Nomination of Sitting Member of Congress to be Ambassador
to Vietnam
The Ineligibility Clause does not bar the nomination o f Representative Pete Peterson to be Ambassador
to the Socialist Republic of Congress, provided that the President does not make the determination
to create the office o f ambassador to that government until after the expiration of the term for
which Representative Peterson was elected.
Ju ly 26, 1996
M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n f o r t h e C o u n s e l t o t h e P r e s id e n t
You have asked for our opinion as to whether the Ineligibility Clause of the
Constitution, U.S. Const, art. I, §6, cl. 2, operates to bar the nomination of Rep
resentative Douglas (“ Pete” ) Peterson to be Ambassador to the Socialist Republic
o f Vietnam. We conclude that, in the circumstances of this case, Representative
Peterson is not ineligible, provided that the President does not make the determina
tion to create the office of ambassador to that government until after the expiration
o f the term for which Representative Peterson was elected.
I.
The Ineligibility Clause (the “ Clause” ), U.S. Const, art. I, §6, cl. 2, states,
in part, that
No Senator or Representative shall, during the Time for which he
was elected, be appointed to any civil Office under the Authority
o f the United States, which shall have been created, or the Emolu
ments whereof shall have been encreased, during such time . . . .
Representative Peterson was elected on November 8, 1994, for a term that began
on January 4, 1995, and that will end at noon of January 3, 1997. The President
nominated him as Ambassador to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam (“ Vietnam” )
on May 23, 1996.
If the Ineligibility Clause applies to Representative Peterson’s appointment to
the office o f Ambassador to Vietnam, it will apply only until the end of the term
for which he was elected, i.e., until January 3, 1997, but not thereafter.1 Prior
opinions o f the Attorney General and of our Office have resolved that an ineligible
M em ber o f Congress cannot escape the Clause by resigning from Congress before
1 See, e.g.. Appointment o f Senator as Federal Judge , 33 O p. A tt’y Gen. 88, 89 (1922) (Senator elected for term
expiring M arch 4, 1919, and re-elected fo r term beginning on same date, was eligible to be appointed as federal
judge, notw ithstanding fact that salaries o f federal judges were increased by Act of Congress of February 25, 1919.).
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Nomination o f Silting Member o f Congress to be Ambassador to Vietnam
accepting his or her appointment to office.2 The opinions and practice of the
executive branch have also assumed that the Clause cannot be avoided if an ineli
gible Member of Congress is nominated and confirmed to an office created during
the term for which the Member was elected, but not commissioned by the Presi
dent until after that term expires.3
Before proceeding further, we note that there is a difficult and substantial ques
tion whether the ambassadorial position for which Mr. Peterson has been nomi
nated would be a “ civil Office” covered by the Clause. The only precedent we
have identified that is directly on point assumes (without discussion) that it should
be considered to be such an office.4 In accordance with that precedent, we shall
assume here, without deciding, that the Ambassadorship to Vietnam would be
a “ civil Office” within the meaning of the Ineligibility C lause.5
2 See, e.g., Appointment to Civil Office, 17 Op. Att’y Gen. 365 (1882) (prospective appointee held ineligible despite
having resigned from Congress during term for which he was elected and before appointment would have been
made); Memorandum for the Honorable John D. Ehrlichman, Assistant to the President for Domestic Affairs, from
William H. Rehnquist, Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, Re: Eligibility o f Members o f the 91st
Congress to Be Appointed to the Position o f Director o f the Office o f Management and Budget at 4-5 (Mar. 31,
1970) (reaffirming prior view), accord Memorandum to the Honorable Jesse Helms, Chairman, and the Honorable
Claiborne Pell, Ranking Member, from Thomas B. Griffith and Jill E. Hasday, Office o f Senate Legal Counsel,
Re: The Ineligibility Clause at 2 (July 24, 1996) ( “ Senate M em o").
3 See Memorandum for the Attorney General from Charles J. Cooper, Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal
Counsel, Re: Ineligibility o f Sitting Congressman to Assume A Vacancy on the Supreme Court at 3 n.2 (Aug. 24,
1987), Federal Election Commission— Appointment o f Members, 2 Op. O.L.C. 359, 360 (1977); Member o f Con
gress— Appointment to Office, 21 Op. Att’y Gen. 211, 214 (1895); Appointment to Civil Office, 17 Op A tt’y Gen.
522, 523 (1883); accord Senate Memo at 2-3.
This construction o f the meaning o f the term “ appointed” in the Ineligibility Clause originated with President
George Washington, who withdrew the nomination o f an ineligible former Senator to be an Associate Justice o f
the Supreme Court, and declared the act of nomination within that Senator’s term “ to have been null by the Constitu
tion.” Nomination o f George Washington in 1, The Documentary History o f the Supreme Court o f the United Stales,
1789-1800, at 90 (M aeva Marcus et al. eds., 1985).
At least one later President has explicitly followed the W ashington precedent. In 1973, President Richard Nixon
informed the Senate that he would withhold the nomination o f Senator William Saxbe to be Attorney General until
after Congress had cured Senator Saxbe’s ineligibility by enacting legislation that would reduce the compensation
and other emoluments attached to the Office o f Attorney General to those that had been in effect before Senator
Saxbe began his term. President Nixon stated that “ Constitutional precedents beginning with President W ashington
indicate that the nomination o f an individual not then eligible m ay be improper and that any subsequent appointment
based on such nomination might be null and void.” Letter from the President to the Hon. Gale W. McGee, Chairman,
Comm, on Post O ffice and Civil Service, U.S. Senate (Nov. 8, 1973), reprinted in S. Rep. No. 93-499, al 3 (1973);
see also To Reduce the Compensation o f the Office o f Attorney General: Hearing on S. 2673 Before the Senate
Comm, on the Judiciary, 93d Cong. 70 (1973) (the “ Saxbe H earing” ) (statement of Robert G. Dixon, Jr., Assistant
Attorney G eneral, Office o f Legal Counsel) ( “ In light o f this constitutional practice, Senator Saxbe cannot be nomi
nated until legislation removing his disqualification has been passed.” ).
