind the subordinate and largely release the President. The recusal requirement that anchors the conflict regime does not reach the elected constitutional officers at all. The blind trust that might neutralize an asset conflict is voluntary, cannot be required of the President, and cannot in any event blind the signature assets of a great fortune. And the disclosure system that remains, the one control that does reach the apex, illuminates without prohibiting and is administered by an agency that cannot enforce.

The controls, in short, are inversely related to the power of the office. They are tightest on the powerless clerk, whose every small conflict triggers recusal and whose every gift is counted, and loosest on the President, whose conflicts the recusal statute does not reach, whose gifts the regulations largely permit, whom no blind trust can be required to bind, and against whom the disclosure regime offers visibility but no constraint. This inversion is the deepest finding of the paper, because it means the apparatus is weakest exactly where the stakes are highest. The office with the greatest capacity to convert position into private gain is the office the statutory lattice guards least.

And here the constitutional core re-enters. The one control that does reach the President categorically, that names him, binds him by its terms, and forbids the gain the statutes permit him, is the emoluments clauses. The clauses are the apex control, the member of the family written precisely to bind the officer whom the statutes exempt. But the clauses, as Papers 3 and 4 established, are the member whose enforcement machinery is missing: no settled meaning, no eligible plaintiff, no available remedy, a fixed term that outlasts litigation, and a final backstop that is political rather than legal. The lattice thus fails twice at the top. The statutory controls exempt the President by their terms, and the constitutional control that would bind him cannot be enforced. The result is that the office for which a self-enrichment prohibition matters most is screened by a lattice whose statutory members release it and whose constitutional member cannot reach it.

The porous lattice and the family weakness

The argument of the paper can now be stated in full. The emoluments clauses are the constitutional members of a large family of controls against officeholder self-dealing, and the family as a whole forms a lattice rather than a seal. Each control was built to guard one channel, the officer’s own conflicts, foreign gifts, domestic gifts, the revolving door, the visibility of holdings, the neutralization of assets, and each guards its channel imperfectly while leaving the others, and the spaces between them, open. The conflict statute exempts the apex and waives at the margin; the gift regime manages rather than bars and releases the President; the revolving-door controls are short and evaded through shadow advising; disclosure illuminates without prohibiting and is enforced by no one; the blind trust is voluntary and cannot blind the assets that matter. Across all of them runs the same set of weaknesses the doctrinal papers identified in the constitutional core: exemptions and loosening at the apex, conflicted or toothless enforcers, the preference for disclosure over prohibition, narrow definitions and discretionary waivers, and voluntariness where compulsion would be needed. The emoluments clauses are not an isolated failure. They are the highest and oldest member of a family every branch of which leaks, and they leak in the same way and for the same reasons.

This completes the empirical and analytical groundwork of the series. The constitutional text and its doctrine, the enforcement vacuum, the history of benefit regardless of law, the family channel, the informational channel, and now the surrounding statutory lattice have together established both the breadth of the formal prohibitions and the consistency with which the operational norm has run around them. What remains is to draw the threads into a general account: to explain why hard rules against self-enrichment so reliably under-deliver, to identify the recurring mechanisms by which a categorical prohibition becomes a negotiable standard, and to offer a usable typology of the channels of evasion, direct, familial, informational, and deferred, that the survey has surfaced. The next paper undertakes that synthesis, arguing that the gap between prohibition and practice is not a series of separate failures to be patched but a stable equilibrium produced by the interaction of features that hold one another in place, given who holds the power to enforce.


Notes

[^1]: 18 U.S.C. § 208 (acts affecting a personal financial interest). The statute requires recusal from particular matters in which the officer or an imputed party has a financial interest. The imputed parties are the officer’s spouse, minor child, general partner, an organization in which the officer serves as officer, director, trustee, general partner, or employee, and a person with whom the officer is negotiating or has an arrangement for prospective employment. See Paper 6 for the treatment of the family imputation.

[^2]: Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act, 5 U.S.C. § 7342. The Act permits retention of foreign-government gifts below a minimal-value threshold, periodically adjusted by the General Services Administration, and requires that gifts above the threshold be deposited with the agency or otherwise turned over to the United States. The regime converts the categorical concern of the Foreign Emoluments Clause into a threshold-and-disposition rule.

[^3]: The executive-branch standards of ethical conduct, 5 C.F.R. Part 2635, Subpart B, generally bar acceptance of gifts from prohibited sources or given because of official position, subject to exceptions including a per-occasion allowance and an annual aggregate limit from a single source. The congressional chambers maintain analogous gift rules under their respective standing rules.

[^4]: 18 U.S.C. § 207 (restrictions on former officers and employees). The statute imposes a lifetime bar on a former officer’s knowingly representing a party before the government on a particular matter involving specific parties in which the officer participated personally and substantially while in government; a shorter bar on matters that were under the officer’s official responsibility; and cooling-off periods restricting senior and very senior officials from communicating with their former agencies. Former members of Congress are subject to their own cooling-off periods (longer for senators than for representatives) before lobbying their former chamber. The definitional exemption that removes the President, Vice President, members, and judges from the meaning of “officer” and “employee” in these statutes is at 18 U.S.C. § 202(c).

[^5]: The Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995, as amended by the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007, requires registration and periodic disclosure by those who engage in lobbying contacts above defined thresholds of compensation and time devoted to lobbying activities.

[^6]: “Shadow lobbying” refers to the practice by which former officials provide strategic counsel and advice to clients seeking to influence government without making the registrable lobbying contacts, or without crossing the time-devoted threshold, that would trigger registration under the Lobbying Disclosure Act. The practice allows the monetization of access and judgment outside the disclosure and cooling-off apparatus. It is the channel through which the “deferred” mode of benefit, taken up in Paper 9’s typology, most commonly flows.

[^7]: Ethics in Government Act of 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-521, establishing the public financial-disclosure system (the OGE Form 278e and periodic transaction reports), which requires reporting of the assets, income, and transactions of the official, the official’s spouse, and dependent children. See Papers 6 and 7.

[^8]: The Office of Government Ethics is an independent agency within the executive branch charged with overseeing the executive ethics program, issuing regulations and guidance, and certifying disclosure reports and qualified trusts. It does not possess authority to compel compliance, impose discipline, or prosecute; enforcement is effected through agency administrative action or through criminal prosecution by the Department of Justice. The division between the expert overseer and the enforcing authorities is a structural feature of the system.

References

Congressional Research Service. (2014, January 17). Financial assets and conflict of interest regulation in the executive branch (Report No. R43365). https://www.everycrsreport.com/reports/R43365.html

Ethics in Government Act of 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-521, 92 Stat. 1824.

Ethics Reform Act of 1989, Pub. L. No. 101-194, 103 Stat. 1716.

Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act, 5 U.S.C. § 7342.

Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007, Pub. L. No. 110-81, 121 Stat. 735.

Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995, Pub. L. No. 104-65, 109 Stat. 691.

Maskell, J. (2005, September 23). The use of blind trusts by federal officials (CRS Report No. RS21656). Congressional Research Service. https://www.everycrsreport.com/reports/RS21656.html

Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch, 5 C.F.R. pt. 2635.

Qualified Trusts, 5 C.F.R. pt. 2634, subpt. D.

U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 8.

U.S. Const. art. II, § 1, cl. 7.

18 U.S.C. § 202(c).

18 U.S.C. § 207.

18 U.S.C. § 208.


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Paper 7 — Insider Trading and the STOCK Act: Informational Emoluments and the Enforcement That Wasn’t

Gain in the form of knowledge

The series has so far tracked benefit that arrives as money or its equivalent: a gift, a payment, a commercial advantage, a relative’s enrichment. This paper turns to a benefit that arrives as information, the advance knowledge of a market-moving fact that comes to an officer because of the office, and that can be converted to gain as surely as any cash present. The conceptual claim of the paper is that informational advantage of this kind is a species of emolument in the broad sense established in Paper 2, a profit, gain, or advantage arising from public position. The officer who trades on what he learned in a closed briefing has been enriched by his office every bit as much as the officer who pockets a foreign gift; the difference is only in the form the gain takes and the mechanism by which it is realized.

That difference matters for the constitutional analysis, and the paper states the qualification at the outset to avoid overclaiming. The emoluments clauses, as Papers 2 and 3 showed, bar the receipt of a benefit from a source, a foreign state, the federal government, a state. Trading on inside information is not the receipt of a benefit from a source in that sense; it is a self-realized gain extracted from the market, using knowledge the office supplied. The clauses, read on their own terms, do not reach it. Informational enrichment is therefore policed, if at all, not by the Constitution’s emoluments provisions but by statute, principally the securities laws and the congressional-trading statute this paper examines. The point of treating it here is that the broad conception of emolument, gain arising from office, unifies the constitutional and statutory instruments as members of a single regime against officeholder self-enrichment, and that the statutory member exhibits the same gap between prohibition and practice that the constitutional member does. The disease is one; the instruments are several; and each instrument leaks at the same structural seams.

The remarkable ambiguity before 2012

The natural assumption is that a senator who sold stock the day after a secret briefing warned of a coming collapse would be committing a crime, and the more remarkable fact is that, for most of American history, it was unclear whether he would be. The uncertainty arose from the architecture of insider-trading law itself. Liability for insider trading under the federal securities laws is not a freestanding prohibition on trading with an informational advantage; it is built on the breach of a duty. Under the classical theory, a corporate insider who trades on material nonpublic information breaches a duty owed to the company’s shareholders. Under the misappropriation theory the Supreme Court adopted in the 1990s, a person who trades on confidential information breaches a duty of trust and confidence owed to the source of the information.[^1] Both theories require a duty that the trading violates. The difficulty, as applied to members of Congress, was identifying the duty. A legislator who learned a market-moving fact in a briefing owed no obvious fiduciary duty to corporate shareholders, and it was contestable whether he owed an enforceable duty of trust and confidence to the government as the source of the information such that trading on it amounted to misappropriation. The result was a genuine question, debated by serious lawyers, about whether members of Congress were covered by insider-trading prohibitions at all.

This is the operational norm in its starkest possible form, a domain in which it was unclear that even a stated rule existed. The conduct, an officer converting official knowledge into private trading profit, is among the cleanest instances imaginable of gain arising from office, the very thing the broad emolument concept names. Yet the legal apparatus that might forbid it was built around a duty that the officeholder might not owe, and so the prohibition hovered in doubt for decades. Legislation to clarify the matter was introduced as early as the mid-2000s and went nowhere, attracting almost no support, until external pressure forced the issue.[^2]

The reform under pressure

The pressure arrived in late 2011, when a television investigation and a widely read book brought congressional trading to public attention and framed it as a scandal of self-dealing hiding in plain sight. The political response was swift in the way responses to public outrage are swift. In his January 2012 address to Congress, the President called for legislation barring insider trading by members and pledged to sign it without delay, and a bill that had languished was reintroduced within days and signed into law that April as the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act.The President’s State of the Union request that Congress send him a bill banning congressional insider trading was followed within two days by the reintroduction of the measure, which became law on April 4, 2012.[^3]

The statute’s architecture is worth describing precisely, because its design encodes the weakness the rest of the paper traces. The STOCK Act did two principal things. First, it resolved the coverage ambiguity by affirming that members and employees of Congress owe a duty of trust and confidence with respect to material nonpublic information derived from their positions and are not exempt from the insider-trading prohibitions of the securities laws. This was a clarification of the stated rule, declaring that the prohibition applies. Second, and this is where the design choice lies, the operative machinery of the statute was disclosure rather than prohibition. The Act did not bar members from trading; it required them to report their securities transactions promptly, within periodic-transaction-report deadlines, and contemplated public, searchable online databases of those filings, on the theory that transparency would deter abuse and enable detection. The statute’s working mechanism, in other words, was sunlight, not a categorical ban. Members could still trade individual stocks in the industries they regulated and on which they held nonpublic information; they had only to disclose the trades afterward and face whatever scrutiny disclosure invited.

A disclosure-based regime makes a particular bet: that the conduct is acceptable so long as it is visible, and that visibility will summon accountability through the political process and the press. The bet is structurally identical to the consent valve of the Foreign Emoluments Clause examined in Paper 2, which likewise relied on publicity rather than prohibition, and it shares that mechanism’s dependence on actors having the will to act on what the sunlight reveals. Where that will is absent, disclosure illuminates conduct that nothing then constrains.

The hollowing

What followed is the pattern the series has documented in other registers: a reform passed under pressure, then hollowed in operation until little of its force remained. The hollowing of the STOCK Act proceeded along three lines.

The first was a quiet legislative retreat. Barely a year after passage, Congress amended the Act to remove the requirement that the financial disclosures of most congressional and executive-branch staff be posted in public, searchable online databases, the feature that would have made the transparency mechanism genuinely usable at scale. The amendment passed swiftly and with little public notice, scaling back the very architecture of visibility on which the original statute’s deterrent logic depended.[^4] The reform’s transparency engine was throttled within a year of its installation, and the retreat attracted a fraction of the attention the original passage had drawn, because outrage is loud and its dissipation is silent.

The second was the triviality of the sanction. The penalty for failing to file the required transaction reports on time settled into a nominal late fee, commonly two hundred dollars, an amount that ethics advocates have noted is trivial against the gains a well-timed trade can produce, and that has frequently been waived in practice.The penalty for a member’s violation of the STOCK Act’s reporting requirement is a fee of two hundred dollars, a sum critics describe as a negligible deterrent against the potential gains at stake. A disclosure requirement backed by a two-hundred-dollar fine is a requirement honored at the filer’s convenience, and studies of compliance have found widespread late filing across both parties with consequences too small to alter behavior.

