Morrison v. Olson determined that it was not unconstitutional to restrict the Attorney General’s ability to fire Department of Justice officials without cause. The Independent Counsel Act made it illegal for the Attorney General to fire an inferior without good reason, which is important because it means a DOJ official won’t be fired just because doing their job inconvenienced someone above them.
Imagine a wild scenario where a sitting President commits a criminal act that the Department of Justice, part of the Executive Branch, then has to investigate. If the Attorney General was, say, more committed to loyalty to the President than upholding the law, prior to the Independent Counsel Act, they could just fire any Justice Department official looking into the matter without having to justify it.
A lawsuit was filed after the ICA went into effect that then got appealed to the Supreme Court – the Morrison v. Olson case – that challenged that the ICA substantially inhibited the Executive Branch’s power to the benefit of the other branches, but the SC ultimately ruled that this was not the case.
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