4See Member o f Congress— Appointment to Office, 21 Op. A tt’y Gen. at 212-13 (appointment o f Senator as
envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Mexico was forbidden by Clause because emoluments o f that
office had been increased during term for which Senator was elected); see also Saxbe Hearing at 50 (remarks of
Professor van Alstyne) (finding that opinion to be “ unquestionably sound” ).
5 Accordingly, we do not rely on the view that the Office o f the Senate Legal Counsel ascribes to us, that “ the
Clause applies only to congressionally-created offices.” Senate Memo at 3.
As we have stated, the question whether the Ineligibility Clause generally applies to ambassadorships is a difficult
one. It has been said that ” [t]he foremost danger” that the Clause was intended to guard against “ was that legislators
would create offices with the expectancy o f occupying them themselves.” Freytag v. Comm'r, 501 U.S. 868, 904
(1991) (Scalia, J., concurring in judgment); see also Atkins v. United States, 556 F.2d 1028, 1070 (Ct. Cl. 1977)
(per curiam) ( “ This provision was generated out o f a fear that corruption would result if the legislature multiplied
the number or increased the salaries o f public offices for the benefit o f its own members.” ), cert, denied, 434
U.S. 1009 (1978); see generally Saxbe Hearing at 70-71 (statement o f Assistant Attorney General Dixon) (reviewing
Continued
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Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 20
11.
The central question, therefore, is whether the office of Ambassador to Vietnam
has been “ created” within the proscribed tim e.6 This appears to be a case of
first impression; in any event, relevant precedents are rare.7 While federal offices
are nearly always created by Acts of Congress (or else pursuant to delegations
o f legislative authority),8 the executive branch has historically taken the position
that the President has the inherent, constitutional power to create diplomatic of
fices, and Congress has generally acquiesced in that view .9
As long ago as 1855, Attorney General Caleb Cushing opined that the Constitu
tion conferred on the President the power to appoint ambassadors and other diplo
matic officers, subject only to the advice and consent of the Senate, in the absence
original materials). If the purpose of the C lause is only to prevent self-dealing by Congress, its prohibition would
not extend to offices that w ere created by the President pursuant to his inherent, constitutional powers; and, as
further discussed below , it has been the traditional position o f the executive branch that diplomatic offices are created
by unilateral presidential action. On this understanding o f the Clause, it would not apply to the ambassadorial post
for which Mr. Peterson has been nominated.
The Clause does not in terms refer, how ever, to civil Offices created 4‘by Congress*’: it refers to “ civil O ffices”
as such. M oreover, the Clause might well be understood to be addressed, not only to legislative self-dealing, but
also to attem pts by the Executive to exercise improper influence on Congress, including offers of appointments
to offices that the Executive could create by virtue o f its ow n independent powers. See, e.g., Buckley v. Valeo,
424 U.S. 1, 124 (1976) (per curiam) (concern o f Clause was with “ maintenance o f the separation of powers” );
Joseph C ooper & A nn C ooper, The Legislative Veto and the Constitution, 30 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 467, 500 (1962)
(“ The framers were trying to avoid a pattern o f politics in which the executive manipulated the legislature through
its patronage resources o r the legislature m ultiplied the number o r increased the salaries o f public officers for the
benefit o f its ow n m em bers.” ). Consistent w ith that view, it appears that many Americans in the Founding Period
were fearful o f the British C row n’s power to create offices, as well as to fill them. See, e.g., The Federalist No.
69, at 421 (A. H amilton) (Clinton Rossiter ed. 1961) ( “ The king o f Great Britain . . . not only appoints to all
offices, but can create offices.” ); Weiss v. United States, 510 U.S. 163, 187 n.2 (1994) (Souter, J., concurring);
Freytag v. Comm’r, 501 U.S. at 904 n.4 (Scalia, J., concurring in judgm ent); G ordon S. W ood, The Creation o f
the American Republic 1776-1787, at 144 (1969); Louis Fisher, Constitutional Conflicts between Congress and the
President 23 (3d ed. 1991). So understood, th e Clause would reach offices that were created by the Executive acting
alone.
On yet another view o f the Clause, its prim ary purpose was to discourage the wasteful multiplication of federal
offices. In that connection, at least two delegates to the Philadelphia Convention, and one delegate to the Virginia
Ratifying Convention, specifically pointed to the danger that ambassadorships might be created unnecessarily. See
Notes o f Debates in the Federal Convention o f 1787, Reported by James Madison 178 (Adrienne Koch ed., 1976)
(remarks o f Mr. Sherman on June 23); id. at 452 (remarks o f Mr. G erry on August 14); see also 10 The Documentary
History o f the Ratification o f the Constitution 1263-64 (John P. Kaminski et al. eds. 1993) (remarks of Mr. Grayson
in Virginia Ratifying Convention). In light o f these comments, it might again be argued that the Clause reached
ambassadorial offices.
6 W e note that if the office o f Ambassador to Vietnam has not been “ created” during the time for which Represent
ative Peterson was elected, the prohibition o n increased “ em olum ents” in art. I, §6 , cl. 2 would necessarily be
inapplicable. The ineligibility relates to civil offices, “ the Emoluments whereof shall have been increased” (emphasis
added). If the office does not exist within the proscribed time, no emoluments have attached to it, or could have
been increased.
1 See John F. O 'C o n n o r, The Emoluments Clause: An Anti-Federalist Intruder in a Federalist Constitution, 24
Hofstra L. Rev. 89, 111 (1995) ( “ Not surprisingly, the question whether Congress has in fact created a new office
rarely has surfaced; statutes creating new federal offices generally are clear enough to settle the m atter.” ).
