As this morning’s New York Times analysis put it in describing the rationale behind the Adminstration's violations of the Foreign Intelligence Security Act, pursuant to which it has been secretly spying on the commuincations of American citizens without judicial warrants:
A single, fiercely debated legal principle lies behind nearly every major initiative in the Bush administration's war on terror, scholars say: the sweeping assertion of the powers of the presidency.
From the government's detention of Americans as "enemy combatants" to the just-disclosed eavesdropping in the United States without court warrants, the administration has relied on an unusually expansive interpretation of the president's authority.
As the Times reports, Bush's claim to absolute executive power has its origins principally in one document:
The notion that one of the three branches of our Government can claim power unchecked by the other two branches is precisely what the Founders sought, first and foremost, to preclude. And the fear that a U.S. President would attempt to seize power unchecked by the law or by the other branches – i.e., that the Executive would seize the powers of the British King – was the driving force behind the clear and numerous constitutional limitations placed on Executive power. It is these very limitations which the Bush Administration is claiming that it has the power to disregard because the need for enhanced national security in time of war vests the President with unchecked power.
a Sept. 25, 2001, memorandum [by the Justice Department’s John Yoo] that said no statute passed by Congress "can place any limits on the president's determinations as to any terrorist threat, the amount of military force to be used in response, or the method, timing and nature of the response."
But that theory of the Executive unconstrained by law is completely repulsive to the founding principles of the country, as well as to the promises made by the Founders in order to extract consent from a monarchy-fearing public to the creation of executive power vested in a single individual. The notion that all of that can be just whimsically tossed aside whenever the nation experiences external threats is as contrary to the country’s founding principles as it is dangerous.
It cannot be said that the Founders were unaware of the potential for national emergencies and external threats. They engaged in a war with the British which was at least as much of an existential threat to the Republic as those posed by 9/11 and related threats of Islamic extremism. Notwithstanding those threats, the Founders, in creating an Executive branch, sought first and foremost to ensure that the President could never wield unchecked powers which would exist above and separate from Congressionally enacted laws.
Among recent Republican Administrations, this theory of the unchecked President is not new. Digby recalls Richard Nixon's endorsement of it, and the theory came to life in the Iran-Contra scandal, where the Reagan Administration unilaterally deemed it necessary to U.S. national security to arm the Nicaraguan contras and then asserted for itself the power to circumvent the law enacted by the Congress which prohibited exactly that.
But the situation we have now is far more egregious, and far more dangerous, because the Administration is not even bothering to pretend now (as the Reagan Administration at least did) that the Executive acts undertaken really did adhere to Congressional intent, or alternatively, to the extent that such acts violated Congressional mandates, the acts were simply the by-product of overzealous and rogue officials who broke the law without the knowledge or approval of President Reagan.
The Bush Administration’s position now is almost the opposite of that posture, in that the Administration is expressly claiming that the President does have the right to violate laws of Congress because his executive power is absolute and thus cannot be restricted by anything. And rather than applying this theory of unchecked executive power to a single case (as the Reagan Administration did in Iran-contra), the Bush Administration has arrogated unto itself this monarchical power as a general proposition, applicable to each and every issue which can be said to relate, however generally, to this undeclared "war" against terrorism.
This view of the Presidency – which now exists not just in odious theory but in real, live, breathing form vested in George Bush – is precisely what the monarchy-fearing Founders insisted should never occur and, with the enactment of the U.S. Constitution, would never occur.
This absolute power claimed and enthusiastically exercised by George Bush violates not just specific Constitutional limitations, but the core principles of the Constitution: that we are a nation of laws not men; that each branch shall be "co-equal" to the others and checked and limited by the other two; and that the people shall retain ultimate power by vesting in them the right to enact supreme laws through the Congress which shall bind all other citizens, including the President.
That the Bush Administration’s claim to unchecked and supra-legal Executive power is squarely inconsistent with basic constitutional principles is conclusively demonstrated by James Madison’s Federalist No. 48, which is devoted to the principle that liberty cannot be maintained unless each branch remains accountable and subordinate to the others:
It was shown in the last paper that the political apothegm there examined does not require that the legislative, executive, and judiciary departments should be wholly unconnected with each other. I shall undertake, in the next place, to show that unless these departments be so far connected and blended as to give to each a constitutional control over the others, the degree of separation which the maxim requires, as essential to a free government, can never in practice be duly maintained.
Similarly, Madison, in Federalist No. 51, defined the central objective for avoiding tyranny as ensuring that no branch be able to claim for itself powers which are absolute and unchecked by the other branches:
What expedient, then, shall we finally resort, for maintaining in practice the necessary partition of power among the several departments, as laid down in the Constitution? The only answer that can be given is, that as all these exterior provisions are found to be inadequate, the defect must be supplied, by so contriving the interior structure of the government as that its several constituent parts may, by their mutual relations, be the means of keeping each other in their proper places. . . .
In particular, Madison emphasized in Federalist 51 that liberty could be preserved only if the laws enacted by the people through the Congress were supreme and universally binding:
But it is not possible to give to each department an equal power of self-defense. In republican government, the legislative authority necessarily predominates.
