TheTip.org
Username:
Password:

Not a member?
Signup!
Polls Members Refer Forums Write for TheTip! Home Impeach Bush




Impeach George Bush


Unitary Executive

A new and expanding power the President of the United States assumed is the Presidential Signing Statements. Just what is it and where and when did it come into vogue? Which one of our Presidents became King, putting themselves above America's lawmakers and essentially asserting "Yes, this is the law of the land... FOR EVERYONE BUT ME!"

Source: Linda Lindauer, 2007-11-18

Candidate: Big Government

I was going to write an article, but then I found this one.

January 12, 2006

Why the Bush Doctrine Violates the Constitution

The Unitary Executive

By JENNIFER VAN BERGEN

When President Bush signed the new law, sponsored by Senator McCain, restricting the use of torture when interrogating detainees, he also issued a Presidential signing statement. That statement asserted that his power as Commander-in-Chief gives him the authority to bypass the very law he had just signed.

This news came fast on the heels of Bush's shocking admission that, since 2002, he has repeatedly authorized the National Security Agency to conduct electronic surveillance without a warrant, in flagrant violation of applicable federal law.

And before that, Bush declared he had the unilateral authority to ignore the Geneva Conventions and to indefinitely detain without due process both immigrants and citizens as enemy combatants.

All these declarations echo the refrain Bush has been asserting
from the outset of his presidency. That refrain is simple: Presidential power must be unilateral, and unchecked.

But the most recent and blatant presidential intrusions on the law and Constitution supply the verse to that refrain. They not only claim unilateral executive power, but also supply the train of the President's thinking, the texture of his motivations, and the root of his intentions.

They make clear, for instance, that the phrase "unitary executive" is a code word for a doctrine that favors nearly unlimited executive power. Bush has used the doctrine in his signing statements to quietly expand presidential authority.

In this column, I will consider the meaning of the unitary executive doctrine within a democratic government that respects the separation of powers. I will ask: Can our government remain true to its nature, yet also embrace this doctrine?

I will also consider what the President and his legal advisers mean by applying the unitary executive doctrin
e. And I will argue that the doctrine violates basic tenets of our system of checks and balances, quietly crossing longstanding legal and moral boundaries that are essential to a democratic society.


President Bush's Aggressive Use of Presidential Signing Statements

Bush has used presidential "signing statements" - statements issued by the President upon signing a bill into law -- to expand his power. Each of his signing statements says that he will interpret the law in question "in a manner consistent with his constitutional authority to supervise the unitary executive branch."

Presidential signing statements have gotten very little media attention. They are, however, highly important documents that define how the President interprets the laws he signs. Presidents use such statements to protects the prerogative of their office and ensure control over the executive branch functions.

Presidents also -- since Reagan -- have used such statements to create a kind of alter
native legislative history. Attorney General Ed Meese explained in 1986 that:

To make sure that the President's own understanding of what's in a bill is the same . . . is given consideration at the time of statutory construction later on by a court, we have now arranged with West Publishing Company that the presidential statement on the signing of a bill will accompany the legislative history from Congress so that all can be available to the court for future construction of what that statute really means.

The alternative legislative history would, according to Dr. Christopher S. Kelley, professor of political science at the Miami University at Oxford, Ohio, "contain certain policy or principles that the administration had lost in its negotiations" with Congress.

The Supreme Court has paid close attention to presidential signing statements. Indeed, in two important decisions -- the Chadha and Bowsher decisions - the Court relied in part on president signing statements in in
terpreting laws. Other federal courts, sources show, have taken note of them too.

President Bush has used presidential signing statements more than any previous president. From President Monroe's administration (1817-25) to the Carter administration (1977-81), the executive branch issued a total of 75 signing statements to protect presidential prerogatives. From Reagan's administration through Clinton's, the total number of signing statements ever issued, by all presidents, rose to a total 322.

In striking contrast to his predecessors, President Bush issued at least 435 signing statements in his first term alone. And, in these statements and in his executive orders, Bush used the term "unitary executive" 95 times. It is important, therefore, to understand what this doctrine means.


What Does the Administration Mean When It Refers to the "Unitary Executive"?

Dr. Kelley notes that the unitary executive doctrine arose as the result of the twin circumstances of Vietnam
and Watergate. Kelley asserts that "the faith and trust placed into the presidency was broken as a result of the lies of Vietnam and Watergate," which resulted in a congressional assault on presidential prerogatives.