8 See Myers v. United States, 272 U.S. 5 2 , 128-29 (1926); Weiss v. United States, 510 U.S. at 183 (Souter, J.,
concurring). Limitations on Presidential Power to Create a New Executive Branch Entity to Receive and Administer
Funds Under Foreign Aid Legislation, 9 Op. O.L.C. 76, 7 7 -7 8 (1985).
9 See generally Fisher, supra note 5, at 3 9 -4 0 .
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Nomination o f Silling M ember o f Congress to be Ambassador to Vietnam
of any legislation purporting to create offices for them to occupy. He stated that
the Appointments Clause of the Constitution, U.S. Const, art. 2, §2, cl. 2 , 10
empowers the President to appoint [ambassadors] and other “ public
ministers,” that is, any such officers as by the law of nations are
recognised as “ public ministers,” without making the appointment
of them subject, like, “ other (non-enumerated) officers,” to the exi
gency of an authorizing act of Congress. In a word, the power to
appoint diplomatic agents, and to select for employment any one
out of the varieties of the class, according to his judgment of the
public service, is a constitutional function of the President, not de
rived from, nor limitable by, Congress, but requiring only the ulti
mate concurrence of the Senate; and so it was understood in the
early practice o f the Government.
Ambassadors and other Public Ministers, 7 Op. A tt’y Gen. 186, 193 (1855).11
With reference to early practice, Attorney General Cushing cited the case of
President George Washington’s nomination of William Short to be charge d ’af
faires in France, during the temporary leave of Ambassador Thomas Jefferson.12
This nomination occurred very early in Washington’s first term, even before the
first Congress had been able to enact legislation creating the Department of For
eign Affairs (later, the State Departm ent).13 As Cushing pointed out, “ no enact
ment occurs at that session, either in the act making appropriations for the service
of the year, (1 Stat. at Large, p. 95), or in any other, to define the number or
rank of the diplomatic agents of the United States.” 14 Hence, “ the designation
of the officer was derived from the law of nations, and the authority to appoint
from the Constitution.” 15
10The Appointments Clause states, in part, that the President “ shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and
Consent o f the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges o f the supreme Court,
and all other Officers o f the United States, whose Appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which
shall be established by L a w /’
11 For the background to Attorney General Cushing's opinion, see Graham H. Stuart, American Diplomatic and
Consular Practice 6 (2d ed. 1952).
12 See Ambassadors and other Public Ministers, 7 Op. A tt'y Gen. at 193-94; see also 1 Messages and Papers
o f the Presidents 58 (James D. Richardson ed. 1896) (letter from President George W ashington to the Senate, dated
June 15, 1789, nominating Short).
Moreover, President W ashington reported a conversation with James Madison, in which Madison concurred in
the opinion, given also by John Jay and Thomas Jefferson to Washington, that the Senate had “ no Constitutional
right’’ to “ interfere’’ with the President’s decision “ on the places to which it would be necessary to send persons
in the Diplomatic line,’’ or on the “ grade” o f such persons. The Diary o f George Washington, From 1789 to
1791 (Benson J. Lessing ed., photo, reprint 1978) (1860).
>3 See Act of July 27, 1789, ch. 4, 1 Stat. 28.
14Ambassadors and other Public Ministers, 1 Op. A tt’y Gen. at 193.
15 Id. at 194. Similarly, James M adison advised President Monroe on M ay 6, 1822, that it was his belief that
“ the practice of the Government had from the beginning been regulated by the idea that the places or offices of
public ministers and consuls existed under the law and usages o f nations, and were always open to receive appoint
ments as they might be made under competent authorities.’’ 1 A Digest o f the International Law o f the United
Continued
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It appears that the practice of the political branches thereafter generally accorded
with the Executive’s conception of its constitutional power. In Francis v. United
States, 22 Ct. Cl. 403, 405 (1887) (emphasis added), the court said:
M ost offices of the Government are established by general laws,
except in the diplom atic service, and all salaries are fixed in like
manner . . . . In the diplomatic service, Congress seems to have
practically conceded, whether on constitutional grounds rightly or
wrongly taken or otherwise, the duty, power, or right of the Execu
tive to appoint diplomatic agents, of any rank or title, at any time
and at any place, subject to such compensation, or none at all, as
the legislative branch o f the Government should in its wisdom see
fit to provide . . . .
In another opinion from the same time, the court again pointed out that the
Executive had consistently taken this view of its power, and that Congress had
long acceded to it:
It has been claimed by the Executive, in accordance with the opin
ion of Attorney General Cushing, that by the Constitution to the
Executive alone is granted the power to appoint diplomatic agents
of any rank or title, at any time, and at any place, and upon the
exercise of this power Congress can place no extension or limita
tion, by undertaking either to create, abolish, or change the char
acter, title, or rank of officers. On the other hand, to the legislative
branch of the Government alone is granted the power to provide
for the compensation o f those, as well as of all other public officers,
and this it may do in such manner as it deems best, or may withhold
all compensation whenever it sees fit to do so. During the whole
States § 7 8 at 583 (Francis Wharton ed. 1886). (M adison therefore rejected the idea that every tim e an ambassador
was sent to a particular country, the office o f ambassador to that country was created anew. Id.