The third, and most telling, was the failure of enforcement when a genuine test arrived. In early 2020, as members of Congress received nonpublic briefings on the approaching coronavirus pandemic, several senators sold substantial holdings in the weeks before markets collapsed. The episode crossed party lines: the senators whose trades drew scrutiny included three Republicans and one Democrat, among them the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, who sold between roughly six hundred thousand and one and seven-tenths million dollars in stock after receiving briefings and who stepped down from his chairmanship after the FBI seized his phone.[^5] Here was the cleanest conceivable case of potential informational emolument, trading by officers with access to nonpublic government information ahead of a foreseeable market event. And the enforcement outcome was uniform. The Department of Justice closed its investigations into three of the senators in May 2020 and into the committee chairman in January 2021, in every instance without charges.The Justice Department closed its insider-trading investigations into the three senators in May 2020 and into the remaining senator in January 2021, none resulting in charges. All denied wrongdoing, and the closures may well have reflected the genuine difficulty of proving that any trade rested on nonpublic information rather than public reporting. But that difficulty is precisely the point. The proof problem that makes insider-trading liability hard to establish against anyone is compounded for officeholders, and the result is that even the most conspicuous test of the regime, conducted under intense public scrutiny, produced no sanction. The statute that was supposed to end the practice presided over its most visible instance and left it unpunished.

The pattern named

These three lines of hollowing reproduce, in the statutory domain, the structural features the doctrinal papers identified in the constitutional one. The reform’s working mechanism was disclosure rather than prohibition, a bet on publicity that depends on a will to act that the structure does not supply. Its transparency architecture was quietly dismantled once the pressure that produced it had passed. Its penalties were nominal. And its enforcement, where it might have bitten, ran into the same proof problem and the same conflicted-enforcer dynamic that disables the emoluments clauses, the Department of Justice operating under constraints about charging sitting officials, the conduct structured to fall short of provable misappropriation, the body that wrote the rule being the body the rule restrains. The STOCK Act is the emoluments problem in a securities-law key, and it plays the same progression: a categorical wrong, a stated rule weakened at the moment of drafting by the choice of disclosure over prohibition, an operational norm of tolerance, and enforcement vested in actors without the incentive to enforce.

The conflicted-enforcer dynamic deserves emphasis because it is sharper here than anywhere else in the series. The STOCK Act is a statute by which Congress regulates Congress. The body asked to forbid its own members from profiting on official information is the same body whose members do the profiting, and the design choices that weakened the statute, disclosure rather than ban, the swift rollback of transparency, the nominal penalty, were all made by the regulated party acting as its own regulator. This is the structural conflict of Paper 4, the gatekeeper policing itself, in its most direct form, and it predicts exactly the hollowing that occurred. A rule against self-enrichment, drafted and enforced by those it restrains, will be drafted and enforced to leave room, and the room is the operational norm.

The persistence of the underlying conduct

The evidence that the regime failed to alter behavior is not anecdotal. Analyses of congressional trading have found that a large share of members continued to trade individual securities after the Act, including in companies and sectors over which their committees held jurisdiction. One widely cited accounting found that roughly a third of the members of Congress traded stocks or other assets in a recent multi-year period, and that thousands of those trades presented potential conflicts with the members’ legislative responsibilities.An accounting cited by reform sponsors found that about one in three members of Congress traded stocks or other financial assets in a recent multi-year span, with several thousand of those trades posing potential conflicts of interest with the members’ legislative duties. Public opinion on the matter is not closely divided; large majorities across party lines support barring members from trading individual stocks.Polling cited by sponsors indicates that roughly eighty-six percent of Americans support legislation barring members of Congress from trading individual stocks. The conduct persisted not because it was popular but because the disclosure-based regime, hollowed in the ways described, imposed no constraint that would stop it.

The recurring proposal to ban outright, and its fate

If disclosure failed, the obvious remedy is prohibition: a flat bar on members owning or trading individual stocks, the categorical approach the original statute declined. Proposals of exactly this kind have recurred for over a decade, and their fate is itself a chapter in the prohibition-and-tolerance story. As of mid-2026 the question is again live, and the legislative landscape illustrates how a measure with overwhelming public support and bipartisan rhetorical backing can nonetheless struggle to become law when it is the regulated body that must enact it.

Several competing bills have circulated in the current Congress. Fuller versions would bar members, and in most drafts their spouses and dependent children, from owning or trading individual stocks outright. One such measure, reintroduced in 2025, would prohibit members and their immediate families from owning or trading individual stocks, securities, commodities, or futures.A reintroduced 2025 measure would prohibit members of Congress, their spouses, and their dependent children from owning or trading individual stocks, securities, commodities, and futures. A bipartisan companion effort in both chambers would impose a comparable full ban and require sitting members to divest within a set period, and its House version accumulated well over a hundred cosponsors, with a discharge petition filed to force the measure to the floor.A bipartisan full-ban proposal in both chambers would require members to divest individual stocks within a set period after enactment; its House version drew more than a hundred cosponsors, and a discharge petition was filed to attempt to force a floor vote. Against these fuller bans, the leadership of the majority advanced a milder bill that would bar members and their families from purchasing new individual stocks while permitting them to retain existing holdings, require advance public notice of a week to two before any sale, and impose a penalty of two thousand dollars or ten percent of the transaction’s value, whichever is greater, plus return of gains.The milder leadership-backed bill would bar members and their families from buying new individual stocks while allowing them to keep existing holdings, require seven-to-fourteen-day advance public notice before any sale, and impose a penalty of two thousand dollars or ten percent of the trade’s value, whichever is greater, plus return of realized gains. That bill cleared the relevant House committee along party lines in January 2026.The leadership-backed bill was advanced out of the House Administration Committee along party lines in mid-January 2026.

The contrast between the bills is the contrast between prohibition and tolerance made legislative. The fuller bans would forbid the conduct; the milder bill would permit retention of existing portfolios, grandfathering the holdings most likely to present conflicts, and reformers have characterized it as largely toothless, riddled with the kind of exceptions that let the underlying practice continue.Reform advocates characterized the milder bill as largely toothless and riddled with loopholes that would leave the underlying practice substantially intact. The episode even drew a presidential endorsement of the milder measure and a notably bipartisan reception in the chamber.The milder bill drew a presidential endorsement, with a call to pass it promptly that received an unusually bipartisan reception in the chamber. Yet despite the endorsement, the public support, and the committee’s action, no ban had been enacted as of this writing; the leadership bill awaited a full floor vote that had been expected earlier in the year and had not occurred, and the fuller bans remained stalled.As of the most recent reporting in spring 2026, the leadership bill awaited a full House floor vote that had been anticipated earlier in the year and had not taken place, while the fuller-ban alternatives remained stalled. The reader should treat this account as a snapshot of a fluid situation; the particulars will have moved by the time these words are read, and the status of any specific bill should be checked against current sources.

What will not have moved is the pattern the snapshot illustrates. For more than a decade, the proposal to forbid officeholder trading outright has commanded public support, bipartisan sponsorship, and periodic bursts of momentum, and for more than a decade it has yielded either nothing or a diluted measure that preserves the core of the practice. The reason is the reason the STOCK Act was a disclosure statute rather than a ban, and the reason its transparency was rolled back and its penalties left nominal: the body that must enact the prohibition is the body the prohibition restrains. A categorical bar is exactly the instrument the conflicted enforcer is least likely to forge against itself, and the recurring near-misses are not failures of public will but expressions of the structural conflict the series has tracked throughout.

The thesis in a statutory key

Informational emoluments confirm the governing argument in a domain the constitutional clauses do not reach, which strengthens the claim that the gap between stated rule and operational norm is structural rather than peculiar to the emoluments text. The conduct, gain arising from office in the form of traded-upon knowledge, is a clean instance of the broad emolument concept. The stated rule against it was for decades so uncertain that its existence was debated, and when a statute finally affirmed it, the statute chose disclosure over prohibition, was hollowed within a year, was backed by a nominal penalty, and failed at its most conspicuous test. The recurring effort to replace disclosure with a categorical ban has been frustrated by the same conflicted-enforcer dynamic that disables the constitutional prohibition. The instruments differ, constitutional clause and securities statute, but the disease and its tolerance are one.

This paper completes the pair, begun with the family channel, that extends the analysis beyond the emoluments text proper into the wider field of officeholder self-enrichment. The next paper situates both within the full apparatus of conflict-of-interest law, the revolving door, gift rules, financial disclosure, and the blind trust, the lattice of statutory controls that surrounds the constitutional core. The argument there will be that each control in the lattice addresses one channel while leaving others open, and that the aggregate is porous rather than sealed, so that the emoluments clauses are best understood not as an isolated failure but as the constitutional member of a statutory family that shares, in every branch, the same enforcement weakness this paper has traced in the law of informational gain.


Notes

[^1]: The misappropriation theory of insider-trading liability was adopted by the Supreme Court in United States v. O’Hagan, 521 U.S. 642 (1997), under which a person who trades on confidential information in breach of a duty of trust and confidence owed to the source of the information violates Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and SEC Rule 10b-5. The classical theory rests on a duty owed to the corporation’s shareholders. Both require a breach of duty, which is what made the application to members of Congress uncertain.

[^2]: Legislation to address congressional trading was introduced in the mid-2000s (associated with Representative Brian Baird and others) and attracted negligible support until the subject gained public attention in late 2011. The dormancy of the proposal for years, followed by rapid enactment once outrage materialized, is itself characteristic of the reform-under-pressure pattern.

[^3]: The public attention is generally traced to a November 2011 television investigation and to Peter Schweizer’s book Throw Them All Out (2011). The President’s January 2012 State of the Union call for legislation, and the enactment of the STOCK Act, Pub. L. No. 112-105, on April 4, 2012, followed. The statute affirmed that members and employees of Congress are not exempt from the insider-trading prohibitions of the securities laws and owe a duty of trust and confidence regarding nonpublic information derived from their positions.

[^4]: The 2013 amendment, Pub. L. No. 113-7, removed the requirement that the financial disclosures of most congressional and executive-branch employees be made available in public, searchable, sortable online databases. It passed quickly and with limited public attention, scaling back the transparency architecture central to the original statute’s deterrent design.

[^5]: The 2020 episode involved stock sales by Senators Richard Burr (R-N.C.), Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.), James Inhofe (R-Okla.), and, through her husband’s trades, Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), made after coronavirus briefings and before the market decline. Burr, then chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, sold holdings reported between roughly $600,000 and $1.7 million and stepped down from the chairmanship after the FBI seized his phone. The Department of Justice closed the investigations into Loeffler, Inhofe, and Feinstein in May 2020 and into Burr in January 2021, in each case without charges. All denied wrongdoing. The bipartisan spread of the senators involved underscores that the channel is structural rather than partisan.

References

Campaign Legal Center. (2026, March 13). Congressional stock trading and the STOCK Act. https://campaignlegal.org/update/congressional-stock-trading-and-stock-act

Congressional Budget Office. (2026, March 19). H.R. 7008, Stop Insider Trading Act (Cost estimate, Publication No. 62243). https://www.cbo.gov/publication/62243

Ending Trading and Holdings in Congressional Stocks (ETHICS) Act, H.R. 4890, 119th Cong. (2025).

Justice Department closes investigation into Senator Richard Burr over stock sales. (2021, January 21). CBS News. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/doj-closes-insider-trading-investigation-into-richard-burr/

Schweizer, P. (2011). Throw them all out. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

Securities Exchange Act of 1934 § 10(b), 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b); 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5.

Stop Insider Trading Act, H.R. 7008, 119th Cong. (2026).

Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2012, Pub. L. No. 112-105, 126 Stat. 291.

Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act amendment, Pub. L. No. 113-7, 127 Stat. 438 (2013).

Lawmakers said they wanted to rein in their own stock trading. What happened? (2026, March 31). Roll Call. https://rollcall.com/2026/03/31/congress-stock-trading-ban-what-happened/

Teachout, Z. (2014). Corruption in America: From Benjamin Franklin’s snuff box to Citizens United. Harvard University Press.

United States v. O’Hagan, 521 U.S. 642 (1997).


Posted in Musings | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Paper 6 — The Family Channel: Relatives, Households, and the Boundary of the Prohibition

The seam the text left open

The close of Paper 2 identified, among the seams visible in the constitutional text, the individual framing of the prohibitions. The Foreign Emoluments Clause bars “any Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust” from accepting a forbidden benefit; the Domestic Emoluments Clause bars “the President” from receiving any other emolument. Both speak of the officer as a single natural person who must not receive. They were drafted for a picture in which a man and his finances are one thing, and they say nothing, in terms, about a benefit that lands on the officer’s spouse, his children, his siblings, or the enterprise that bears his name. Paper 5 then showed, across every era of the republic, that much of the gain officeholders actually captured reached them not in their own persons but through their households and their family businesses: the founding speculator’s land held in the family’s name, the spoilsman’s relatives installed in office, the modern officeholder’s enterprise enriched by those seeking his favor.

