Opinion PER CURIAM.
The Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) appeals from a November 15, 1982, district court order enjoining him from carrying out a reduction-in-force (RIF) involving approximately 181 HUD employees. 1 The injunction was to remain in effect until December 31, 1982. For the reasons stated below, we reverse the district court’s order and remand with instructions to enter judgment for the Secretary. 2
Plaintiff-appellees are HUD employees affected by the personnel action, their union (American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO), and Congressman Martin Sabo, a member of the House Appropriations Committee. They allege that the proposed RIF was a “reorganization of the Department” of the type Congress meant to block through a provision in the HUD Appropriation Act precluding use of funds “prior to January 1, 1983, to plan, design, implement, or administer any reorganization without the prior approval of the Committees on Appropriations.” Department of Housing and Urban Development— Independent Agencies Appropriation Act, 1983, Pub.L. No. 97-272, 96 Stat. 1160,1164 (1982).
The district court ruled that Congressman Sabo had standing to challenge the Secretary’s action, did not decide whether the union or the HUD employees could pursue the case, assumed arguendo the unconstitutionality of the clause lifting the funding prohibition upon “the prior approval of the Committees on Appropriations,” severed the approval .clause, and applied the provision, as trimmed, to enjoin the RIF. Thus, under the order we review in this expedited appeal, the Secretary is estopped from using appropriated funds before December 31, 1982, to “plan, design, implement, or administer any reorganization of the Department.” We agree that Congressman Sabo has standing to commence this lawsuit, pretermit the question whether the district court was the appropriate forum for the employees’ complaint, find the approval clause unconstitutional and not severable from the preceding portion of the sentence in which it is contained, and hold the provision invalid in its entirety.
Standing
Congressman Sabo asserts that he has standing both in his capacity as a legislator and as a member of the House Appropriations Committee. The district court found standing based on his membership in Congress, but did not explicitly consider the
Congressman Sabo’s membership in the House of Representatives
With respect to this basis for standing, we disapprove the district court’s reliance upon
Kennedy v. Sampson,
■Congressman Sabo’s membership on the House Appropriations Committee
This basis for standing, however, is controlled by Kennedy, which involved a challenge to President Nixon’s alleged abuse of the pocket veto. Senator Kennedy asserted that a bill passed by both Houses of Congress had become law without signature of the President. We found that the Senator had standing because the President’s actions had denied him the effectiveness of his vote in enacting the statute. He claimed an interest which he, as a senator, had in the legislative process, different from any interest that he, like any other citizen, may have had in the execution of the bill once enacted.
In the present case, the Appropriation Act gave Congressman Sabo the right, as a member of the Appropriations Committee, to participate in approval of any reorganization of HUD conducted before January 1, 1983. The Secretary’s actions injured him by depriving him of that specific statutory right to participate in the legislative process.
3
That right, unique to members of the Appropriations Committees, is not a general interest in the faithful execution of laws, but rather a particular interest in the law as it relates to their authority. Under currently governing precedent, therefore, Congressman Sabo has a sufficient “personal stake in the outcome of the controversy,”
Baker v. Carr,
Constitutionality of the Proviso
The challenged provision of the HUD Appropriation Act can be interpreted
Consumer Energy
holds that a one-house veto of otherwise permitted executive action is an act of legislative power,
The provision can also be taken as granting the Appropriations Committees the power to lift a congressionally-imposed restriction on the use of appropriated funds. In this light, the directive is nothing more or less than a grant of legislative power to two congressional committees. It is plainly violative of article I, section 7, which prescribes the only method through which legislation may be enacted and which “restrict[s] the operation of the legislative power to those policies which meet the approval of three constituencies, or a super-majority of two.”
Consumer Energy,
Severability
The provision at issue reads in full: Provided, That none of the funds made available in this paragraph may be used prior to January 1, 1983, to plan, design, implement, or administer any reorganization of the Department without the prior approval of the Committees on Appropriations. (Emphasis in original.)
Avoiding the constitutional question, the district court assumed
arguendo
the invalidity of the approval device. In the district court’s judgment, the provision survived without it. Citing
Buckley v. Valeo,
All parties recognize that the reorganization funding restriction was “compromise legislation.” Brief of Appellees at 4; see also Brief for Appellant at 36-39. The House version would have banned HUD’s use of fiscal year 1983 funds for reorganization unless the Appropriations Committees approved. See House Report, supra, at 10. The Senate version contained no restriction. The Senate Committee report stated:
The Committee has deleted House bill language specifying that no funds may be used to plan or implement a reorganization of the Department without the prior approval of the Committees on Appropriation. The Committee believes that such legislation is overly restrictive and will impair the Department’s ability to institute management improvements and cost savings.
S.Rep. No. 97-549, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. at 29 (1982). The conferees settled on retention of the funding prohibition coupled with the committee approval clause, but set a December 31,1982, termination date for the restriction. See H.R.Rep. No. 97-891 (Conference), 97th Cong., 2d Sess. at 7 (1982).