According to an authoritative treatise from the period o f the framing o f the Constitution, the law o f nations taught
that “ each N ation possesses both the rig h t to negotiate and have intercourse with the others, and the reciprocal
obligation to lend itself to such intercourse as far as circumstances will permit it to do so.” 3 Emmerich de Vattel,
The Law o f Nations or The Principles o f Natural Law 362 (Charles G. Fenwick trans., 1916) (1758). Accordingly,
because “ Nations o r sovereign States d o not treat with one another directly as corporate entities; nor can their
rulers o r sovereigns readily meet one another personally in order to negotiate their affairs,” they communicate
“ through the mediation o f public ministers. This expression . . . is particularly applied to those who are appointed
to fulfill [public] duties at a foreign c o u rt . . . . Every sovereign State has, therefore, the right to send and to
receive public ministers. For they are the necessary agents in the negotiation of the affairs which sovereigns have
w ith one another, and in the maintenance o f the intercourse which sovereigns have a right to keep up.” Id; see
also Henry W heaton, Elements o f International Law §207, at 243 (photo, reprint 1936) (1866) ( “ Every independent
State has a right to send public ministers to, and receive ministers from, any other sovereign State with which
it desires to maintain the relations of peace and amity. No State, strictly speaking, is obliged, by the positive law
o f nations, to send or receive public m inisters, although the usage and comity o f nations seem to have established
a sort o f reciprocal duty in this respect. It is evident, however, that this cannot be more than an imperfect obligation,
and m ust be modified by the nature and importance o f the relations to be maintained between different States by
means o f diplomatic intercourse.” ).
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Nomination o f Sitting Member o f Congress to be Ambassador to Vietnam
of the administration of President Jefferson, and part of the terms
of other early Presidents, Congress annually appropriated a sum in
gross “ for the expenses of intercourse with foreign nations,” leav
ing it to the Executive to fix the salaries of its several appointees.
Byers v. United States, 22 Ct. Cl. 59, 63-64 (1887). '6
Accordingly, we believe that the President has the inherent, constitutional power
to create diplomatic offices such as ambassadorships, without any need for statu
tory authorization.17 The question then becomes that of identifying the time at
which the President acts to create such offices.
Particularly instructive is a controversy over the Recess Appointments Clause,
U.S. Const, art. II, §2, cl. 3, that arose during the War of 1812, under the Presi
dency of James M adison.18 The Czar of Russia had unexpectedly offered to medi
ate between the United States and Great Britain, who were then at war. President
Madison was eager to grasp the opportunity, and in 1813 gave recess appointments
to Albert Gallatin, John Quincy Adams and James A. Bayard to negotiate a peace
treaty. Madison also sought the Senate’s advice and consent to their appointment
as Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary. The Senate confirmed
Adams’ and Bayard’s nominations, but rejected Gallatin’s. Senator Gore intro
duced a motion to censure Madison, on the grounds that the recess appointments
had been unconstitutional. The principal argument was that because these offices
had not been established by statutory law, no vacancies existed to which the Presi
dent could make recess appointments. Madison’s defenders in the Senate argued
that the recess appointments were constitutional, maintaining that the President
had the inherent power to create diplomatic offices when and as, in his judgment,
international circumstances so required — and thus, if need be, during a recess
16 There have, however, been instances in which Congress has apparently asserted the authority to create diplomatic
offices. For example, the Act o f March 2, 1909, provided that “ hereafter no new ambassadorship shall be created
unless the same shall be provided for by an Act o f Congress.” 35 Stat. 672. Notwithstanding that Act, “ President
Wilson appointed an ambassador to Peru in 1919 without any authorization from the Congress other than that found
in the appropriation bill for the Department o f State.” Graham H. Stuart, American Diplomatic and Consular Practice
at 137.
17 The Foreign Service Act, codified in relevant part as 22 U.S.C. § 3942(a)(1), states that “ (t]he President may,
by and with the advice and consent o f the Senate, appoint an individual . . . as an ambassador at large, as an
ambassador, [or] as a m inister.” The relevant question here is whether the statute should be understood to be a
legislative act creating the office o f ambassador (and, inter alia, the office o f ambassador to Vietnam). Assuming
that it could be so read, Mr. Peterson would not be ineligible for the office to which he has been nominated, because
that office would have been created before the beginning o f the 104th Congress. (Section 3942(a) was last amended
by the Foreign Relations Authorization Act, Fiscal Year 1992 and 1993, Pub. L. No. 102-138, §141, 105 Stat.
647, 667 (1991)). In our opinion, however, the section is better understood as merely declaratory of what the constitu
tional procedure for appointing ambassadors is, rather than as a legislative creation of such offices. Thus, the fact
that it was enacted before the cunent Congress would have no bearing on Mr. Peterson’s eligibility. Alternatively,
the section might conceivably be construed, not as itself creating ambassadorships, but as authorizing the President
to do so. That reading would also fail to resolve the question at issue, however, because the time at which the
President exercised such a statutory grant o f authority would be identical with the time at which he exercised his
constitutional authority to create the office o f ambassador to Vietnam.
18The Recess Appointments Clause states that the President “ shall have Power to fill up all Vacancies that may
happen during the Recess o f the Senate, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the End o f their next Ses
sion.”
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of the S en ate.19 Senator Bibb, an ally of M adison’s, reasoned that it was essential
to recognize
two descriptions of offices altogether different in their nature, au
thorized by the Constitution— one to be created by law, and the
other depending for their existence and continuance upon contin
gencies. O f the first kind, are judicial, revenue, and similar offices.
O f the second, are Ambassadors, other Public Ministers and Con
suls. The first description organize the Government and give it effi
cacy. They form the internal system, and are susceptible of precise
enumeration. When and how they are created, and when and how
they become vacant, may always be ascertained with perfect preci
sion. Not so with the second description. They depend for their
original existence upon no law, bu t are the offspring o f the state
o f our relations with foreign nations , and m ust necessarily be gov
erned by distinct rules. A s an independent Power, the United States
have relations with all other independent Powers; and the manage
ment o f those relations is vested in the Executive.
22 Annals o f Cong. 699 (1814) (emphasis added).
With respect to the disputed recess appointments, Bibb argued
that the office could not exist until the Russian mediation was pro
posed, and that it was proposed during the recess of the Senate.
Until, therefore, the office was created, it could not be said to have
been either full or vacant; but the moment it commenced its exist
ence, it was necessarily full or vacant. It was vacant until filled
by the President. The office itself, like that o f all foreign missions,
was the offspring of circumstances, and the happening o f the va
cancy w as contemporaneous with the commencement o f the office.