This paper isolates that channel and asks the question the prior two papers set up: why has the boundary of the prohibition run so consistently around the family, and what does that boundary reveal about the gap between stated rule and operational norm? The answer is that the family channel is the place where the operational norm most clearly outruns the stated rule, and it does so for reasons that are partly textual, partly evidentiary, and partly the product of a genuine competing value. The prohibitions are written around the individual; treating a benefit to a relative as a benefit to the officer collapses back into the proof problem the clauses were designed to avoid; and a rule broad enough to bar every relative from every gain would be both overbroad and unjust, so the formal apparatus draws narrow lines that are correspondingly easy to step around. The combination leaves the widest and most reliable channel of benefit largely unguarded.

What the formal apparatus reaches, and how narrowly

It would overstate the case to say the law ignores the family entirely. A patchwork of statutes reaches into the household at specific points, and a fair account must map that coverage before showing its gaps. The map matters because the gaps are not random; they fall in a consistent pattern that the operational norm exploits.

The principal conflict-of-interest statute imputes certain family interests to the officer. The criminal conflict-of-interest law forbids an executive-branch officer from participating personally and substantially in a matter in which he has a financial interest, and it extends that interest to include the financial interests of his spouse and minor children, along with a general partner, an organization in which he serves as officer or director, and a prospective employer.[^1] This is the clearest instance of the law treating a relative’s stake as the officer’s own, and it embodies a sound instinct: a man’s spouse’s holdings and his young children’s are, as a practical matter, his. But the reach stops almost exactly there. The statute imputes the interests of a spouse and minor children; it does not impute the interests of adult children, siblings, parents, in-laws, or more distant relatives. A grown son’s business, a brother’s contract, a son-in-law’s venture, a parent’s investment, none of these is the officer’s financial interest under the statute, however closely the officer’s fortunes may in fact be bound up with them. And the imputation that does exist is subject to waiver: the appointing authority may waive the conflict where it determines the interest is not so significant as to be likely to affect the integrity of the officer’s service, a provision that supplies a ready exit even within the narrow band the statute covers.[^2]

The anti-nepotism statute reaches the family at a different point, the appointment to office, and its coverage proved narrower still in application. Enacted in 1967, in reaction to a President’s appointment of his brother as Attorney General, the statute forbids a public official, expressly including the President, from appointing or employing a relative in the agency over which he exercises jurisdiction, and it defines “relative” broadly enough to include a son-in-law.[^3] On its face the statute should have barred the appointment of a President’s son-in-law to a White House post. But when that question arose in 2017, the Office of Legal Counsel concluded that the statute did not bar the appointment, reasoning that a separate provision authorizing the President to appoint White House Office staff without regard to other employment laws exempted those positions from the anti-nepotism bar.[^4] The opinion broke with the implication of earlier executive-branch advice and read the President’s immediate staff out of the statute’s coverage. The episode is doubly instructive. It shows that even the one statute squarely aimed at family appointments could be construed to leave the most consequential family appointments untouched, and it shows the now-familiar mechanism by which the executive, interpreting a restraint on itself through soft law, located an exit. More fundamentally, the anti-nepotism statute addresses only appointment to office; it says nothing about the far larger channel through which family benefit actually flows, which is not the relative’s salary but the relative’s enrichment through the officer’s position.

Two further regimes reach the household through disclosure rather than prohibition. The financial-disclosure system established by the post-Watergate ethics legislation requires senior officials to report not only their own assets and income but those of their spouses and dependent children, and the securities-trading statute that the next paper examines extends its disclosure requirements to the transactions of spouses and dependent children as well.[^5] These provisions illuminate the household, and illumination is not nothing; it is the precondition of any informal accountability. But disclosure is not a bar. It tells the public what a spouse holds; it does not forbid the holding or the benefit. And like the conflict statute, the disclosure regimes draw the family line at the spouse and the dependent child, leaving the adult child, the sibling, and the in-law outside even the duty to report.

The pattern across all four regimes is consistent. Where the law reaches the family at all, it reaches the spouse and the minor or dependent child, the inner household whose finances are functionally the officer’s, and it stops there. The relatives through whom benefit most reliably and most plausibly flows in the modern instances, adult children with their own enterprises, siblings trading on the family name, in-laws with independent businesses, fall outside the formal definitions almost entirely. The law’s conception of family is the dependent household; the operational channel of benefit is the extended family and, above all, the family enterprise.

The conduit problem and the proof it would require

Suppose a foreign state, wishing to cultivate an officer, enriches not the officer but his adult son, channeling a lucrative consulting arrangement or an investment to the son precisely because the son’s father holds power. This is, in the logic of the anti-dependence theory developed in Paper 2, the exact harm the Foreign Emoluments Clause exists to prevent: the creation of dependence through gain, the bending of an officer’s judgment toward a benefactor. And yet it is the harm the individual framing of the clause is least able to capture, for reasons that compound.

The first is textual. The clause bars the officer from accepting an emolument; the son is not the officer, and the son’s gain is not, on the face of the text, the officer’s receipt. To reach the arrangement, one must treat the benefit to the son as in substance a benefit to the father, which requires a theory of conduit, that the son is a channel through which the foreign state reaches the officer. But here the second difficulty arises, and it is the one that defeats the whole project. Proving that a benefit to a relative is in substance a benefit to the officer requires showing the connection, the intent, the purpose, that the gain to the relative was meant to reach or influence the officer. And that proof is precisely what the emoluments clauses were designed to avoid requiring. The genius of the prophylactic prohibition, as Paper 2 argued, is that it bars the receipt without demanding proof of a corrupt bargain, because the dependence it guards against forms beneath the level of any provable agreement. The conduit theory reintroduces the proof requirement through the back door. To treat the son’s gain as the father’s emolument, one must prove the kind of purposive connection that bribery law demands, and once that proof is required, the clause has lost the very feature that made it broader than bribery law. The family channel thus forces the prohibition back into the evidentiary posture it was built to escape.

The executive’s own interpretive practice illustrates how narrowly the conduit idea has been confined. The Office of Legal Counsel has been willing to treat a proportionate share of a partnership’s distributions as an officer’s emolument where the partnership represents a foreign government, on the theory that the entity is a conduit and a slice of the income is attributable to the foreign client.[^6] But that reasoning reaches a specific and structurally transparent case, the officer’s own share of an entity’s foreign-derived revenue, and does not extend to the general situation of a relative independently enriched. The conduit principle, in other words, has been applied where the officer himself holds the interest and the only question is the source of its income, not where the benefit lands on a separate person whom the officer does not financially own. The hardest and most common case, the independently enriched relative, lies beyond it.

The family enterprise and the modern frontier

The channel that most cleanly exposes the gap, and the one that returned the emoluments problem to public prominence, is the family enterprise that bears the officer’s name. The founders drafted for a world of personal finance; they did not contemplate the modern apparatus in which an officeholder’s wealth takes the form of a branded global business, owned by the officer or his family, licensing his name, operating hotels and properties that governments foreign and domestic may patronize. This structure launders advantage in a way the individual framing cannot easily grasp, because the benefit it confers is simultaneously the officer’s and not personally received by him in the clause’s sense.

Consider the principal modern instance. A President retained ownership of an enterprise that bore his name and transacted with foreign and domestic governments; foreign states booked its hotels and leased its space, and the President’s adult children both ran the enterprise and held their own interests in it, including foreign trademark grants obtained while their parent held office.[^7] Every element of this arrangement sits in the gap the formal apparatus leaves. The revenue to the enterprise is the conduct the broad reading of the clause would reach if “emolument” includes commercial profit, which is why the litigation examined in Papers 3 and 4 turned on that definition, but the children’s role and gains lie outside the conflict statute (they are adult children), outside the anti-nepotism statute as construed (and in any case that statute addresses appointment, not enrichment), and within the disclosure regimes only partially. The benefit to the family name and the family business is the officer’s in every practical sense, his wealth, his brand, his children’s fortunes, yet it is not his personal receipt of an emolument in the way the text most naturally contemplates, and the relatives who share in it are largely the relatives the statutes do not reach.

This is the operational norm outrunning the stated rule in its purest modern form. The dependence the founders feared, an officer whose interests are bound to those enriching him, is fully present: a foreign state that fills the officer’s hotels has done exactly what the clause was written to prevent, cultivated the officer through gain. But the gain arrives as ordinary commercial revenue to an enterprise, shared with adult relatives, and the prohibition written around the individual officer’s receipt cannot, without the contested broad definition and without surmounting the enforcement vacuum, reach it. The family enterprise is the channel where the eighteenth-century text and the twenty-first-century structure of wealth diverge most completely.

The continuity of the channel across eras and parties

The family channel is not a partisan artifact or a modern novelty; it runs through the republic’s history across administrations of every stripe, and cataloguing it briefly, without partisan inflection, confirms its constancy. The 1967 anti-nepotism statute was itself a reaction to a Democratic President’s appointment of his brother to the cabinet, and the fact that Congress had to legislate at all is evidence that the Constitution did not reach the conduct. A subsequent President’s brother accepted a large sum from a foreign government, registering belatedly as its agent amid a Senate inquiry, an episode in which the foreign state plainly sought influence through the relative rather than the officer.[^8] A First Lady’s well-timed commodity trades turned a small stake into a large gain under circumstances that drew lasting questions about whether the opportunity was extended because of her husband’s position.[^9] A President’s son was entangled in the failure of a savings institution during an era when his father held national office. Departing presidents of both parties granted clemency in circumstances touching their own relatives’ interests, including pardons sought through or benefiting siblings.[^10] And the most recent administrations have each faced sustained controversy over the foreign and domestic business dealings of adult children conducted in proximity to a parent’s high office, controversies that remain contested in their particulars but that share a single structural feature: the benefit flowed through an adult relative outside the formal definitions, and the formal apparatus had little purchase on it.[^11]

The bipartisan spread of these instances is the point. The family channel is durable precisely because it is structural rather than the property of any faction. Whoever holds office has relatives, those relatives have their own lives and enterprises, and the boundary of the prohibition runs around them by design. Each era’s instances differ in form, a cabinet appointment, a foreign payment, a commodity trade, a business venture, but they share the common feature that the gain reached the officer’s orbit through a person the rules did not reach, and that the rules’ silence was not an oversight to be corrected so much as a consequence of how the prohibitions were built.

Why the boundary runs where it does

It would be too simple to treat the family boundary as mere failure, and the analysis is incomplete without acknowledging the competing value that keeps the boundary narrow. A rule that imputed every relative’s gain to the officer, or that barred every relative of every officeholder from any benefit, would be both unworkable and unjust. Relatives have independent lives, careers, and businesses that predate and exist apart from the officer’s tenure; a President’s adult child is entitled to a livelihood, and a categorical rule attributing all of that child’s fortunes to the parent would punish the relative for the officer’s service and would sweep in conduct that has nothing to do with corruption. The law’s narrow definitions, the spouse and the dependent child, reflect a defensible judgment about which relatives’ finances are genuinely fused with the officer’s and which are not. The difficulty is that the defensible narrow line is also the easily evaded line, and the operational norm has settled precisely into the space between the relatives the law treats as the officer and the relatives through whom benefit in fact flows.

Three forces thus converge to leave the family channel open. The text frames the prohibition around the individual, so a relative’s gain is not the officer’s receipt. The conduit theory that might bridge the gap reintroduces the proof of purpose that the prophylactic prohibition was built to avoid, collapsing the broad rule back into the narrow one. And the genuine interest in not punishing relatives for an officer’s service keeps the formal definitions narrow, which keeps them evadable. Layered atop all three is the enforcement vacuum of Paper 4, which applies with full force here: even where a family benefit arguably crosses a line, the same standing, remedy, and political-remedy barriers that disable the prohibition generally disable it against the family channel in particular. The result is that the widest and most reliable avenue of officeholder benefit is the one the formal apparatus guards least.

The channel and the thesis

The family dimension confirms and sharpens the series’ central claim. The stated rule is a prohibition on the officer’s receipt; the operational norm is benefit that flows through the household and the enterprise to relatives the rule does not reach. The gap between them is not incidental but structural, written into the individual framing of the prohibitions, widened by the proof problem that defeats the conduit theory, and held open by the legitimate reluctance to punish relatives for an officer’s office. Across the republic’s history and across both parties, the family channel has been the durable route by which the dependence the founders feared has formed without triggering the prohibition they wrote, because the gain landed on a person the text did not name.

One feature of the family channel points directly to the next paper. Among the benefits that flow most readily to relatives is not money but information, the advance knowledge of a public decision, the market-moving fact known before it is public, which a relative can convert to gain as easily as the officer could and with even less formal exposure, since the relative holds no office and breaks no rule by trading. The disclosure regimes’ extension to the transactions of spouses and dependent children, noted above, is one of the few places the law reaches into the household precisely because informational advantage was understood to travel along family lines. The next paper takes up informational benefit as a species of emolument, the gain that arises from office in the form of knowledge rather than money, and examines the statute enacted to address it, its disclosure architecture, and the weakness of its enforcement, tracing the same pattern of prohibition and tolerance into the domain of inside information.


Notes

[^1]: The criminal conflict-of-interest statute, 18 U.S.C. § 208, prohibits an executive-branch officer from participating personally and substantially in a particular matter in which, to his knowledge, he, his spouse, his minor child, a general partner, an organization in which he serves as officer, director, trustee, general partner, or employee, or a person with whom he is negotiating prospective employment, has a financial interest. The imputation of the spouse’s and minor child’s interests is the statute’s clearest treatment of a relative’s stake as the officer’s own.