For example, consider the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) which Bush evaded when authorizing the NSA to tap without warrants -- even those issued by the FISA court. FISA was enacted after the fall of Nixon with the precise intention of curbing unchecked executive branch surveillance. (Indeed, Nixon's improper use of domestic surveillance was included in Article 2 paragraph (2) of the impeachment articles against him.)

According to Kelley, these congressional limits on the presidency, in turn, led "some very creative people" in the White House and the Department of Justice's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) to fight back, in an attempt to foil or blunt these limits. In their view, these laws were legislative attempts to strip the president of his right
ful powers. Prominent among those in the movement to preserve presidential power and champion the unitary executive doctrine were the founding members of the Federalist Society, nearly all of whom worked in the Nixon, Ford, and Reagan White Houses.

The unitary executive doctrine arises out of a theory called "departmentalism," or "coordinate construction." According to legal scholars Christopher Yoo, Steven Calabresi, and Anthony Colangelo, the coordinate construction approach "holds that all three branches of the federal government have the power and duty to interpret the Constitution." According to this theory, the president may (and indeed, must) interpret laws, equally as much as the courts.


The Unitary Executive Versus Judicial Supremacy

The coordinate construction theory counters the long-standing notion of "judicial supremacy," articulated by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall in 1803, in the famous case of Marbury v. Madison, which held that the Court
is the final arbiter of what is and is not the law. Marshall famously wrote there: "It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is."

Of course, the President has a duty not to undermine his own office, as University of Miami law professor A. Michael Froomkin notes. And, as Kelley points out, the President is bound by his oath of office and the "Take Care clause" to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution and to "take care" that the laws are faithfully executed. And those duties require, in turn, that the President interpret what is, and is not constitutional, at least when overseeing the actions of executive agencies.

However, Bush's recent actions make it clear that he interprets the coordinate construction approach extremely aggressively. In his view, and the view of his Administration, that doctrine gives him license to overrule and bypass Congress or the courts, based on his own interpretations of the Constitution -- e
ven where that violates long-established laws and treaties, counters recent legislation that he has himself signed, or (as shown by recent developments in the Padilla case) involves offering a federal court contradictory justifications for a detention.

This is a form of presidential rebellion against Congress and the courts, and possibly a violation of President Bush's oath of office, as well.

After all, can it be possible that that oath means that the President must uphold the Constitution only as he construes it - and not as the federal courts do?

And can it be possible that the oath means that the President need not uphold laws he simply doesn't like - even though they were validly passed by Congress and signed into law by him?


Analyzing Bush's Disturbing Signing Statement for the McCain Anti-Torture Bill

Let's take a close look at Bush's most recent signing statement, on the torture bill. It says:

The executive branch shall construe Title X in Division A of
the Act, relating to detainees, in a manner consistent with the constitutional authority of the President to supervise the unitary executive branch and as Commander in Chief and consistent with the constitutional limitations on the judicial power, which will assist in achieving the shared objective of the Congress and the President, evidenced in Title X, of protecting the American people from further terrorist attacks.

In this signing statement, Bush asserts not only his authority to internally supervise the "unitary executive branch," but also his power as Commander-in-Chief, as the basis for his interpretation of the law -- which observers have noted allows Bush to create a loophole to permit the use of torture when he wants.

Clearly, Bush believes he can ignore the intentions of Congress. Not only that but by this statement, he has evinced his intent to do so, if he so chooses.

On top of this, Bush asserts that the law must be consistent with "constitutional limitations
on judicial power." But what about presidential power? Does Bush see any constitutional or statutory limitations on that? And does this mean that Bush will ignore the courts, too, if he chooses - as he attempted, recently, to do in the Padilla case?


The Unitary Executive Doctrine Violates the Separation of Powers

As Findlaw columnist Edward Lazarus recently showed, the President does not have unlimited executive authority, not even as Commander-in-Chief of the military. Our government was purposely created with power split between three branches, not concentrated in one.

Separation of powers, then, is not simply a talisman: It is the foundation of our system. James Madison wrote in The Federalist Papers, No. 47, that:

The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary, self-appointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.

Another early America
n, George Nicholas, eloquently articulated the concept of "power divided" in one of his letters:

The most effectual guard which has yet been discovered against the abuse of power, is the division of it. It is our happiness to have a constitution which contains within it a sufficient limitation to the power granted by it, and also a proper division of that power. But no constitution affords any real security to liberty unless it is considered as sacred and preserved inviolate; because that security can only arise from an actual and not from a nominal limitation and division of power.