They w ere both created by the occasion; the occasion occurred;
the office began its existence', the vacancy happened during the re
cess of the Senate; and as the Executive is authorized “ to fill up
all vacancies which may happen during the recess,” it was his Con
stitutional right to fill this.
26 Annals of Cong. 702-03 (1812) (emphasis added).20
19 For the circum stances o f Madison's recess appointments and the ensuing controversy, see 6 Irving Brant, James
Madison 155-57, 2 4 2 -4 3 (1961).
20 Senator Bibb also articulated a distinct defense o f President M adison's action. According to this alternative
theory, “ the office com m enced with every independent Power from the moment the United States became inde
pendent, and authorized the appointment o f foreign M inisters, and it w ill continue to exist so long as we and they
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Senator Horsey (a Federalist, and so not of Madison’s party), also defended
the President’s recess appointments, arguing that
[t]he office then of a public Minister is the medium through which
the Executive is enabled to manage our foreign relations, and par
ticularly to conduct negotiations. It is an office wholly different
from the ordinary offices created by the Constitution or by
law. . . . [I]t is an office not created by the Constitution, nor by
any municipal law, but emanates from the laws of nations and is
common to all civilized Governments. . . . It is an office, if it may
be so called, sui generis. The number may be multiplied to any
extent, or diminished. It is brought forth with the occasion, and
disappears when the occasion ceases. When not filled, if it exists
at all, it is only in contemplation. . . . The office of a public Min
ister, therefore, depends upon events, upon the state of foreign af
fairs, and is authorized by the laws of nations. . . . The office in
truth attaches whenever the occasion arises to use it, and the act
o f appointment is the consummation o f the law.
Id. at 711-12 (emphasis added).21
Review of this controversy suggests that, at the very least, diplomatic offices
may be created by the President at whatever time, in his judgment, the interests
of the United States in its dealings with foreign nations require them to be m ade.22
continue independent, unless destroyed by the termination o f the relations which created it. The period at which
it should be filled is left by the Constitution to the discretion o f the President.” Id. at 699. On this account, it
appears that the office o f ambassador exists as a necessary incident to sovereignty, and thus has existed since the
United States became independent in 1776. Cf. United States v. Curtiss-Wright Export Corp., 299 U.S. 304, 316—
18 (1936) (power to maintain diplomatic relations was vested in United States as an incident o f external sovereignty
upon separation from Great Britain). Were that theory correct, it would appear to follow that the office for which
Representative Peterson was nominated — the Ambassadorship to Vietnam— existed since (at least) the tim e that
diplomatic relations between the United States and Vietnam became possible, and thus that the office had not been
“ created” during the term for which he was elected.
21 As Senator Horsey explained his view, the “ Occasion” for instituting the mission to Russia was the Russian
Government’s offer o f M arch 8, 1813, to mediate between the United States and Great Britain, and the acceptance
o f that offer by the Secretary o f State on March 11, 1813. This occasion “ happened in the recess o f the Senate.
The office then attached, and with it the vacancy, which was filled and the office perfected by issuing the commis
sions . . . .” Id. at 713.
22 See Memorandum o f Law, Re: Appointment o f Deputy Special Representative fo r Trade Negotiations at 5, ac
companying Letter for A rthur B. Focke, General Counsel, Bureau o f the Budget, from Norbert A. Schlei, Assistant
Attorney General, O ffice o f Legal Counsel (Dec. 19, 1962) ( “ [T]he office is created whenever the President deter
mines that the interests o f the United States require diplomatic representation or negotiation” ). Madison himself
may subsequently have taken a different view o f the matter from that o f his defenders in the Senate. In a memorandum
of 1834— twenty years after the controversy over the recess appointments— he expressed the opinion that the “ place
of a foreign minister o r consul is not an office in the constitutional sense o f the term ,” basing that conclusion
in part on the premise that “ [i]t cannot, as an office, be created by the mere appointment for it, made by the
President and Senate, who are to fill, not create offices.” Power o f the President to appoint Public Ministers and
Consuls in the recess o f the Senate, in 4 Letters and Other Writings o f James Madison 350 (1865). On this theory,
“ [t]he place o f a foreign minister o r consul is to be viewed as created by the law o f nations.” Id. W ere Madison
correct in denying that an ambassadorship is an “ office” in the constitutional sense, no Ineligibility Clause issue
would arise.
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To be sure, the President’s decisionmaking may unfold over a period of time,
and he will ordinarily take various preparatory steps relating to the creation of
a diplomatic office before he unequivocally determines to do so. The remarks
o f M adison’s defenders in the Senate debate suggest that, if it becomes necessary
to pinpoint the precise time at which the President creates such an office (as,
for instance, in determining the validity of a recess appointment), then that time
should be identified as the moment at which he fills the office. While the 1814
debate was directed to the interpretation of the Recess Appointments Clause, we
believe that it also illuminates the meaning of the Ineligibility Clause.
III.
We think it fair to say that the patterns of constitutional practice that we have
described do not conclusively answer the question when the office of an ambas
sadorship is created. Nonetheless, we think that the legal and historical materials
strongly point toward a particular answer, and we find that answer to be consider
ably more persuasive than any of the alternatives. Based on our survey of the
materials, including the 1814 debate, we believe that the following tests are appro
priate in determining when, for purposes of the Ineligibility Clause, the President
has created the office o f ambassador to a particular foreign State, in cases where
such an ambassadorship has not existed before or (as in the case o f Vietnam)
has lapsed or been terminated:
1. In the usual course, the office is created at the time of appointment of the
first ambassador to a foreign State once the President establishes diplomatic rela
tions with that State. All that precedes the appointment— offering to establish
normal diplomatic relations, receiving the foreign State’s agreement to receive
a particular person as the United States’ ambassador, nominating and confirming
that individual as ambassador— are all steps preparatory to the creation of the
office.23 If the President ultimately declines to appoint an ambassador, the “ of
fice” is never created.