[^2]: Section 208(b)(1) permits the official responsible for the officer’s appointment to grant a written waiver where the disqualifying financial interest is not so significant as to be deemed likely to affect the integrity of the officer’s services. Commentators noted during the 2017 controversy that the waiver mechanism supplied a ready exit even within the statute’s narrow band of coverage.

[^3]: The federal anti-nepotism statute, 5 U.S.C. § 3110, was enacted in 1967 following President Kennedy’s appointment of his brother Robert Kennedy as Attorney General. It forbids a public official, a class the statute expressly defines to include the President, from appointing, employing, promoting, or advancing a relative in or to a civilian position in the agency in which the official serves or over which he exercises jurisdiction or control, and it defines “relative” broadly, including a son-in-law and daughter-in-law.

[^4]: Application of the Anti-Nepotism Statute to a Presidential Appointment in the White House Office, 41 Op. O.L.C. __ (2017) (memorandum opinion of Jan. 20, 2017). The opinion concluded that 3 U.S.C. § 105(a), which authorizes the President to appoint White House Office staff “without regard to any other provision of law regulating the employment or compensation of persons in the Government service,” exempts White House Office positions from the § 3110 bar. The opinion departed from the implication of earlier executive-branch advice and is a further instance of the executive construing a restraint on itself through soft law to locate an exit.

[^5]: The Ethics in Government Act of 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-521, established the public financial-disclosure system requiring senior officials to report the assets, income, and transactions of themselves, their spouses, and their dependent children. The Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2012, Pub. L. No. 112-105, similarly extends its securities-transaction disclosure requirements to the transactions of spouses and dependent children. Both regimes draw the family line at the spouse and the dependent child and impose disclosure rather than prohibition. The STOCK Act is treated in Paper 7.

[^6]: See the “conduit” reasoning discussed in Paper 3: the Office of Legal Counsel has treated a proportionate share of a partnership’s or entity’s distributions attributable to the entity’s foreign-government clients as an emolument to a federal officer holding an interest in the entity. The reasoning reaches the officer’s own interest in an entity’s foreign-derived revenue, not the independent enrichment of a separate relative.

[^7]: The arrangement is documented in the analyses underlying the emoluments litigation of 2017–2021. See Eisen, Painter, and Tribe (2016) for the contemporaneous legal analysis of a President’s retention of a branded enterprise transacting with foreign and domestic governments, and the discussion of foreign trademark grants to a presidential relative during the parent’s tenure. The definitional question, whether such commercial revenue constitutes an emolument, is treated in Papers 2 through 4.

[^8]: The reference is to the 1980 “Billygate” episode, in which President Carter’s brother Billy received a sum from the Libyan government, generally reported as roughly two hundred twenty thousand dollars, and registered belatedly as a foreign agent amid a Senate investigation. The episode is a clear instance of a foreign state seeking influence through the officer’s relative rather than the officer.

[^9]: The reference is to the cattle-futures trading by Hillary Clinton in 1978–1979, in which a small initial stake produced a large gain over a short period, drawing lasting questions about whether the trading opportunity was extended in light of her husband’s position as a state official. The episode illustrates the spousal channel and the difficulty of distinguishing independent gain from position-derived advantage.

[^10]: Departing presidents of both parties have granted clemency in circumstances touching relatives’ interests; the clemency actions at the close of the Clinton administration in 2001, including pardons connected to the President’s and First Lady’s relatives, drew particular scrutiny. The point is structural rather than partisan: the family channel recurs across administrations.

[^11]: The recent controversies over the foreign and domestic business dealings of presidential relatives, including those surrounding the adult children of the most recent administrations, remain contested in their factual particulars and are noted here only for their shared structural feature: benefit flowing through an adult relative outside the formal statutory definitions, where the formal apparatus has little purchase. This paper takes no position on the contested specifics.

References

Application of the Anti-Nepotism Statute to a Presidential Appointment in the White House Office, 41 Op. O.L.C. __ (2017).

Eisen, N. L., Painter, R., & Tribe, L. H. (2016, December 16). The emoluments clause: Its text, meaning, and application to Donald J. Trump (Governance Studies). Brookings Institution. https://www.brookings.edu/research/the-emoluments-clause-its-text-meaning-and-application-to-donald-j-trump/

Ethics in Government Act of 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-521, 92 Stat. 1824.

Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act, 5 U.S.C. § 7342.

Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2012, Pub. L. No. 112-105, 126 Stat. 291.

Teachout, Z. (2014). Corruption in America: From Benjamin Franklin’s snuff box to Citizens United. Harvard University Press.

18 U.S.C. § 208.

5 U.S.C. § 3110.

3 U.S.C. § 105(a).

U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 8.

U.S. Const. art. II, § 1, cl. 7.


Posted in American History, History | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Paper 5 — Benefit Regardless of Law: A History of Officeholder Self-Enrichment from the Founding Forward

The empirical question

The doctrinal papers built a structural account of why the emoluments prohibition is hard to enforce: the harm is diffuse, no plaintiff fits the standing template, the gatekeeper is conflicted, the remedy is uncertain, and the fixed term lets the officeholder outlast the suit. If that account is correct, it predicts something testable in the historical record. It predicts that the operational norm, the conduct officeholders and their families have actually been able to engage in, should run roughly constant across the eras of the republic, largely indifferent to the formal rules erected against it, because the machinery that would convert those rules into constraints has been missing or jammed throughout. This paper tests that prediction against the long record and finds it confirmed. From the founding generation to the present, officeholders have profited from position whether or not the formal rules forbade it, the form of the extraction tracking the era’s dominant source of value while the rules accumulated around it, and the presence of a prohibition failing, again and again, to track its effect.

A word on method and on the limits of the claim, restated from the prolegomenon so the chapters that follow are not misread. This is not a catalogue of villains, and it does not assert that every officeholder enriched himself or that the rules never deterred anyone. Deterrence by an unenforced rule is real and unmeasurable, and many officers across these eras served with their hands clean. The claim is narrower and harder. It is that reliable extraction has coexisted with the formal anti-enrichment principle in every period, that the channels of benefit were in large part lawful or unenforced rather than criminal, and that the proliferation of formal rules over two centuries has not produced a corresponding contraction in the underlying conduct. The history is offered as evidence of continuity in a gap, the gap between stated rule and operational norm that the whole series tracks.

The founding generation: land, information, and the men who wrote the rule

The most economical way to establish the continuity thesis is to begin with the generation that drafted the prohibition, because the same men who wrote a constitutional bar against profiting from office lived in a world where profiting from public position was ordinary. The currency of gain in the early republic was land, vast tracts of western territory whose value depended on government decisions, and the men who made those decisions, or knew of them early, were positioned to convert public knowledge into private fortune.

The clearest individual instance is William Duer, who served as Assistant Secretary of the Treasury under Hamilton and who used the position, and the information it carried, to speculate on a scale that ended in his ruin and helped trigger the financial panic of 1792. Duer resigned before the worst of his speculations, but the pattern, an officer trading on knowledge available to him because of his office, was understood at the time as a hazard of placing men of ambition near the levers of public finance. At the level of legislatures rather than individuals, the Yazoo affair of 1795 supplied the era’s defining scandal: the Georgia legislature, nearly to a man bribed by speculating companies, sold off enormous western land claims for a fraction of their worth, and when a reform legislature repudiated the sale, the resulting litigation reached the Supreme Court, which held in 1810 that the original grant was a contract the state could not simply rescind, leaving the corrupt bargain’s beneficiaries protected.[^1] The episode is a compact illustration of the whole problem: a legislature bought wholesale, a corrupt transaction completed, and a legal system that, having no ready mechanism to undo the self-enrichment, ended by ratifying its fruits.

The point is not that the founders were hypocrites. It is that the anti-dependence ideology and the practice of self-enrichment were born together, in the same generation and often in the same men, and that the constitutional prohibition was written into a culture that already understood public position as a route to private gain. The rule and the conduct it addressed were contemporaries from the first day.

The spoils era: the office as the emolument

If the founding era’s currency was land, the Jacksonian era’s was office itself. The doctrine of rotation in office, the principle that public positions should change hands with each electoral victory, was defended as democratic, but it converted the apparatus of government into a system of distributable rewards. The era gave the practice its enduring name when a New York senator defended it with the maxim that to the victor belong the spoils, and the spoils were precisely the offices of profit and trust the Constitution had named, now treated as the patronage of whoever held power.[^2]

The system’s logic made certain offices into private profit centers, and the most spectacular case was Samuel Swartwout, whom Jackson installed as Collector of the Port of New York, the single most lucrative federal post in the country because of the customs revenue that flowed through it. Swartwout extracted well over a million dollars and fled to Europe in 1838, his name briefly becoming a byword for absconding with public funds.[^3] The customhouse, an office of profit in the literal constitutional sense, had become a machine for private accumulation, and the scale of Swartwout’s theft was possible because the office combined large revenue flows with weak oversight, the same combination that recurs in every era’s signature scandal.

What matters for the continuity argument is the irrelevance of the formal emoluments prohibition to any of this. The Foreign Emoluments Clause guarded against capture by foreign crowns; the domestic spoils machine ran openly, internally, and lawfully under the patronage understandings of the day. The extraction had simply moved to a channel the founding prohibition did not address, and would have been hard pressed to address even had anyone thought to invoke it. The form of gain had shifted from land to office, and the rule, written for an earlier form, did not follow.

The Gilded Age: capital, subsidy, and the alignment of office with fortune

The decades after the Civil War produced the densest concentration of officeholder self-enrichment in American history, because the era fused two new forces: an industrial economy generating fortunes on an unprecedented scale, and a federal and municipal government dispensing the subsidies, charters, franchises, and land grants on which those fortunes depended. Where government decisions create value at that magnitude, the officers who make the decisions become valuable, and the era’s extraction followed the money into railroad subsidies, municipal contracts, and the chartering of corporations.

The Crédit Mobilier affair is the era’s emblem and the purest demonstration of the legislature itself for sale. The promoters of the Union Pacific created a construction company that billed the federally subsidized railroad at inflated rates, and to protect the arrangement from congressional interference, a sitting member of Congress, Oakes Ames, distributed discounted shares to colleagues, placing the stock, in the phrase that became notorious, where it would do the most good.[^4] When the scheme broke open in 1872, the names implicated reached a vice president, a future president, and much of the leadership of the House. The response is as instructive as the scandal. After investigation, Ames and one other member were censured; nearly everyone else was absolved, and no one was criminally punished or expelled.[^5] The political remedy, censure, was the heaviest sanction the system imposed on the wholesale bribery of the national legislature, and it left the careers and in most cases the gains of the participants intact. The pattern foreshadowed in the founding era, a corrupt bargain completed and a system without the means to undo it, repeated at national scale.

Around Crédit Mobilier clustered the era’s other monuments: the Whiskey Ring that diverted federal liquor taxes through officials reaching into the Grant administration, and at the municipal level the Tweed Ring, which converted the government of New York City into an instrument for systematic looting through inflated contracts and kickbacks. The era earned its reputation, and historians of the period have documented how thoroughly the line between public office and private fortune dissolved, how the Senate came to be described as a chamber of millionaires, and how business and politics interpenetrated until the corruption seemed less a deviation than the operating system.[^6] Bribery statutes existed throughout; they were rarely effective against men who could afford the best defense and who operated through transactions, the discounted share, the inflated contract, the franchise granted, that were difficult to distinguish from ordinary commerce. The extraction had moved again, from office to the subsidy and the franchise, and the formal rules trailed behind.

Machine politics and the genius of “honest graft”

The machine politics that grew out of the Gilded Age produced the most candid theoretical statement of the operational norm ever offered, and it is worth pausing on because it states the series’ thesis in the voice of a practitioner. George Washington Plunkitt, a Tammany Hall functionary whose reflections were recorded in the early twentieth century, drew a distinction between dishonest graft, the crude theft that could land a man in prison, and what he called honest graft, the conversion of advance knowledge of public works into private land profit. A man who learned where a park or a street would be built, bought the land first, and sold it back at a profit had, in Plunkitt’s account, done nothing illegal; he had merely seen his opportunities and taken them.[^7]

The significance of Plunkitt’s distinction is that it describes extraction that never breaks an enforceable rule. The machine politician’s most reliable gains came not from bribery but from the lawful exploitation of inside position, the same mechanism, in substance, as the founding-era speculator trading on official knowledge, now refined into a system and defended as legitimate. This is the operational norm in its purest form: benefit that flows to the officeholder through channels the law does not reach, requiring no corrupt bargain, leaving no crime to prosecute. The machine was an engine of lawful self-dealing, and its persistence across decades, in city after city, demonstrates that the absence of enforcement was not the failure of the rules but the space in which the conduct lived. Where the gain is lawful, there is nothing for an enforcement mechanism to enforce, and the prohibition, however broad on paper, simply does not touch the conduct.

