KEY POINTS
  • Trump threatened to adjourn Congress so that he could appoint his nominees to senior positions and the federal bench without Senate approval.
  • The Constitution grants the president the power to adjourn Congress in limited circumstances, but such a scenario is nearly unimaginable due to longstanding legislative rules.
  • Trump claims he needs the authority to make recess appointments in order to install his stalled nominees in key positions to help with the coronavirus pandemic response.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Wednesday threatened to do what no American president before him has done: Unilaterally adjourn Congress so that he can appoint his nominees to senior positions and the federal bench without Senate approval.

But according to legal scholars, the president only has the authority to adjourn Congress if — and only if — the House and the Senate disagree with one another over when to adjourn. Currently, there is no such disagreement.