2. The President, nonetheless, retains the power to alter the ordinary course
of events, and to create the office at some other time — or not at all. The act
o f creating the office must be distinguished from the preparatory steps leading
to its creation. The preparatory acts indicate that the President intends to create
the office; they do not in themselves constitute its creation. Indeed, in the ordinary
course, the President should be understood to intend to create the office of ambas
23 The preparations leading up to the creation o f the office can be analogized to the legislative process. Congress
holds hearings on legislative proposals, conducts debates on them, considers amendments, casts votes on a final
bill and presents that bill to the President. All o f these activities are designed to culminate in the enactment of
a bill into law. N onetheless, exceptional cases aside, a bill does not actually become law until the moment that
the President signs it. See INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919 (1983).
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sador upon the appointment of the individual as the first ambassador to the receiv
ing State.24
We turn now to the application of these tests to the ambassadorship to Vietnam.
IV.
The process by which the United States has been normalizing its relations with
Vietnam has been underway for several years.25 The Republic of Vietnam
(“ RVN” ) was constituted as an independent State within the French Union in
1950, and the United States sent a Minister to that State. The United States did
not recognize the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (“ DRVN” ), which had earlier
declared itself to be an independent State. Thereafter, on June, 25, 1952, the
United States appointed an Ambassador to the RVN, and upgraded the United
States Legation in Saigon to Embassy status. In 1954, Vietnam was partitioned
into what came commonly to be called “ North” and “ South” Vietnam. Despite
an international agreement calling for the reunification of Vietnam, that did not
occur; instead, the RVN, functionally, became South Vietnam, and the DRVN,
functionally, North Vietnam. The United States maintained an ambassadorial post
in the RVN from 1952 onwards. The last United States Ambassador left his post
in Saigon on April 29, 1975.26
After the Communist victory over South Vietnam in April, 1975, it became
the position of the United States that “ ‘[t]he Government of South Vietnam has
ceased to exist and therefore the United States no longer recognizes it as the sov
ereign authority in the territory of South Vietnam. The United States has not rec
ognized any other government as constituting such authority.’ ” Republic o f Viet
nam v. Pfizer, Inc., 556 F.2d 892, 895 n.4 (8th Cir. 1977) (quoting Letter for
the Department of Justice from the Department of State (June 9, 1975)).
During the present administration, several successive and carefully measured
steps were taken with a view to improving, and perhaps normalizing, relations
between the United States and Vietnam. On July 2, 1993, President Clinton an
nounced that the United States would no longer oppose the resumption of aid
to Vietnam by international financial institutions. On February 3, 1994, the Presi
dent announced the lifting of the United States’ embargo against Vietnam. He
also announced an intent to open a liaison office in Hanoi in order to promote
further progress on issues of concern to both countries, including the status of
American prisoners o f war and Americans missing in action. His statement empha
sized, however, that ‘ ‘ [t]hese actions do not constitute a normalization o f our rela
34 In unusual circumstances, the President might depart from this procedure. For exam ple, following the establish
ment of diplomatic relations, he might by proclamation declare the office o f ambassadorship to a particular country
to be created, even if he had not appointed a particular person to fill that office.
25 See generally Congressional Research Service, Report for Congress, Vietnam: Procedural and Jurisdictional
Questions Regarding Possible Normalization o f U.S. Diplomatic and Economic Relations (Aug. 4, 1994).
26 See generally Office o f the Historian, Principal Officers o f the Department o f State and United States Chiefs
o f Mission: 1778-1990, D ep’t o f State Publication 9825, at 163 (Jan. 1991).
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tionships. Before that happens, we must have more progress, more cooperation
and more answers.” 27 On May, 26, 1994, the United States and Vietnam formally
entered into consular relations within the framework of the Vienna Convention
on Consular Relations, done Apr. 18, 1961, 21 U.S.T. 77, 596 U.N.T.S. 261, to
which both States were party. T he United States, however, continued to condition
diplomatic relations on progress in areas o f concern to it. On January 28, 1995,
the United States and Vietnam signed an agreement relating to the restoration
o f diplomatic properties and another agreement relating to the settlement of private
claims. On July 11, 1995, the President announced an offer to establish diplomatic
relations with Vietnam under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations,
done Apr. 18, 1961, 23 U.S.T. 3227, 500 U.N.T.S. 95 — an offer that Vietnam
accepted on the following day. In announcing that offer, the President stated that
from the beginning of his Administration, “ any improvement in relationships be
tween America and Vietnam has depended upon making progress on the issue
o f Americans who were missing in action or held as prisoners of war.” 28 Soon
thereafter, the United States Liaison Office in Hanoi was upgraded to a Diplomatic
Post.
On May 8, 1996, the Government of Vietnam gave its agreement (“ agrement ” )
to the United States’ proposal that Representative Peterson be Ambassador Ex
traordinary and Plenipotentiary o f the United States to Vietnam.29 On May 23,
1996, the President submitted Mr. Peterson’s name to the United States Senate
for its advice and consent to that appointment.
In our judgment, while this pattern of activity demonstrates that the President
fully intends and expects to create the office of ambassador to Vietnam, it does
not establish that he has, in fact, yet done so. The establishment of diplomatic
relations does not entail the establishment of a diplomatic mission or the creation
o f the office of an ambassador. See Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations,
art. 2, 23 U.S.T. at 3231, 500 U.N.T.S. at 98. Moreover, the existence of diplo
matic relations with Vietnam does not require (although it may normally assume)
an exchange o f ambassadors, since relations may be conducted at a lower diplo
matic level. Further, we do not think that Vietnam’s agrement to receive Mr.
Peterson as ambassador establishes that that office exists for constitutional pur
p o ses.30 Nor (although the question is closer) does the President’s decision to
submit Mr. Peterson’s name to the Senate for confirmation. Even if Mr. Peterson
27 Remarks on Lifting the Trade Embargo on Vietnam and an Exchange With Reporters, Pub. Papers o f William
J. C linton 178, 179 (Feb. 3, 1994).
28 Remarks Announcing the Normalization o f Diplomatic Relations with Vietnam, 2 Pub. Papers o f William J.
Clinton 1073. 1073 (July 11. 1995).