This court has said with regard to sever-ability, “the crucial inquiry [is] whether Congress would have enacted other portions of the statute in the absence of the invalidated provision.”
Consumer Energy,
In sum, the legislative history casts grave doubt on any supposition that the Senate would have agreed to an absolute prohibition, a ban which would have precluded HUD from making personnel decisions that ordinarily accompany an agency’s programmatic authority. We therefore hold the prohibition on HUD reorganization “inextricably bound” to the invalid committee approval device.
Planned Parenthood of Central Missouri v. Danforth,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
Reversed.
ORDER
PER CURIAM.
Members of the Court have requested the taking of a vote on their sua sponte suggestion that this case be reheard by the Court en banc. The suggestion has been transmitted to the full Court. A majority of the Judges in regular active service have not voted in favor of the suggestion and, accordingly, this case will not be reheard en banc.
A statement of Circuit Judges WALD and MIKVA concerning rehearing en banc is attached.
Statement of Circuit Judges WALD and MIKVA.
We would rehear this case en banc because vitally important issues of executive-legislative relations are articulated too broadly and explored inadequately in the panel opinion. We are especially concerned that the panel’s opinion lumps together for automatic rejection under the rubric of “legislative vetoes” several different kinds of statutory provisions, each entailing a distinct accommodation between the executive and legislative branches. Such black-and-white treatment of these statutes ignores a largely gray area that has existed for 200 years in our constitutional scheme.
The statutory provision invalidated in this case—requiring that both the Senate and House Appropriations Committees approve any expenditure of funds “used prior to January 1, 1983, to plan, design, implement, or administer any reorganization of [HUD]”—is easily distinguishable from the legislative vetoes previously found to be unconstitutional by this court. Both
Consumer Energy Council v. FERC,
We write separately to underscore our concern that language in the panel’s opinion not be read to foreclose careful consideration in subsequent cases of historical experience, practical working relationships, and the deference due Congress when it establishes its own procedures under the Constitution. For example, we note that both the Reorganization Act of 1977, 5 U.S.C. § 906 (Supp. V 1981), and the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Act of 1974, 31 U.S.C. § 1403 (1976), include provisions permitting either house of Congress to disapprove of proposed executive actions. We are convinced that these and similar statutes cannot simply be invalidated under the reasoning of our prior opinions without detailed examination of how such arrangements operate and what they are designed to accomplish.
Cf. Consumer Energy,
Given that the expedited opinion in the present case was released only one day after oral argument, and was based on briefs that barely addressed potential differences among relevant statutes, such an in-depth examination has not yet occurred. The emergency that gave rise to this panel opinion should neither overwhelm nor pretermit more deliberation in the future before defining and taking sides on so fundamental a constitutional clash between branches of government. We anticipate that this court will move in a measured fashion in its treatment of this explosive and far-reaching controversy between Congress and the executive branch.
Notes
. According to appellees, RIF notices were issued to “approximately 222 employees.” Brief of Appellees at 3.
. Appellees assert the near mootness of this suit; they contend that the general notice of reduction-in-force has expired, therefore the Secretary cannot implement the RIF, whatever the outcome of this appeal. The general notice, issued on August 20, 1982, states “[s]pecific RIF notices will be effective on or before 90 calendar days from the date of this general notice or from the date of extension of this notice.” See Brief of Appellees at Appendix B, 2; see also 5 C.F.R. § 351.801(b) (“notice shall not be issued more than 90-days before release”); Federal Personnel Manual, ch. 351, ¶ 6-2(a) (90 days maximum for notice of reduction-in-force). The specific notices of reduction-in-force were issued on September 29, 1982, with an effective date of October 31, 1982. The Secretary never extended the general notice.
Appellees maintain that the general notice expired 90 days after issuance, on November 18, 1982, thus new notices must precede any attempt to implement a RIF. The district court’s stop order, however, made from the bench on November 10, 1982, and embodied in an injunction filed on November 15, 1982, must be deemed to have tolled the running of the 90-day notice period. Tolling would continue pending this court’s decision. Therefore the notice issued on August 20 is still valid. Appellees’ argument, were it accepted, would effectively insulate the district court’s order from appellate review. We cannot embrace the argument.
. The interest Congressman Sabo asserts here is closely analogous to the interest asserted in
Goldwater v. Carter,
. Appellees suggest that if the provision is interpreted as a veto then this case is not ripe for adjudication because no veto has been cast by either committee. Brief of Appellees at 13-18. This does not help appellees’ case. If one of the committees must act in order for the prohibition to be effective, the fact that no vote has been taken means that the President is free to reorganize HUD headquarters. Appellees have inadvertently provided an alternative ground for dismissing their suit. If they mean to suggest that committee inaction constitutes a veto, then a veto has in fact been cast.
. The language quoted by the
Buckley
Court, and relied upon by the district court, appears in
Champlin Refining Co. v. Corporation Comm’n,