Teapot Dome and the limits of the era of exposure

The Progressive era brought the most determined assault on officeholder self-enrichment the country had yet mounted, expanding the formal apparatus through the direct election of senators, the maturing civil service, and new norms of disclosure and investigation. Its signature triumph, and the rare instance in which a high officer was actually imprisoned, was the Teapot Dome affair. Albert Fall, Harding’s Secretary of the Interior, arranged secret, non-competitive leases of the naval oil reserves to two oilmen in exchange for what amounted to roughly four hundred thousand dollars in loans, bonds, and cash, and after a tenacious Senate investigation he was convicted of bribery and became the first cabinet officer imprisoned for crimes committed in office.[^8]

The case is usually told as a victory for accountability, and in a limited sense it was. But its details mark the limits even of the era of exposure. The investigation that uncovered the scheme depended on a determined Senate committee and fortuitous disclosure; the punishment, a year’s sentence and a fine Fall never paid, was modest against the scale of the betrayal; and most tellingly, the men who paid the bribes were acquitted of giving them, prompting the era’s bitter epitaph that a million dollars cannot be convicted.[^9] The system convicted the recipient and exonerated the payers, reached one official out of a corruption-ridden administration, and required an extraordinary mobilization of investigative will to do even that. Teapot Dome stands as the high-water mark of enforcement precisely because it was so exceptional, and its exceptionality confirms the rule. When the formal apparatus succeeds, it succeeds late, partially, and against a single conspicuous figure, while the broader operational norm continues undisturbed.

Mid-century: the administrative state and the influence economy

The growth of the federal government in the mid-twentieth century, through the New Deal, the war, and the national-security state, multiplied the points at which public decisions created private value, and the extraction multiplied with them. The defense economy was the largest new channel. The volume of procurement, the technical complexity that obscured pricing, and the intimacy between contractors and the officials who awarded contracts created a vast surface for self-dealing, and a departing president, himself a career soldier, felt obliged to warn the nation against the influence of the military-industrial complex he saw forming.[^10] The warning named a structural condition, not a single crime: an alignment of interest between public officers and private contractors so deep that the gain need not pass through any identifiable bribe.

Alongside the procurement economy ran an influence economy of gifts and access. A presidential chief of staff was forced from office over gifts that included a vicuña coat from a businessman seeking favorable treatment; a Senate insider built a web of self-dealing enterprises atop his official position before it collapsed into investigation.[^11] Each episode prompted a response in the form of new gift rules, conflict-of-interest statutes, and disclosure requirements, the apparatus that the later paper on the surrounding machinery will examine. But the responses lagged the conduct, addressed the particular channel that had just been exposed while leaving others open, and never closed the underlying gap. As the state grew, the operational norm grew with it, adapting to the new abundance of decisions worth influencing.

The modern era and the return to the founding form

The contemporary period presents a paradox that the continuity thesis resolves. There now exists a formal apparatus against officeholder self-enrichment more elaborate than anything the framers imagined: criminal bribery and gratuity statutes, conflict-of-interest laws, financial disclosure, gift rules, post-employment restrictions, and a securities-trading statute aimed at Congress, the subject of the two papers that follow. Yet extraction persists, having migrated into the forms the apparatus does not reach. The crudest conduct is criminalized and occasionally punished, the bribery sting that caught members of Congress accepting cash, the savings-and-loan financier whose patronage compromised a cluster of senators, the lobbyist whose largesse corrupted a swath of officials, the congressman who sold defense earmarks for a price.[^12] These are the dishonest graft of the modern age, and the law reaches them.

But the bulk of modern extraction, like Plunkitt’s honest graft, runs through lawful channels: the lobbying industry through which former officials monetize their access, the revolving door between government and the firms officials once regulated, the favorable transaction structured to fall short of a provable bribe, the family enterprise that benefits from the officeholder’s position. And the most visible contemporary controversies have returned the country to the founding form of the problem, the officeholder whose private business profits from the office he holds, which is the emoluments problem proper. The Trump-era litigation examined in the doctrinal papers arose because a President retained ownership of a global enterprise that transacted with foreign and domestic governments, and the question it raised, whether ordinary commercial revenue to an officer’s business is a forbidden emolument, is the same question the founding generation’s land speculation posed in a different idiom. After two centuries of accumulating rules, the conduct has come full circle, and the prohibition that opened the series is once again the rule that cannot be made to bite.

The continuity demonstrated

The record assembled here supports the prediction the structural account generated. Across more than two centuries, the form of officeholder self-enrichment has tracked the era’s dominant source of value: land and official information in the founding period, office itself in the spoils era, subsidies and franchises in the Gilded Age, the inside knowledge of public works under the machines, defense procurement and access in the mid-century state, and lobbying, the revolving door, and the family enterprise in the present. Each transition moved the extraction to a channel the existing rules did not reach, and the rules then expanded, after exposure, to address the channel just revealed, only for the conduct to migrate again. The formal apparatus grew from a handful of constitutional clauses to a dense statutory and regulatory regime, and across that entire growth the underlying conduct persisted. The presence of a rule has not tracked its effect.

The reason was established in the prior paper and confirmed by this one. Extraction persists because its dominant channels are lawful or unenforced rather than criminal, so that there is frequently nothing for an enforcement mechanism to enforce; and where the conduct is criminal, the enforcement that reaches it is exceptional, late, partial, and political, convicting the conspicuous recipient while the payers walk and the broader practice continues. The operational norm, what officeholders and their connections can in fact extract without consequence, has been the real law of the subject throughout, and the stated rules have functioned as its intermittent and largely ineffectual shadow.

One feature of the record has been deferred and deserves its own treatment, because it recurs in nearly every episode examined here. The founding speculator’s family held the land; the spoilsman’s relatives held the offices; the Gilded Age legislator’s gains passed through family firms; the machine politician’s profits accrued to household enterprises; the modern officeholder’s business benefits his children and his name. Much of the extraction documented in this paper reached the officeholder not in his own person but through his household, his relatives, and his enterprises, the channel that the individual framing of the prohibitions, noted at the close of Paper 2, leaves most exposed. The next paper isolates that channel, the family dimension of officeholder benefit, and asks why the boundary of the prohibition has so consistently run around it.


Notes

[^1]: On Duer’s speculation and the Panic of 1792, see the standard accounts of early Treasury administration. The Yazoo affair and its resolution are treated in Fletcher v. Peck, 10 U.S. (6 Cranch) 87 (1810), in which the Court held the original land grant a contract protected against legislative repeal, shielding subsequent purchasers and leaving the corrupt sale’s consequences in place. The case is a foundational instance of a legal system unable to undo a completed self-enriching bargain.

[^2]: The maxim associating electoral victory with the spoils of office is attributed to Senator William L. Marcy of New York, circa 1832, and became the popular label for the patronage practice the Jacksonian rotation system institutionalized. The offices distributed were, in constitutional terms, the very “offices of profit or trust” the founding prohibitions named.

[^3]: Samuel Swartwout, appointed Collector of the Port of New York, embezzled a sum generally placed well above one million dollars and fled to Europe in 1838. The customs collectorship was the most lucrative federal office of the period, and the episode illustrates the combination of large revenue flows and weak oversight that recurs in each era’s signature theft.

[^4]: The Crédit Mobilier promoters used the construction company to bill the federally subsidized Union Pacific at inflated rates; to forestall congressional interference, Representative Oakes Ames distributed discounted shares to colleagues. The phrase describing the placement of the stock where it would do the most good entered the political lexicon as a description of legislative bribery. The scheme was exposed by the New York Sun in September 1872.

[^5]: The House investigation, chaired by Representative Luke Poland, implicated a vice president (Schuyler Colfax), a future president (James Garfield), and numerous members. The House censured Ames and James Brooks in 1873; the remainder were absolved, and no criminal punishment followed. The mildness of the sanction against wholesale legislative bribery illustrates the weakness of the political remedy.

[^6]: For the broader pattern of Gilded Age corruption, including the Whiskey Ring, the Tweed Ring, and the interpenetration of business and politics, see Summers (1993) and White (2011). McCormick (1981) traces how the recognition that business systematically corrupted politics shaped the Progressive reaction.

[^7]: Plunkitt’s distinction between “honest” and “dishonest” graft, and his defense of converting inside knowledge of public works into private land profit, is recorded in Riordon (1905). His summary that he saw his opportunities and took them is the most candid practitioner’s statement of lawful self-dealing through official position.

[^8]: On Teapot Dome, see Britannica’s account and the contemporaneous record. Secretary Albert Fall arranged secret, non-competitive leases of the naval oil reserves at Teapot Dome, Wyoming, and Elk Hills, California, in exchange for roughly four hundred thousand dollars in loans, bonds, and cash from Edward Doheny and Harry Sinclair. Fall was convicted of bribery in 1929, fined one hundred thousand dollars, and sentenced to a year’s imprisonment, becoming the first cabinet officer jailed for crimes committed in office.

[^9]: Doheny and Sinclair were acquitted of paying the bribes Fall was convicted of accepting; Sinclair served a short term for contempt and jury tampering rather than for bribery. The contemporary observation that a million dollars cannot be convicted captured the asymmetry. The Supreme Court separately voided the leases as corrupt.

[^10]: President Eisenhower’s farewell address of January 17, 1961, warned against the influence of what he termed the military-industrial complex, describing a structural alignment of interest between public officials and defense contractors rather than a discrete criminal act.

[^11]: Sherman Adams, President Eisenhower’s chief of staff, resigned in 1958 over gifts, including a vicuña coat, from a businessman seeking favorable regulatory treatment. Robert (Bobby) Baker, secretary to the Senate majority, became the subject of investigation in the 1960s over self-dealing enterprises built atop his official position. Each prompted incremental tightening of gift and conflict rules.

[^12]: Modern criminal instances include the Abscam operation (1980), in which members of Congress accepted cash from agents posing as foreign interests; the Keating Five matter (1989), involving senators’ interventions on behalf of a savings-and-loan financier; the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal of the 2000s; and the conviction of Representative Randy Cunningham (2005) for selling defense appropriations. These represent the criminalized residue; the larger volume of modern extraction runs through lawful lobbying, the revolving door, and family enterprise.

References

Fletcher v. Peck, 10 U.S. (6 Cranch) 87 (1810).

McCormick, R. L. (1981). The discovery that business corrupts politics: A reappraisal of the origins of progressivism. The American Historical Review, 86(2), 247–274.

Noonan, J. T., Jr. (1984). Bribes. Macmillan.

Riordon, W. L. (1905). Plunkitt of Tammany Hall. McClure, Phillips & Co.

Summers, M. W. (1993). The era of good stealings. Oxford University Press.

Teachout, Z. (2014). Corruption in America: From Benjamin Franklin’s snuff box to Citizens United. Harvard University Press.

Teapot Dome Scandal. (n.d.). In Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved June 8, 2026, from https://www.britannica.com/event/Teapot-Dome-Scandal

White, R. (2011). Railroaded: The transcontinentals and the making of modern America. W. W. Norton.

U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 8.

U.S. Const. art. II, § 1, cl. 7.


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Paper 4 — The Enforcement Vacuum: Standing, Justiciability, and the Problem of Who May Sue

The question prior to meaning

The previous two papers established that the stated rule is strong and that its interpretation has been left, for most of the republic’s history, to soft law written by the branches the rule restrains. This paper takes up the question that sits beneath both: even granting the broad reading, even crediting the anti-dependence theory in full, who can make an officer obey? A prohibition is a sentence; a constraint is a sentence plus a mechanism that gives the sentence consequences plus an actor with the incentive to run the mechanism. The emoluments clauses have the sentence. This paper shows that the mechanism is absent or jammed at every entrance, and that the absence is not a defect to be patched but the predictable result of mating a structural, diffuse-harm prohibition to a justiciability regime built around concrete private injury and an enforcement design that hands the keys to conflicted political actors.

There are, in principle, five routes by which the clauses might be enforced. A private party injured by a violation might sue. A state might sue. Members of Congress might sue. Congress as a body might use its consent power and its other levers to discipline a violation. And in the last resort the officeholder might be impeached. The paper takes these in turn and shows that the first three are blocked or destabilized by the law of standing and justiciability, the fourth is committed to a body with weak incentive to use it, and the fifth is a political proceeding rather than the enforcement of a legal rule. What remains, after each route is examined, is a prohibition that binds in proportion to the political will of the officeholder’s adversaries rather than in proportion to the conduct the clause forbids.

The standing architecture and the shape of the harm

Every suit in a federal court must clear the requirements of Article III standing: the plaintiff must show an injury in fact that is concrete and particularized, fairly traceable to the defendant’s conduct, and likely to be redressed by a favorable decision.[^1] These requirements are not technicalities. They express a conception of the judicial role under which courts resolve concrete disputes between injured parties rather than police the government’s compliance with the law at the instance of any citizen who objects. A generalized grievance, an injury shared equally by the whole citizenry in its interest in lawful government, does not confer standing, because it is the kind of complaint the political process, not the courts, is meant to address.

This conception runs directly against the grain of the emoluments clauses. The harm the clauses guard against is precisely a generalized one: the corruption of the republic’s officers through dependence on foreign or domestic benefactors, a harm to the integrity of self-government as such. The framers wrote a structural prohibition to protect a public good, and the injury from its violation falls, in the first instance, on everyone and no one in particular. That is the worst possible fit with a standing doctrine that demands a concrete, particularized, individual injury. The very feature that makes the clauses important, their orientation toward a diffuse public interest rather than a private right, is the feature that makes them nearly impossible to bring before a court. An officer who takes a foreign emolument injures the constitutional order; he does not, by that act alone, injure any identifiable plaintiff in the concrete, particularized way standing requires. The clauses create no private right, name no enforcer, and authorize no damages. They protect a value, and values do not have standing.