Yet it seems a nominal limitation and division of power - with real power concentrated solely in the "unitary executive" - is exactly what President Bush seeks. His signing statements make the point quite clearly, and his overt refusal to follow the laws illustrates that point: In Bush's view, there is no actual limitation or division of power; it all resides in the executive.

Thomas Paine wro
te in Common Sense:

In America, the law is king. For as in absolute governments the King is law, so in free countries the law ought to be king; and there ought to be no other.

The unitary executive doctrine conflicts with Paine's principle - one that is fundamental to our constitutional system. If Bush can ignore or evade laws, then the law is no longer king. Americans need to decide whether we are still a country of laws - and if we are, we need to decide whether a President who has determined to ignore or evade the law has not acted in a manner contrary to his trust as President and subversive of constitutional government.

Jennifer Van Bergen, a journalist with a law degree, is the author of THE TWILIGHT OF DEMOCRACY: THE BUSH PLAN FOR AMERICA

Add a comment to this Message in our Forums.
While you're at it, check out our forums too!
Add your Comments to this article
Display Name:


User Originated Comments:


Send this article to:
Your Email:

Related News

11-21-2007
Hillary Clinton and the Unitary Executive
11-14-2007
C-SPAN 11/14
5-23-2007
If a Panther Calls, Don't Anther.
4-5-2007
Greenhouse Gasses are not only Fact, but Law
3-20-2007
FBI and the Subpoena Scam
3-11-2007
Issues for 08
2-6-2007
Who's Future
1-12-2007
16th Ammendment, Prepare for a Challenge
12-4-2006
The Next 20 Years
10-30-2006
The Revolution
9-13-2006
Remembering 9/11
3-28-2006
Immigration
12-16-2005
More Mischief
11-15-2005
Freedom Isn't Free
10-5-2005
Pray, Just Pray
10-3-2005
The Poor
10-3-2005
The Poor
6-29-2005
Ten Commandments
6-22-2005
Hypocrosy Piling Up
6-11-2005
Serving God in Iraq
5-13-2005
Slavery makes a Comeback
3-5-2005
Then there's the One abou the Economy
2-7-2005
Budget
2-6-2005
SOCIAL SECURITY CURE
1-31-2005
Spellings Expels Vermont
1-30-2005
Wimpy - Reprise
1-29-2005
Inmates in Charge at the White House
1-26-2005
2000-2004 Ballot Spoilage - Accident or Habit
1-26-2005
Government/Corporate Corruption
1-26-2005
Ten Worst Corporate Offenders
1-26-2005
#3 Worst Corp
1-26-2005
The Grandaddy of them All
1-26-2005
#5 & #6, Halfway there
1-26-2005
#7 & #8, Counting the Bodies
1-7-2005
Democracy Dead Part II
10-19-2004
No Child Left Behind: They're All Going to Iraq
10-18-2004
Privitizing Social Security
10-17-2004
Creeping Fascism at Sinclair
10-4-2004
You cannot lead if you send mexxed missiges. GWB
10-3-2004
DRAFT!!
9-26-2004
DeLay's Tactics Will Take the Congress
9-13-2004
Pinning the Blame
8-26-2004
Feel Safe Yet?
8-22-2004
Gerrymandering - What For? Electronic Voting
8-22-2004
Election Directors Roster
8-19-2004
And the Beat Goes On and On and On
8-16-2004
Why We Need Tax Reform
8-3-2004
Investigating the Investigators
7-23-2004
When Up is Down
7-22-2004
Put Them Out With The Cat
7-20-2004
Abu Ghraib - You Decide
6-23-2004
Congress and Administration Use Our Health to Rob Our Pockets
6-19-2004
Who's Watching the Store
6-3-2004
Arthur Anderson Gets $10 Billion Security Contract
5-14-2004
Who is Muqtada al-Sadr
5-3-2004
Vanishing Votes
4-28-2004
Battle of the Warmongering Lying Yale Skull and Bonesman
4-26-2004
Tristero: Fair and Balanced
4-24-2004
Religion
4-23-2004
Koreans Blasted
4-20-2004
Fables of the Reconstruction
4-19-2004
Bush names Negroponte Iraq ambassador
4-16-2004
Ashcroft at Ground Zero
4-13-2004
How Much is Too Much
4-11-2004
CIA and FBI had 9/11 Evidence in Advance
4-6-2004
Mercenaries v Our Boys
3-13-2004
Electronic Voting Machine Proved Failure in California Election
2-27-2004
Pentagon Opens Propaganda Office for Iraq/Afganistan News
2-19-2004
#1 Issue for 2004
2-15-2004
Bremer Awaiting UN Handoff in Iraq
2-11-2004
Tenet's Job Security
2-10-2004
Who is Grover Norquist?
2-9-2004
FBI Terrorism Hearings - Black Lists are Back
2-8-2004
Traitors!
2-7-2004
Back to Frick or Frack
2-6-2004
Duck!!
2-5-2004
Iraq is a Free Country Today
2-1-2004
Diebold Experiment Fails
1-26-2004
Federal Courts Chipping Away at Patriot Act
1-23-2004
Repugs Destroying the Republic
12-29-2003
The End of Common Sense
12-4-2003
Why Do They Hate US II
12-3-2003
Iraq Money Scandals
11-29-2003
A Prisoner Of Panic After 9/11
11-26-2003
Straight Talk from Bill Moyers
11-21-2003
Occupied America
11-19-2003
Can you name them?
11-13-2003
Sieg Heil!!
11-10-2003
Jessica Lynch Lies
11-2-2003
Getting The Bucks Before It's Too Late
11-1-2003
Unemployment Steady at 6.1%
10-23-2003
Iran, the Next Iraq II
10-17-2003
Democrats or Republicans - Definitely No Difference
10-15-2003