29 “ In Older to avoid the unfriendly feeling which m ight arise through the refusal o f a state to receive a foreign
representative it is custom ary for the sending state to subm it in advance the name o f its envoy to the government
o f the state to whom he is to be accredited. The procedure o f determining in advance as to whether the envoy
will be persona grata is called agreation an d the approval agrement.” Stuart, supra note 16, at 139-40.
30 Indeed, as a m atter o f international law, it may be that the office of ambassador to Vietnam will not begin
to exist until o u r representative is “ duly accredited and received" as ambassador by the Government o f Vietnam.
Hollander v. Bail, 41 F. 732, 735 (S.D.N. Y .), prohibition denied fry 135 U.S. 403 (1890).
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is confirmed, the President would retain the discretion not to send an ambassador
to Vietnam, or otherwise not to create that office. In view of the facts that the
United States has not had an ambassador to Vietnam since 1975 (and has never
had an ambassador to the present government), that the process of normalizing
relations between the United States and Vietnam has been a complex and pro
tracted one, and that contingencies, however unlikely, may yet arise that would
lead the President to conclude that it was not in the United States’ best interests
to appoint and send an ambassador, we do not think that the office of ambassador
to Vietnam can be said to exist unless and until the President actually completes
the process by appointing an officer to that position. Accordingly, if the President
decides not to appoint Mr. Peterson to that office until after the expiration of
the present term of Congress on January 3, 1997, we do not think that Mr. Peter
son is constitutionally ineligible for that appointment.
In the interests of clarity, we repeat that we are not maintaining that an “ ap
pointment” within the meaning of the Ineligibility Clause does not occur until
the appointee is actually commissioned by the President. Whatever the merits of
that view as an original proposition (and they are substantial),31 we are not writing
on a clean slate. Accordingly, we follow the centuries-old teaching and practice
of the executive branch in assuming that the nomination of an ineligible individual
is itself a constitutional nullity, even if the commissioning of that individual were
to occur after the term of his or her ineligibility. Our position is that, in the sin
gular circumstances of this case, the relevant office — the Ambassadorship to Viet
nam — has not yet been “ created,” so that no ineligibility exists. Thus, both the
President’s act of nominating Mr. Peterson, and the Senate’s act of confirming
him (if it does), are constitutionally valid.
V.
It could be argued that our analysis gives insufficient weight to the policy of
the Ineligibility Clause, inasmuch as it makes it possible, by the President’s deci
sion to withhold creating a diplomatic post until after the expiration of a congres
sional term, to appoint an otherwise ineligible Member of Congress to that posi
tion. We would disagree. The tradition of interpreting the Clause has been “ for
malistic” rather than “ functional,” and our analysis comports fully with the literal
meaning o f the text. Furthermore, it is important to bear in mind that the Clause
was a compromise that reflected policy disagreements at the Philadelphia Conven
tion: to some extent, at least, the Clause was designed to perm it Members of
Congress, in appropriate circumstances, to hold office in the executive branch.32
31 See Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 155 (1803) (appointment not effective until commissioning
by President); Appointments to Office— Case o f Lieutenant Coxe, 4 Op. Att’y Gen. 217, 219 (1843).
32See Saxbe Hearing at 67 (emphasis added) (testimony o f Assistant Attorney General Dixon) ( “ There was a
disagreement in the convention concerning this issue and that was because there was a competition in values. The
Continued
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Moreover, even at the time of the Framing, it was understood that the Clause
was a highly imperfect safeguard against the danger that the prospect of appoint
ment to office would improperly influence Members of Congress. Luther Martin,
a delegate from Maryland to the Philadelphia Convention, provided his State legis
lature with a critical report on the Convention’s work. As to the Ineligibility
Clause, he wrote:
As to the exception that [Members of Congress] cannot be ap
pointed to offices created by themselves, or the emoluments of
which are by themselves increased, it is certainly of little con
sequence, since they may easily evade it by creating new offices,
to which may be appointed the persons who fill the offices before
created, and thereby vacancies will be made, which may be filled
by the members who for that purpose have created the new of
fices. 33
More recent commentators have also pointed out the inadequacy of the Clause
as a device for controlling the abuses at which it is apparently aimed. Thus, former
Assistant Attorney General Antonin Scalia rejected a policy-based interpretation
o f the Clause, writing:
the constitutional provision does not avoid some degree of absurdity
in any event, no matter what imaginatively constructed extensions
are devised; and . . . therefore it is best to restrict the provision
to its clear, literal meaning . . . . As for a means o f easy evasion,
nothing could be easier than having the Congress create a new post,
to be filled by an existing appointee, and then appointing the fa
vored M ember to the vacated office. In light o f the essential
incohesivesness of the constitutional provision, I do not regard the
policy a r gument . . . as persuasive.
Memorandum for Hugh M. Durham, Chief, Legislative & Legal Section, Office
of Legislative Affairs, from Antonin Scalia, Assistant Attorney General, Office
m atter was not viewed as being simple o r mechanistic. As M adison said at one point: 'Som e gentlemen give too
much weight and others too little to this subject.’ There was a fear that unless the Constitution did include an
ineligibility clause o f this sort, that there would be undue inroads on the independence o f the legislature by the
Executive m enticements and appointments to the executive branch and that also there might be self-interest in
the m em bers’ approach toward salaiy increases o r toward creation o f new offices. Al the same time there was also
a recurrent concern shared by Madison who was a primary mover o f the clause and also Pinkney, that a total
bar would be a disservice to the public and indeed to the executive branch and judicial branch.").