Competitor standing as the workaround, and its instability

Because the constitutional harm itself yields no eligible plaintiff, the only suits able to approach the courthouse did so on a theory that has little to do with the clauses’ purpose: competitor standing. The plaintiffs in the major suits, an ethics organization joined by owners of hotels and restaurants, and later the State of Maryland and the District of Columbia, alleged not that they were injured as citizens in the integrity of their government but that they suffered concrete economic injury as business competitors of the President’s hotels and restaurants, which drew foreign and domestic government patronage that allegedly flowed to them because of, and in violation of, the emoluments clauses.[^2] Competitor standing is a recognized doctrine: a plaintiff who competes in the same market as a party benefiting from a defendant’s unlawful conduct may show injury in the increased competition, even where other causes may also explain the competitor’s gains.[^3]

The theory is ingenious, and it is also revealing. The competitor sues not as a guardian of the constitutional value but as an injured market participant, and the constitutional violation enters the suit only as the unlawful conduct that skewed the market. The plaintiff’s injury is incidental to the constitutional wrong rather than coextensive with it. This is the only way the clauses could reach a court at all, by recasting a structural-integrity harm as an economic-competition harm so that it would fit the standing template, and even so the theory proved unstable. The Second Circuit accepted it, holding that the hospitality plaintiffs adequately alleged competitive injury and fell within the zone of interests of the clauses, reasoning that one who sues to enforce a law limiting a competitor’s activity satisfies the zone-of-interests test even if the law was not enacted to shield such plaintiffs from competition.[^4] The Fourth Circuit, in the parallel suit, reached the opposite conclusion, finding the attorneys general’s asserted competitive interest too attenuated and abstract to support standing and the suit an inappropriate use of courts built to resolve concrete controversies.[^5] The result was a square circuit split on whether the only viable standing theory was viable at all, a split the en banc Fourth Circuit then resolved in favor of the plaintiffs before the Supreme Court mooted the entire matter.[^6]

The lesson is structural, not partisan. The sole route to standing required a theory tangential to the constitutional purpose, and even that tangential theory divided the federal courts of appeals down the middle. A prohibition whose enforcement depends on whether a court will accept a competitor-injury workaround, and whose workaround commands no consensus among judges, is a prohibition with no reliable enforcer. Where the constitutional harm cannot itself open the courthouse door, enforcement becomes contingent on the fortuity that some economically injured third party exists and that the reviewing court accepts an attenuated theory of that party’s injury.

State plaintiffs and the federalism overlay

The state plaintiffs added theories unavailable to private parties, asserting proprietary injury to state-owned competing venues, quasi-sovereign interests in their residents’ economic welfare, and parens patriae standing to vindicate their citizens’ interests. The Maryland district court accepted competitor and proprietary standing for the state plaintiffs, locating concrete economic injury in the competitive disadvantage to state-affiliated convention and hospitality facilities.[^7] The Fourth Circuit panel rejected these theories as too remote before the en banc court revived them. The state suits thus traveled the same unstable path as the private one, with the added complication that suits by states against the President raise their own separation-of-powers and federalism sensitivities. The states fared somewhat better than private plaintiffs at the threshold because they could point to government-owned competing enterprises, but they remained dependent on the same competitor-injury logic and the same judicial willingness to credit it, and they too were ultimately mooted out before any final judgment on the merits.

Legislator standing and the conflicted gatekeeper

The third route, suit by members of Congress, foundered on a distinct and well-settled barrier. In the congressional suit, more than two hundred members alleged that the President’s acceptance of foreign emoluments without seeking congressional consent injured them by depriving them of their constitutional role in voting on such consent under the Foreign Emoluments Clause. The District of Columbia Circuit held that they lacked standing, applying the rule that individual legislators cannot sue to assert an injury to the institutional interests of the legislature as a whole; only the body, acting collectively, holds such an interest, and an individual member’s vote-dilution or lost-prerogative theory does not supply the concrete, personal injury Article III demands.[^8] The Supreme Court declined review, leaving the holding intact.[^9]

This barrier deserves emphasis because it interacts with the clauses’ design in a way that closes a circle. The Foreign Emoluments Clause makes Congress the gatekeeper: an officer may accept a foreign emolument with congressional consent, and the clause’s safeguard is supposed to be the requirement that the question be put to the legislature publicly. But the clause gives Congress only the power to consent or withhold consent; it gives Congress no judicial remedy to compel an officer who never asks, and the legislator-standing rule means the individual members who might care cannot take the matter to court in their own names. The body as a whole could, in theory, authorize litigation or act through its other powers, but a closely divided and partisan legislature has weak incentive to discipline an officer of its own coalition, and a legislature controlled by the officer’s opponents faces its own collective-action and political constraints. The gatekeeper designed to administer the consent valve is thus a body that, as a practical matter, can decline to act, and its inaction operates as a kind of silent consent the clause never contemplated. The mechanism intended to bring foreign benefits into the open depends entirely on a will to act that the structure neither supplies nor compels.

The merits-adjacent barriers: zone of interests, ripeness, and the political question

Beyond Article III standing lie further gates that the emoluments suits had to clear, and the district courts initially found several of them closed. The first district court to rule dismissed on the alternative grounds that the plaintiffs fell outside the zone of interests the clauses protect, that their claims were not ripe, and that the suit presented a non-justiciable political question.[^10] Each ground reflects a way the clauses resist judicial enforcement even after a plaintiff has cleared injury in fact.

The zone-of-interests inquiry asks whether the plaintiff’s grievance falls within the interests the law in question protects. Because the emoluments clauses protect the public interest in uncorrupted government rather than the private interest of business competitors, the zone-of-interests question is genuinely hard, and reasonable judges divided on whether a competitor’s economic interest is one the clauses were meant to serve. The ripeness objection holds that a court should not decide a constitutional question prematurely, and in a setting where the officer’s conduct is ongoing and the contours of the alleged violation shift, ripeness offers a ready ground for deferral. The political-question objection is the weightiest. It rests on the argument that the Foreign Emoluments Clause textually commits the consent decision to Congress, so that whether a given benefit should be permitted is a question assigned to a coordinate branch rather than to the courts, and on the related argument that the undefined term supplies no judicially manageable standard for decision.[^11] One concurring appellate judge captured the objection in its strongest form, describing the suit as proceeding under provisions that confer no right, provide no remedy, and lack guidance in precedent and history, and warning that a loose theory of competitor standing would let litigants haul the presidency into court at will.[^12]

Against these objections stands the principle that an individual who suffers a concrete, otherwise-justiciable injury may raise even a structural constitutional provision as the basis of the claim, a principle the Supreme Court affirmed in the federalism context.[^13] The emoluments plaintiffs invoked it to argue that, having established competitor injury, they could press the structural prohibition as the rule the defendant violated. But the very need to lean on that principle shows the difficulty: the clauses do not themselves furnish a plaintiff, and the plaintiff who arrives by another door must then persuade the court that the structural prohibition is judicially enforceable at all, against arguments that it is committed to Congress and lacks manageable standards. Each merits-adjacent gate is independently surmountable and collectively formidable, and any one of them, accepted, ends the suit.

The absence of affirmative enforcement machinery

Litigation by injured parties is only one possible mode of enforcement, and it is worth asking why the others, criminal prosecution and administrative enforcement, are equally unavailable. There is no criminal statute that directly enforces the emoluments clauses. The statutes that police related conduct, the bribery laws and the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act, are narrower than the constitutional prohibition and address different conduct; the gifts statute, for instance, sets up a regulatory regime for the receipt and disposition of foreign gifts rather than enforcing the clause’s categorical bar.[^14] No agency holds authority to enforce the clauses against an officer. The Office of Government Ethics administers disclosure and advises on conflicts but cannot compel compliance or impose penalties. And the Department of Justice, which might in theory prosecute, operates under its own longstanding opinion that a sitting President is not amenable to indictment and criminal prosecution, an opinion that, whatever its merits, removes the executive’s prosecutorial arm from the field where the violation matters most.[^15] The affirmative enforcement apparatus that exists for ordinary criminal law simply has no counterpart for the emoluments clauses; there is no prosecutor, no regulator, and no penalty.

The remedial vacuum

Suppose a plaintiff clears standing, survives the zone-of-interests, ripeness, and political-question objections, and prevails on the merits. What relief follows? Here too the path is obstructed. The relief sought in the suits was declaratory and injunctive, a declaration that the President was violating the clauses and an injunction against continued violation. But a court’s power to enjoin the President in the performance of his duties is doubtful as a matter of long standing; the Supreme Court held in the nineteenth century that the judiciary will not enjoin the President in the discharge of his official functions, and while the emoluments plaintiffs argued that a President’s private business conduct is not an official function, the question is unsettled and raises separation-of-powers concerns that a court would not lightly resolve.[^16] Damages are unavailable because the clauses create no private right of action. Disgorgement of unlawful emoluments has been proposed as a remedy but has no settled doctrinal footing. The plaintiff who wins thus confronts a remedial vacuum: the most that a court might confidently grant is a declaration, and a declaration unenforceable by injunction against a President who chooses to disregard it is a moral rather than a legal sanction.

The mootness escape and the fixed-term structure

The capstone of the enforcement analysis is the interaction between the office’s fixed term and the doctrine of mootness, introduced in the prior paper and developed here as the decisive structural feature. A prohibition aimed chiefly at a President’s conduct in office is inherently vulnerable to the clock. Litigation over emoluments is slow; it moves through motions to dismiss, interlocutory appeals, circuit splits, and petitions for rehearing, and it can easily consume the years of a single term. When the term ends, the case against the departed officer becomes moot, and the doctrine of Munsingwear vacatur then directs that the judgments rendered along the way, including any that favored the plaintiffs, be vacated so that they will not stand as precedent.[^17] This is exactly what occurred: the Supreme Court dismissed the surviving suits as moot upon the end of the President’s term and ordered the lower courts to vacate their decisions, erasing the one judicial construction of the term and the appellate rulings on standing.[^18]

The structure is self-defeating in a precise way. The temporariness of the office is what makes the prohibition urgent, an officer’s dependence on a foreign power matters most while he holds power, yet that same temporariness is the mechanism of escape, because the officeholder need only outlast the litigation to moot it and, through vacatur, to delete any interim losses. The merits are never rejected. They are run out the clock, and the clock is built into the office. A prohibition that can be enforced only by litigation that cannot be completed within the term it governs is a prohibition with a structural expiration date, and the defendant controls the calendar.

The political backstop

The one mechanism with undisputed reach to a sitting President is impeachment. A violation of the emoluments clauses, particularly the acceptance of foreign benefits in the manner the Foreign Emoluments Clause forbids, could in principle constitute an impeachable offense, and bribery is named in the Constitution among the grounds for impeachment. But impeachment is a political proceeding, not the application of a legal rule by a neutral tribunal. It requires a majority of the House to impeach and two-thirds of the Senate to convict, thresholds that in practice can be met only when the officeholder’s opponents hold not merely a majority but an overwhelming majority, and only when they choose to spend their political capital on the effort. The proceeding is governed by political incentives, calculations of electoral advantage, party loyalty, public opinion, rather than by a determination of whether the clause was violated. To say that the ultimate enforcement of the emoluments clauses is impeachment is therefore to say that the prohibition binds an officer exactly to the degree that his adversaries command a supermajority and elect to use it. That is not enforcement of a rule in the ordinary sense, under which the rule binds evenly regardless of who is watching and regardless of the violator’s political strength. It is the substitution of a political contest for a legal one, and it leaves the prohibition’s force a function of the violator’s coalition rather than of his conduct.

The vacuum as equilibrium

Drawing the analysis together returns the series to its governing thesis. The enforcement vacuum is not a collection of fixable defects but a stable arrangement produced by the interaction of features that reinforce one another. The clauses protect a diffuse public interest, which standing doctrine treats as a generalized grievance unfit for courts, so the constitutional harm cannot itself produce a plaintiff. The only plaintiffs who can approach the courthouse arrive on a competitor-injury theory tangential to the clauses’ purpose, and that theory divides the courts. The legislator route is closed by the institutional-injury rule, and the congressional gatekeeper designed to administer the consent valve has weak incentive to act and no judicial remedy if it does not. The merits-adjacent gates, zone of interests, ripeness, and political question, each offer an independent ground to avoid decision. There is no prosecutor, no regulator, and no penalty. The remedy, even on victory, is uncertain and may be unenforceable against the President. The fixed term lets the defendant outlast the suit, and vacatur erases his interim losses. And the final backstop is a political proceeding calibrated to the violator’s coalition rather than his conduct.

Each of these features could be defended in isolation as a reasonable feature of the judicial system or the constitutional design. Together they ensure that the emoluments clauses, however broadly read and however earnestly meant, arrive at the moment of enforcement already disabled. The prohibition is real on the page and inert in operation, and the inertness is structural. This is the mechanism by which a hard rule becomes a negotiable one: not through any single failure but through a lattice of doctrines and incentives that, in combination, leave no actor both able and willing to compel obedience. The next paper turns from this structural account to the historical record, and asks whether the operational norm, the conduct officers and their families have actually been able to engage in regardless of the formal rule, has in fact remained roughly constant across the republic’s eras precisely because the enforcement vacuum documented here has been a constant feature of the landscape from the founding forward.


Notes

[^1]: The tripartite standing requirement, injury in fact, causation, and redressability, is the canonical statement in Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555 (1992). The bar on generalized grievances, injuries shared in substantially equal measure by the whole citizenry in lawful government, is a recurring corollary.