Halliburton Sting
10-9-2003
The Employment Problem - Again
10-4-2003
$$MISMANAGEMENT$$
9-23-2003
How Much It's Costing
9-20-2003
Debt Matters
9-19-2003
Kennedy Outs Bush
9-12-2003
Iran Nuclear - NOT
9-2-2003
China Buying US Treasury Bonds
9-1-2003
Bin Laden In Pakistan
8-30-2003
Iran Nuclear
8-26-2003
British Excuses - How Conspiracies Really Happen
8-19-2003
UN Go Home - US Go Home
8-12-2003
David Kelly - Lord Hutton's First Hearings
8-11-2003
Hard Costs
8-5-2003
Tom Kelly on David Kelly
7-27-2003
Tired of the Crick in my Neck
7-26-2003
Electronic Voting Machines Blasted by Scientists, Hacked by Author
7-24-2003
Hoon - Silence is Golden
7-20-2003
Whistleblowers Beware - David Kelly
7-18-2003
Americans Not Deceived
7-10-2003
Ron Paul on Neo Conservativism
7-8-2003
An Independence Day Declaration
7-1-2003
Are You Sleeping at Night? Maybe You've Fallen Prey to PTSS
6-12-2003
Free Speech, Freedom of Assembly
6-11-2003
Black Box Voting
5-30-2003
WMD just a convenient excuse for war, admits Wolfowitz
5-30-2003
Stop Michael Powell Now!
5-30-2003
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz cites Bureaucratic Reasons for War On Iraq
5-29-2003
ACLU Releases Report on Suppression of Dissent in a Post 9/11 America
5-28-2003
Iran - No Al Qaeda Links, US Not Fighting Terror Effectively
5-8-2003
Closing the Deal - US To Get Power over Iraqi Oil
5-2-2003
6% Unemployment
4-29-2003
Liberating the Dead - US Kills 13 Unarmed Iraqi's at Political Protest
4-18-2003
New American Century
4-15-2003
A Strategic Mistake - Shiites and Baathists Disincluded from New American Iraq
4-15-2003
Feel Like a Sucker?
4-14-2003
We Love the Iraqi Minister Dot Com
4-9-2003
Bringing Home the Bacon - 80 Billion Dollars for War and Homeland Security
4-6-2003
Senate Tables Alaska Oil Drilling
4-6-2003
Enforcing Consent - Rubber Bullets Used on American War Protesters
4-3-2003
How to rule the world - a long view.
4-3-2003
Maybe the Iraqis will Bomb Themselves - US Generals Say
3-27-2003
First Returning Soldiers Have a Tale to Tell
3-26-2003
Al Jazeera Down!
3-25-2003
Pentagon - A Handful of Snippets
3-23-2003
Fox Reports "Huge" chemical weapons plant found in Iraq
3-22-2003
Who Said It?
3-21-2003
Proud to be an American
3-20-2003
California Abandoning Electric Cars
3-20-2003
US Attacks Afghanistan while world watches Iraq
3-20-2003
Blackmailing the Kurds
3-20-2003
An Open Letter to NPR - Rewriting History
3-19-2003
Civil Disobedience
3-15-2003
Political Meta Directory
3-11-2003
Mother Of All Bombs
3-1-2003
GNN Interview of Greg Palast
2-28-2003
John Brady Kiesling, Career Diplomat, Resigns Citing Administration's Manipulation of Facts
2-27-2003
Newsweek's Iraq Report Falls on Deaf Ears
2-22-2003
Following the Money to Iraq
2-22-2003
Rhetoric of Relevance
2-13-2003
Newspaper Headlines Across the Nation
2-9-2003
Can't Forget, Can't Move On
2-3-2003
Deficits Do Matter
1-31-2003
Special Forces in Norther IRAQ Admitted by US
1-24-2003
Is the United States Still A Democracy
1-21-2003
Selling Fear - Feinstein and the Bush Administration Line up to get us to spend more money on Fear
1-9-2003
Bush Gives FBI 9/11 Foul-Up a Bonus
12-13-2002
New York State Judge Advocates Slavery to the State
12-3-2002
Bush Gives the Government A Raise
11-18-2002
Manifesto for an Improved America
11-18-2002
Problems with Homeland Security: Our Waning Rights and the the Big Business Benefits
11-18-2002
Total Information Awareness is Step Towards Police State - Libertarians Say
11-17-2002
Pelosi Shows Her Colors - The DemoPublicans Fold Ranks
11-17-2002
$17.5 Billion More for Daddy
10-30-2002
Democrats or Republicans? Who cares?
10-16-2002
Law forcing schools to share student data
10-10-2002
Club Med For Monkeys?
10-3-2002
Let the Gerrymandering Begin
10-2-2002
Timing is Everything - Senate Debates Iraq Attack, but we're already bombing.
9-23-2002
Congressional Review Board has no Teeth
9-23-2002
Senators and Congresspeople Emails
9-22-2002
World Domination - War In Iraq
9-20-2002
Who gets credit for War?
9-20-2002
Not in Our Name
9-20-2002
Please CALL YOUR Congresspeople
9-20-2002
What's Down With the Dow?
9-15-2002
Vote.Org Democracy Movement
9-15-2002
Democracy Movement
9-11-2002
September 11 Again
9-11-2002
Taxation!
9-4-2002
Senate and House Agree on Meaningless Campaign Reform Bill
9-2-2002
National Press has Short Memory and Selective Information
9-2-2002
Saddam Hussein - A CIA Puppet?
9-2-2002
World Domination II - Britain Makes war on Iraq?
7-30-2002
Why War is good for the Republicrats
1-24-2002
Total Information Awareness Funding Pulled
1-2-2002
North Korea Pulls out of Nuclear Non-Proliferation Pacts After the US
7-28-2001
California Supreme Court Dismissed Class Action Suit against price fixers
1-1-1995
O. J. and Iraq
1-1-1900
BBC Reports CIA/FBI Involvement in Sept. 11 Attacks