33 The Genuine Information Delivered to the Legislature o f the State o f Maryland Relative to the Proceedings
o f the General Convention Lately Held at Philadelphia, By Luther Martin, Esquire (1788), reprinted in 2 Herbert
J. Storing, The Com plete Anti-Federalist 19, 52 (198L).
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Nomination o f Sitting Member o f Congress to be Ambassador to Vietnam
of Legal Counsel, Re: P roposed bill to increase the salary o f the A ttorney General
at 6 (Nov. 22, 1974).34
VI.
Finally, there remains the question whether the President may nominate, and
the Senate confirm, an individual for an office that does not exist at the time
of the nomination and confirmation, but is expected to come into existence later.
The Office of the Senate Legal Counsel raises this objection, stating that “ we
are aware of no prior instance in which the President appointed someone to an
office that did not yet exist.” 35 There are, however, several such precedents.
The practice of the political branches establishes that the President may make
a nomination, and the Senate give its advice and consent, for an office not yet
in being. For example, the statute creating the Occupational Safety and Health
Review Commission became effective on April 28, 1971. See Occupational Safety
and Health Act of 1970, Pub. L. No. 91-596, §34, 84 Stat. 1590, 1620. President
Nixon nominated the first members of the Commission on March 19, 1971, see
117 Cong. Rec. 7270 (1971), and the Senate confirmed the nominees on April
14, 1971, “ effective in accordance with the provisions of law,” id. at 10,458.
Similarly, Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1953, 3 C.F.R. 1022 (1949-1953), re
printed in 5 U.S.C. app. at 1488 (1994), and in 67 Stat. 631 (1953), created the
office of Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, as of April 11, 1953. On
April 2, 1953, President Eisenhower nominated Oveta Culp Hobby to be the first
Secretary, effective April 11, see 99 Cong. Rec. 2716 (1953), and the Senate con
firmed her on April 10, id. at 2958.36
34 Similarly, Professor van Alstyne, testifying in a Senate hearing regarding the possibility o f curative legislation
to remove Senator Saxbe’s ineligibility to be appointed Attorney General, noted that
the mechanicalism of article I, section 6, clause 2, has the same virtues and the same vices as similar
provisions elsewhere in the document. For along with the virtue o f clear and impersonal operation, there
is, o f course, the shortcoming that legislative technique— that a line drawn in a manner giving conclusive
effect to but one or two circumstances may often fail to reach a variety of possible corrupt practices that
a more general standard would tend to reach. It is clear, for instance, . . . that a Senator or Representative
nearing the end o f his term might be induced to vote to create a new office or to raise the emoluments
in an existing one, expecting in return for his vote at once to be appointed to that office the instant his
term expires. Yet, the clause does not reach that point.
Saxbe Hearing at 51.
35 Senate Memo at 4.
36 Other instances in which Presidents have made nominations for offices not yet in being include: (1) the nomina
tion on January 20, 1989, o f Edward Derwinski to be the first Secretary o f Veterans Affairs, 135 Cong. Rec. 321
(1989), under a statute that precluded appointment until after January 21, 1989, see Department o f Veterans Affairs
Act, Pub. L. No. 100-527, § 18(b). 102 Stat. 2635, 2648 (1988) (codified as amended at 38 U.S.C. §301 note);
(2) the nomination on June 8, 1979, o f the first Federal Inspector for the Alaska Natural Gas Transportation System,
125 Cong. Rec. 14,209 (1979), under Reorganization Plan No. 1 o f 1979, 3 C.F.R. 505 (1980), reprinted in 5
U.S.C. app. at 1584 (1994), and in 93 Stat. 1373 (1979), which became effective on July 1, 1979; and (3) the
nomination on November 16, 1970, o f William D. Ruckelshaus to be the first Administrator o f the Environmental
Protection Agency, 116 Cong. Rec. 37,347 (1970), under a Reorganization Plan creating the office as o f December
2, 1970, Reorganization Plan No. 3 o f 1970, 3 C.F.R. 199 (1971), reprinted in 5 U.S.C. app. at 1551 (1994), and
in 84 Stat. 2086 (1970).
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The reasoning that supports this procedure is similar to that underlying nomina
tions and confirmations for prospective vacancies in existing offices:
[A]s a constitutional matter, nothing precludes the nomination and
confirmation of a successor while the incumbent still holds office.
Confirmation does not confer any rights on the nominee; the Presi
dent remains free to decide that he does not want to make the ap
pointment, which is not legally completed until the execution of
the commission.
N om inations f o r Prospective Vacancies on the Supreme Court, 10 Op. O.L.C. 108,
109 (1986). The President and Senate have repeatedly used this procedure for
prospective vacancies. See id. at 110-11. Just as in the case of prospective vacan
cies, nomination and confirmation for a prospective office can confer no rights
on the nominee, who must await further decisions and the President’s appointment.
The Office of the Senate Legal Counsel also objects that the nomination and
confirmation of an individual to a position that is to be created later “ raises seri
ous separation of powers concerns because it might fundamentally reshape and
limit the Senate’s constitutionally-based confirmation power. The Senate’s advice
and consent function requires a review not simply of the nominee, but of his
fitness to fulfill a particular office.” 37 We do not find that objection forceful
in the circumstances present here. First, the Senate’s constitutional power to reject
a nominee for any reason, or for none, is completely unimpaired. Second, in the
actual circumstances of this nomination, the Senate possesses all the facts that
are needed to make an informed judgment of the nominee’s fitness to serve as
Ambassador to Vietnam. Even if that particular ambassadorship has yet to be cre
ated, the duties and responsibilities of an ambassador are of course perfectly famil
iar to the Senate.
Conclusion
Accordingly, we conclude that Representative Peterson is not constitutionally
ineligible for appointment as Ambassador to Vietnam, provided that the President
finally creates that office after Representative Peterson’s term of office as a Mem
ber of Congress has expired on January 3, 1997.
CHRISTOPHER SCHROEDER
Acting Assistant Attorney General
Office o f Legal Counsel
37 Senate M emo at 4.
298