[^2]: The competitor and proprietary theories are set out in the complaints and developed in CREW v. Trump, 276 F. Supp. 3d 174 (S.D.N.Y. 2017) (dismissing for lack of standing and on other grounds), and District of Columbia v. Trump, 291 F. Supp. 3d 725 (D. Md. 2018) (sustaining competitor and proprietary standing for state plaintiffs).

[^3]: The competitor-standing doctrine permits a market participant to establish injury in the increased competition produced by a defendant’s unlawful conduct, notwithstanding other possible causes of the competitor’s gains. The Second Circuit applied it to the hospitality plaintiffs.

[^4]: CREW v. Trump, 953 F.3d 178 (2d Cir. 2020), reversing the district court’s dismissal, accepting competitor standing, and holding that a plaintiff suing to enforce a law that limits a competitor’s activity satisfies the zone-of-interests test even where the law was not enacted to protect such plaintiffs from competition. Rehearing en banc was denied over the dissent of five judges, CREW v. Trump, 971 F.3d 102 (2d Cir. 2020).

[^5]: In re Trump, 928 F.3d 360 (4th Cir. 2019), granting mandamus and concluding that the attorneys general’s asserted interest in enforcing the clauses was too attenuated and abstract to support standing.

[^6]: The en banc Fourth Circuit revived the Maryland and District of Columbia suit in 2020, producing a circuit split with the Second Circuit on competitor standing that the Supreme Court did not resolve, dismissing instead as moot.

[^7]: District of Columbia v. Trump, 291 F. Supp. 3d 725, 740–49 (D. Md. 2018). The court located concrete economic injury in the competitive disadvantage to state-affiliated hospitality and convention facilities; the standing decision was later vacated, 838 F. App’x 789 (4th Cir. 2021) (mem.).

[^8]: Blumenthal v. Trump, 949 F.3d 14 (D.C. Cir. 2020), applying the institutional-injury rule of Raines v. Byrd, 521 U.S. 811 (1997), under which individual legislators lack standing to assert an injury that runs to the legislature as an institution.

[^9]: Blumenthal v. Trump, cert. denied, 141 S. Ct. 553 (2020). The denial left the standing holding in force; it is one of the few emoluments rulings of the era not vacated.

[^10]: CREW v. Trump, 276 F. Supp. 3d 174 (S.D.N.Y. 2017), dismissing on standing, zone-of-interests, ripeness, and political-question grounds in the alternative.

[^11]: The political-question argument rests on Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186 (1962), and its factors, principally a textually demonstrable commitment of the issue to a coordinate branch (here, the consent power of Congress) and the absence of judicially manageable standards (here, aggravated by the undefined term).

[^12]: The concurrence in the Fourth Circuit’s mandamus disposition described the suit as proceeding under provisions conferring no right and providing no remedy and warned against a competitor-standing theory broad enough to subject the presidency to litigation at the pleasure of opponents. The passage states the justiciability objection in its strongest form.

[^13]: Bond v. United States, 564 U.S. 211 (2011), holding that an individual with a concrete, otherwise-justiciable injury may raise structural constitutional objections. The emoluments plaintiffs invoked it to argue that, having shown competitor injury, they could press the structural prohibition.

[^14]: The Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act, 5 U.S.C. § 7342, regulates the receipt and disposition of gifts from foreign governments by federal personnel; it is a statutory regime narrower than, and distinct from, the constitutional prohibition, and does not supply a general enforcement mechanism for the clauses.

[^15]: A Sitting President’s Amenability to Indictment and Criminal Prosecution, 24 Op. O.L.C. 222 (2000), reaffirming the executive’s position that a sitting President may not be indicted or criminally prosecuted. Whatever its contested merits, the position removes prosecution as an enforcement avenue against the officer for whom the clauses matter most.

[^16]: Mississippi v. Johnson, 71 U.S. (4 Wall.) 475 (1867), holding that courts will not enjoin the President in the performance of official duties. The emoluments plaintiffs argued that private business conduct is not an official duty, but the question is unresolved and implicates separation-of-powers concerns that bear on the availability of injunctive relief.

[^17]: United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S. 36 (1950), directing vacatur of a civil judgment that becomes moot pending review through no fault of the losing party, so that it will not stand as precedent.

[^18]: Trump v. District of Columbia, 141 S. Ct. 1262 (2021) (mem.), and the companion disposition of the CREW matter, dismissing as moot upon the end of the term and ordering vacatur of the lower-court judgments. See the treatment of resolution-by-non-resolution in Paper 3.

References

Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186 (1962).

Blumenthal v. Trump, 335 F. Supp. 3d 45 (D.D.C. 2018).

Blumenthal v. Trump, 949 F.3d 14 (D.C. Cir. 2020), cert. denied, 141 S. Ct. 553 (2020).

Bond v. United States, 564 U.S. 211 (2011).

CREW v. Trump, 276 F. Supp. 3d 174 (S.D.N.Y. 2017).

CREW v. Trump, 953 F.3d 178 (2d Cir. 2020).

CREW v. Trump, 971 F.3d 102 (2d Cir. 2020) (denial of rehearing en banc).

District of Columbia v. Trump, 291 F. Supp. 3d 725 (D. Md. 2018), vacated, 838 F. App’x 789 (4th Cir. 2021).

Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act, 5 U.S.C. § 7342.

In re Trump, 928 F.3d 360 (4th Cir. 2019).

Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555 (1992).

Mississippi v. Johnson, 71 U.S. (4 Wall.) 475 (1867).

Raines v. Byrd, 521 U.S. 811 (1997).

A Sitting President’s Amenability to Indictment and Criminal Prosecution, 24 Op. O.L.C. 222 (2000).

Trump v. District of Columbia, 141 S. Ct. 1262 (2021).

U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 8.

U.S. Const. art. II, § 1, cl. 7.

United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S. 36 (1950).


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Paper 3 — The Word in Constitutional Law: Doctrine, Advisory Opinion, and the Absence of a Holding

A constitutional provision without a constitutional law

The previous paper read the emoluments clauses at full textual strength and reconstructed the anti-dependence theory they encode. This paper asks a different question: what has the legal system actually made of that text? The answer, stated plainly, is the central finding of the paper and one of the load-bearing observations of the whole series. For more than two centuries, no court construed either emoluments clause. The first decisions reaching the merits came in a single presidential administration, and within four years all but one of them had been wiped from the books. What stands in the place of doctrine is a body of advisory opinions written by the executive branch about its own conduct, a thinner line of opinions from the legislative branch’s auditor, an accumulation of administrative practice, and a scholarly literature that argues the question precisely because the courts have not answered it. The “constitutional law” of emoluments is, in the main, soft law and accreted practice rather than binding judicial construction.

That is not a neutral fact about an obscure corner of the Constitution. It is itself a finding about the mechanism this series tracks. A prohibition whose meaning has never been fixed by a court that can compel obedience is a prohibition that remains, at its core, negotiable. The actors who interpret it are, with few exceptions, the actors it restrains. The instruments through which it is interpreted carry no binding force and bind no future interpreter. And the one period in which courts came close to settling the matter ended not with a settlement but with a procedural maneuver designed to ensure that nothing would be settled. To call this a body of constitutional law is to use the phrase loosely. What exists is a record of how a hard rule is administered by those it governs, which is a record of how a hard rule becomes a soft one.

The executive interprets the restraint on the executive

The most developed body of emoluments interpretation comes from the Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel, the unit that renders binding-within-the-executive legal advice to the President and the agencies. Over the twentieth century, when a President or an officer faced a question about accepting some honor or benefit, the practice was to ask OLC, and OLC’s answers accumulated into something resembling an internal jurisprudence. A handful of these opinions concern the highest office directly. In 1963, OLC considered whether President Kennedy could accept honorary Irish citizenship and addressed the Foreign Emoluments Clause implications.[^1] In 1981, it concluded that President Reagan could draw his vested California pension without offending the Domestic Emoluments Clause, reasoning that the pension was a right he had earned and fixed six years before taking office, a kind of pre-existing entitlement that the state could not revoke and that was therefore neither a gift nor compensation for present service.[^2] In 2009, it considered whether President Obama’s acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize violated the Foreign Emoluments Clause and concluded that the prize did not come from a “foreign State” within the meaning of the clause, the committee that awards it being structured to act independently of the Norwegian government.[^3]

A larger volume of opinion addresses lesser officers, especially retired military personnel and federal employees, and it is here that OLC’s working definitions emerge most clearly. The office has treated a consulting fee or stipend from a foreign government as an emolument in the ordinary case, resolving particular requests not by denying that the payment was an emolument but by asking whether its source was truly a foreign state. In a 1986 opinion concerning federal scientists and a foreign public university, OLC concluded the payment was permissible because the university made its own employment decisions independently of the foreign government, not because the consulting fee failed to qualify as an emolument.[^4] The office has gone further, treating a retiree’s share of a law or consulting partnership’s profits as a partial emolument where some portion of that share derives from the partnership’s representation of a foreign government, on the theory that the partnership acts as a conduit and a proportionate slice of the income is attributable to the foreign client even when the individual rendered no direct service to it.[^5] This conduit reasoning is notable because it reaches indirect and entity-mediated benefit, the very kind of channel that the broad reading of the clause requires and that the narrow, official-services reading would exclude.

Two features of this executive-branch jurisprudence deserve emphasis, because they shape what the soft law can and cannot do. The first is its structural position. These are opinions in which the executive branch interprets a constitutional restraint imposed upon the executive branch. There is nothing improper in the practice; agencies must have legal advice, and OLC’s work is generally careful. But an interpreter assessing the limits of its own conduct is differently situated from a neutral tribunal, and the body of opinion that results carries the marks of that position. It tends to resolve hard cases by locating exits, the pension that vested early, the university that decides independently, the prize from a body that is not quite a state, while preserving the broad principle in the abstract. The principle remains generous; the application repeatedly finds room. That pattern is consistent with conscientious lawyering and also consistent with an interpreter inclined, at the margin, toward conclusions that do not constrain the institution it serves.

The second feature is the opinions’ legal status. OLC opinions bind the executive branch internally as a matter of practice, but they are not judicial precedent, create no rights enforceable by outsiders, and do not bind a court or a future administration that chooses to revisit them. They are advice, however weighty. To rest the meaning of a constitutional prohibition on a stack of advisory opinions is to rest it on a foundation that any later interpreter may decline to honor, and that no plaintiff may invoke to compel an officer’s compliance. The soft law construes the clause without ever hardening it.

The auditor’s line of opinion

A second and thinner body of interpretation comes from the Comptroller General of the United States, the head of the legislative branch’s audit arm, who historically issued opinions on the legality of federal expenditures and benefits. The Comptroller General’s emoluments opinions cluster around the same recurring problem of retired uniformed service members receiving compensation from foreign governments, and they helped establish the working understanding that the Foreign Emoluments Clause reaches retired officers, who remain subject to recall and are treated as holding an office of profit or trust, so that they must obtain congressional consent before accepting foreign-government employment or pay.[^6] Congress eventually supplied a standing, conditional consent mechanism by statute for certain such cases, which is itself an illustration of the consent valve discussed in the prior paper functioning as designed in the one domain where the political will to administer it existed.

The Comptroller General’s opinions, like OLC’s, are administrative rather than judicial. They guided disbursing officers and agencies; they did not construe the Constitution with the force of a holding. The point of cataloguing both bodies is not to disparage them. It is to establish that the entire interpretive apparatus of the emoluments clauses, before the Trump-era litigation, consisted of advisory pronouncements by the political branches about their own officers, supplemented by administrative regulation implementing them. There was no decision of any court that an officer or a President could be made to obey.

The litigating position and the first merits decisions

That changed, briefly, after 2017, when three sets of plaintiffs brought the emoluments clauses before federal courts for the first time in the nation’s history. One suit was filed by an ethics organization together with hospitality-industry competitors who alleged they lost business to a President’s hotels patronized by foreign and domestic governments; one by members of Congress; and one by the State of Maryland and the District of Columbia.[^7] The cases forced the executive, for the first time, to defend a construction of the clauses in an adversarial forum rather than to advise itself, and the construction it advanced is instructive precisely because it was the narrowest reading the text could bear.

The government’s litigating position, foreshadowed by a white paper prepared by the President’s private counsel, was that an emolument means compensation for services rendered in an official or employment capacity, and that arm’s-length commercial transactions at fair market value, a hotel room booked and paid for, a property leased, a round of golf purchased, are not emoluments at all because they are not payment for official services. On this view the clauses leave a President free to own a global business that transacts with foreign states, so long as the transactions are ordinary commerce. The position is the mirror image of the anti-dependence theory: where the broad reading bars the receipt because of the dependence it may create regardless of form, the narrow reading asks only whether the payment was for official services, and answers that commerce is not.

The district court in Maryland rejected that reading. In denying the President’s motion to dismiss, it held that “emolument” is a broad term embracing any profit, gain, or advantage, including profit from ordinary market transactions, the first time any court had construed the word in American history.[^8] The decision aligned the judicial reading with the founding-era dictionary evidence and against the government’s official-services construction. Had it been affirmed and made final, it would have hardened the broad reading into binding law. It was not.

Resolution by non-resolution

What happened to the three cases is the part of the story most directly relevant to this series, because the manner of their ending is a clean demonstration of how the merits of the emoluments clauses keep failing to be decided even when courts are willing to decide them.