Donate some Clicks!













This RingSurf The Political Science and Politics Webring Net Ring
owned by TheTIP.

[ Skip Next | Next | Random Site | List Sites |Previous ]

NEWS | ACTION | RESULTS | POLLS | MEMBERS | SEARCH

FAIR USE NOTICE This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. Thetip.org assumes no responsibility for any errors or omissions in these materials. Thetip.org makes no commitment to update the information contained herein. Further, Thetip.org cannot edit, control, review for truth or accuracy, or screen for defamation or obscenity any content provided to the Website by a third party through postings, uploaded files, or any other form of communication, nor can Thetip.org ensure prompt removal of defamatory, obscene, inappropriate or unlawful content after transmission. Any such third party postings, files or other communications do not necessarily represent the opinions, beliefs, or positions of Thetip.org.

Thetip.org makes no, and expressly disclaims any, representations or warranties, express or implied, regarding the Website, including, without limitation, any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. Thetip.org makes no, and expressly disclaims any, warranties, express or implied, regarding the correctness, accuracy, completeness, timeliness, and reliability of the text, graphics, links to other sites and any other items accessed from or via this Website or the Internet, or that the services will be uninterrupted, error-free or free of viruses or other harmful components. Under no circumstances shall Thetip.org, its affiliates, or any of their respective partners, officers, directors, employees, agents or representatives be liable for any damages, whether direct, indirect, special or consequential damages for lost revenues, lost profits, or otherwise, arising from or in connection with this Website, the materials contained herein, or the Internet generally.