The congressional suit foundered on standing. The District of Columbia Circuit held that individual members of Congress lacked standing to sue the President under the Foreign Emoluments Clause, because they could not assert the institutional interests of the legislature as a whole, and the Supreme Court denied review, leaving that standing holding intact and the suit terminated without any ruling on what the clause means.[^9] The competitor and state suits fared better at the threshold, with the appellate courts recognizing competitor and state standing and allowing the cases toward the merits, over significant dissent.[^10] But before either reached a final judgment on the meaning of the clauses, the President’s term ended. The acting Solicitor General urged the Supreme Court to wait for the inauguration and then vacate the lower-court rulings with instructions to dismiss as moot, a procedure known as Munsingwear vacatur, under which a judgment that becomes moot through no fault of the losing party is wiped out so that it will not stand as precedent.[^11] On January 25, 2021, the Court did exactly that, dismissing the two surviving cases as moot and ordering the favorable lower-court opinions vacated.[^12]

The result is that the one judicial construction of “emolument” in the nation’s history, the Maryland district court’s broad reading, was erased, and the appellate opinions recognizing standing were largely vacated as well. What survives as precedent is narrow and procedural: the holding that individual legislators lack standing remains good law, while the merits questions, the meaning of the term, the reach of the clauses, the President’s coverage, return to the unsettled condition they occupied before 2017. Four years of litigation produced no authoritative answer to the question the litigation was brought to answer. The clauses were argued before courts for the first time, and the courts, through the mootness doctrine and the vacatur that follows it, contrived to leave them where they had always been.

It is worth naming the structural feature this episode reveals, while reserving its full treatment for the next paper. A prohibition aimed chiefly at a President’s conduct in office is, by its nature, vulnerable to mootness, because the office is held for a fixed and limited term. If the litigation cannot be completed within the term, the defendant’s departure moots the case, and Munsingwear vacatur then ensures that even the interim victories vanish. The very temporariness of the office that makes the prohibition urgent is what allows the officeholder to outlast the litigation and take any adverse rulings down with him. The merits are not rejected; they are run out the clock.

Scholarship as a stand-in for doctrine

Where binding doctrine is absent, scholarship rushes to fill the vacancy, and the emoluments literature has the character of a debate conducted in the space a court would ordinarily occupy. The broad, anti-dependence reading has been developed by Zephyr Teachout’s work on the framers’ conception of corruption, by the historical-meaning research of John Mikhail on the founding-era definition of the term, and by the legal analysis of Norman Eisen, Richard Painter, and Laurence Tribe applying the clause to a sitting President.[^13] The narrow reading, and the argument that the President is not even among the officers the Foreign Emoluments Clause reaches, has been pressed most persistently by Seth Barrett Tillman, whose work on the founding-era usage of “office under the United States” and on the treatment of business transactions supplied the intellectual scaffolding for the government’s litigating position.[^14] The dispute is real and the narrow case is not frivolous; a fair account must grant that the President-coverage question turns on contested historical usage and that the Constitution’s parallel office-related phrases do not all plainly include elected officials.

But the point for this series is not to adjudicate the scholarly contest. It is to notice that the contest exists in lieu of an answer. In a domain governed by settled doctrine, the academic literature comments on the law; in a domain without doctrine, the literature becomes the nearest thing to law, and the meaning of a constitutional prohibition is, in practice, whatever the most persuasive brief can make it for the duration of a particular dispute. That is a precarious foundation for a categorical command. It means the prohibition’s scope is relitigated from the ground up each time it is invoked, with no accumulated holding to anchor it, and that the side with the resources to mount the more elaborate historical argument enjoys an advantage the text alone never conferred.

Soft law as the mechanism of negotiability

Drawing the threads together yields the paper’s contribution to the larger argument. The interpretation of the emoluments clauses lives almost entirely in soft law: advisory opinions of the executive about itself, opinions of the legislative auditor about its own branch’s officers, administrative regulations implementing those opinions, a single now-vacated judicial construction, and a scholarly debate that substitutes for the missing doctrine. Each of these instruments shares a disqualifying limitation when measured against the function a binding holding would serve. The executive opinions are written by the restrained party. The auditor’s opinions are administrative and confined to expenditures. The regulations implement the opinions and inherit their status. The one judicial construction was erased by the mootness machinery before it could bind. And the scholarship, however learned, commands no one.

The consequence is that the meaning of the prohibition is not fixed but perpetually open, and that the actors with the practical power to settle it, the executive interpreting its own duties, the Congress declining to administer the consent valve against its own, the courts declining the merits, are precisely the actors least motivated to settle it against the officeholders the clause restrains. A hard rule whose meaning is determined, when determined at all, by its own subjects, and whose only judicial construction can be deleted by the subject’s departure from office, is a hard rule in form and a negotiable standard in operation. This is the precise sense in which the series claims that the emoluments regime exhibits a wide gap between stated rule and operational norm. The stated rule is the categorical text of Paper 2. The operational norm is what the soft-law apparatus, and the failure of the hard-law apparatus, have left standing: a prohibition that officers may construe in their own favor, that no outsider can readily enforce, and that no court has been permitted to pin down.

Why the courts have not pinned it down, the standing barriers, the justiciability objections, the absence of a private right of action, and the mootness escape that closed the Trump-era cases, is the subject of the next paper. There the inquiry turns from what the law of emoluments is to why the machinery that would give the law force has so reliably failed to engage. The present paper establishes the antecedent point: that the failure of enforcement is not merely a failure to punish violations but a failure, prior to punishment, even to fix what the prohibition means, so that the rule arrives at the question of enforcement already softened, its content unsettled, its construction in the hands of those it was written to bind.


Notes

[^1]: Proposal That the President Accept Honorary Irish Citizenship, 1 Op. O.L.C. Supp. 278 (1963). The opinion canvassed the options by which President Kennedy might receive the honor consistent with the Foreign Emoluments Clause; its significance for present purposes is its treatment of the President as an officer to whom the clause’s concerns apply.

[^2]: President Reagan’s Ability to Receive Retirement Benefits from the State of California, 5 Op. O.L.C. 187 (1981). OLC treated the vested state pension as a sui generis legal entitlement, earned before the presidency and irrevocable by the state, and so neither a gift nor compensation for present service within the Domestic Emoluments Clause.

[^3]: Applicability of the Emoluments Clause and the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act to the President’s Receipt of the Nobel Peace Prize, 33 Op. O.L.C. 1 (2009). The opinion turned on the “foreign State” element, concluding that the awarding committee acts independently of the Norwegian government and that the prize was therefore not received from a foreign state. A companion line of opinion addressing awards from sub-national and municipal bodies appears in OLC’s later work.

[^4]: The 1986 opinion concerning federal scientists and the University of New South Wales resolved the matter on the source question, holding that a consulting fee from a foreign government would ordinarily be an emolument but that the university acted independently of the foreign state. The opinion is significant for conceding the breadth of “emolument” while narrowing on source.

[^5]: OLC’s “conduit” reasoning treats a proportionate share of partnership or limited-liability-company distributions attributable to the entity’s foreign-government clients as an emolument to the federal officer, even absent direct service to the foreign client. The Department of Defense’s financial-management regulations implement this understanding for retired service members.

[^6]: In re Retired Uniformed Service Members Receiving Compensation from Foreign Governments, 58 Comp. Gen. 487 (1979). The Comptroller General’s opinions established the working view that retired officers, subject to recall, hold an office of profit or trust and require congressional consent for foreign-government employment. Congress later enacted a statutory framework granting conditional advance consent for certain such cases, an instance of the consent mechanism operating where political will existed to administer it.

[^7]: The three suits were CREW v. Trump (S.D.N.Y.), Blumenthal v. Trump (D.D.C.), and District of Columbia v. Trump (D. Md.). Each presented questions of first impression; in more than two centuries no court had construed either emoluments clause on the merits.

[^8]: District of Columbia v. Trump, 291 F. Supp. 3d 725 (D. Md. 2018). The court read “emolument” broadly as any profit, gain, or advantage, including profit from ordinary commercial transactions, the first judicial construction of the term in American history. The opinion was later vacated as moot.

[^9]: Blumenthal v. Trump, 949 F.3d 14 (D.C. Cir. 2020), holding that individual members of Congress lacked standing because they could not assert the institutional interests of the legislature; cert. denied, 141 S. Ct. 553 (2020). This standing holding, unlike the merits questions, remains good law because it was not vacated.

[^10]: CREW v. Trump, 953 F.3d 178 (2d Cir. 2020) (recognizing competitor standing), reh’g en banc denied, 971 F.3d 102 (2d Cir. 2020) (with noted dissents); and the Fourth Circuit’s en banc treatment reviving the Maryland and District of Columbia suit. The standing analysis is treated at length in Paper 4.

[^11]: The Munsingwear doctrine, from United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S. 36 (1950), directs that a federal civil judgment which becomes moot on its way to review through no fault of the losing party should be vacated, so that it will not spawn legal consequences or stand as precedent. The acting Solicitor General expressly sought this disposition.

[^12]: Trump v. District of Columbia, 141 S. Ct. 1262 (2021) (mem.), and the companion disposition in the CREW matter, dismissing the cases as moot upon the end of the President’s term and ordering the lower-court judgments vacated. The order carried no noted dissents.

[^13]: Teachout (2014); Mikhail (2017); Eisen, Painter, & Tribe (2016). Together these supply the principal modern statements of the broad, anti-dependence reading.

[^14]: Tillman (2017) and related work argue both that ordinary business transactions do not yield constitutional emoluments and that the elected President does not hold an “Office of Profit or Trust under” the United States within the Foreign Emoluments Clause. The argument supplied intellectual support for the government’s litigating position and was advanced before the courts by amicus filing.

References

Congressional Research Service. (2019). The emoluments clauses and the presidency: Background and recent developments (Report No. R45992). https://www.everycrsreport.com/reports/R45992.html

CREW v. Trump, 953 F.3d 178 (2d Cir. 2020).

CREW v. Trump, 971 F.3d 102 (2d Cir. 2020) (denial of rehearing en banc).

Blumenthal v. Trump, 949 F.3d 14 (D.C. Cir. 2020), cert. denied, 141 S. Ct. 553 (2020).

District of Columbia v. Trump, 291 F. Supp. 3d 725 (D. Md. 2018), vacated as moot.

Eisen, N. L., Painter, R., & Tribe, L. H. (2016, December 16). The emoluments clause: Its text, meaning, and application to Donald J. Trump (Governance Studies). Brookings Institution. https://www.brookings.edu/research/the-emoluments-clause-its-text-meaning-and-application-to-donald-j-trump/

In re Retired Uniformed Service Members Receiving Compensation from Foreign Governments, 58 Comp. Gen. 487 (1979).

Mikhail, J. (2017). The definition of “emolument” in English language and legal dictionaries, 1523–1806 (Working paper). Social Science Research Network. https://ssrn.com/abstract=2995693

President Reagan’s Ability to Receive Retirement Benefits from the State of California, 5 Op. O.L.C. 187 (1981).

Proposal That the President Accept Honorary Irish Citizenship, 1 Op. O.L.C. Supp. 278 (1963).

Applicability of the Emoluments Clause and the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act to the President’s Receipt of the Nobel Peace Prize, 33 Op. O.L.C. 1 (2009).

Teachout, Z. (2014). Corruption in America: From Benjamin Franklin’s snuff box to Citizens United. Harvard University Press.

Tillman, S. B. (2017). Business transactions and President Trump’s “emoluments” problem. Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, 40(3), 759–771.

Trump v. District of Columbia, 141 S. Ct. 1262 (2021).

United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S. 36 (1950).

U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 8.

U.S. Const. art. II, § 1, cl. 7.


Posted in American History, History | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Paper 2 — The Constitutional Text: Foreign and Domestic Emoluments and the Anti-Dependence Architecture

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.

References

Blackstone, W. (1765–1769). Commentaries on the laws of England. Clarendon Press.

Eisen, N. L., Painter, R., & Tribe, L. H. (2016, December 16). The emoluments clause: Its text, meaning, and application to Donald J. Trump (Governance Studies). Brookings Institution. https://www.brookings.edu/research/the-emoluments-clause-its-text-meaning-and-application-to-donald-j-trump/

Farrand, M. (Ed.). (1911). The records of the Federal Convention of 1787. Yale University Press.

Hamilton, A. (1788). The Federalist No. 22; The Federalist No. 73; The Federalist No. 75. In A. Hamilton, J. Madison, & J. Jay, The Federalist.

Johnson, S. (1755). A dictionary of the English language. W. Strahan.

Mikhail, J. (2017). The definition of “emolument” in English language and legal dictionaries, 1523–1806 (Working paper). Social Science Research Network. https://ssrn.com/abstract=2995693

Mikhail, J. (2019). The 2018 Seegers Lecture: Emoluments and President Trump. Social Science Research Network. https://ssrn.com/abstract=3419223

Teachout, Z. (2009). The anti-corruption principle. Cornell Law Review, 94(2), 341–413.

Teachout, Z. (2014). Corruption in America: From Benjamin Franklin’s snuff box to Citizens United. Harvard University Press.

Tillman, S. B. (2012). Citizens United and the scope of Professor Teachout’s anti-corruption principle. Northwestern University Law Review, 107(1), 399–428.

Tillman, S. B. (2017). Business transactions and President Trump’s “emoluments” problem. Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, 40(3), 759–771.

U.S. Const. art. I, § 6, cl. 2.

U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 8.

U.S. Const. art. II, § 1, cl. 7.


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