Hamilton made the same point in Federalist No. 73. where he emphasized:
"[t]he superior weight and influence of the legislative body in a free government, and the hazard to the Executive in a trial of strength with that body, . . . "
To the Founders, the defining characteristics of the tyrannical British King was that he possessed precisely those powers which the Constitution prohibits but which the Bush Administration is now claiming it can exercise. From Federalist 70:
In England, the king is a perpetual magistrate; and it is a maxim which has obtained for the sake of the public peace, that he is unaccountable for his administration, and his person sacred.
Based on the fear of such unchecked executive power, Federalist 69 emphasized that unlike the British King, who did possess the absolute power to nullify duly enacted laws , the sole power possessed by the President to negate a law enacted by the Congress -- including with regard to matters of national security and war -- is the President’s qualified (i.e., override-able) veto power:
Hence it appears that, except as to the concurrent authority of the President in the article of treaties, it would be difficult to determine whether that magistrate would, in the aggregate, possess more or less power than the Governor of New York. And it appears yet more unequivocally, that there is no pretense for the parallel which has been attempted between him and the king of Great Britain. . . .
The one [the American President] would have a qualified negative upon the acts of the legislative body; the other [the British King] has an absolute negative. The one would have a right to command the military and naval forces of the nation; the other, in addition to this right, possesses that of declaring war, and of raising and regulating fleets and armies by his own authority.
An extremely potent demonstration that the Bush Administration’s claim to unchecked Executive Power is fundamentally inconsistent with the most basic constitutional safeguards comes from one of the unlikeliest corners – Antonin Scalia’s dissent in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, 124 S.Ct. 2633 (2004):
The proposition that the Executive lacks indefinite wartime detention authority over citizens is consistent with the Founders' general mistrust of military power permanently at the Executive's disposal. In the Founders' view, the "blessings of liberty" were threatened by "those military establishments which must gradually poison its very fountain." The Federalist No. 45, p. 238 (J. Madison). No fewer than 10 issues of the Federalist were devoted in whole or part to allaying fears of oppression from the proposed Constitution's authorization of standing armies in peacetime.
Many safeguards in the Constitution reflect these concerns. Congress's authority "[t]o raise and support Armies" was hedged with the proviso that "no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years." U. S. Const., Art. 1, §8, cl. 12. Except for the actual command of military forces, all authorization for their maintenance and all explicit authorization for their use is placed in the control of Congress under Article I, rather than the President under Article II.
As Hamilton explained, the President's military authority would be "much inferior" to that of the British King:
"It would amount to nothing more than the supreme command and direction of the military and naval forces, as first general and admiral of the confederacy: while that of the British king extends to the declaring of war, and to the raising and regulating of fleets and armies; all which, by the constitution under consideration, would appertain to the legislature." The Federalist No. 69, p. 357.
A view of the Constitution that gives the Executive authority to use military force rather than the force of law against citizens on American soil flies in the face of the mistrust that engendered these provisions.
Both the Bush Administration’s theory of its own unchecked power and its indiscriminate and aggressive use of that power to violate Congressional law contradicts every constitutional principle created to ensure that we do not live under unchecked Executive tyranny. If the President is allowed to get away with secretly decreeing that he can violate the law and then doing exactly that, then there really are no remaining checks on Executive power -- and we have, without hyperbole, arrived at the very definition of tyranny.
The country has, more or less with a quiet complacency, stood by while this Administration imprisoned American citizens with no due process, while the Administration sanctioned torture and then used it to extract "evidence" to justify those detentions, and while the Administration exploited the fear of terrorist acts to bestow onto itself unprecedented powers.
If the naked assertion of absolute power by the Bush Administration -- and the use of that power to eavesdrop on American citizens without any judicial review -- does not finally prompt the public regardless of partisan allegiance to take a stand against this undiluted claim to real tyrannical power, then it is impossible to imagine what would ever prompt such a stand.
UPDATE: The more one thinks about the fact that the New York Times was aware of this patently illegal behavior for a full year and concealed it from the public because the Administration told it keep quiet, the more disturbing that complicity becomes.
Outstanding.
ReplyDeleteYou have done a real public service by putting this together and marshalling these historical warnings this way. I wish this required reading.
ReplyDeleteIt is almost as if the founders of our country could see what this Administration is doing and were warning against exactly this. The specific applicability to current events is jarring.
Extremely interesting, thanks. We really should all go back and read the Federalist papers and similar documents from time to time. What they thought was very clearly stated. And I definitely trust their judgment more than our own.
ReplyDeleteBest post I have read on the subject.
ReplyDeleteI wish this would penetrate deeply into the public discourse.
Allow me to just say - this is as good as it gets in the blogosphere. Thank you for the evident amount of work, reserach and thought you put into this beauitfully written, jarring warning.
ReplyDeleteI wish someone would give a copy to the President to read. Someone has to be able to enlighten him, before he makes this country into a police state. I find it ironic that the very freedoms he tells us that the terrorists hate us for are the ones he is taking away.
ReplyDeleteBravo. A very succinct and compelling analysis and statement (as an attorney, wish I had written it!).
ReplyDeleteI hope your post reaches the widest possible readership...I've already directed my friends to it.
As recently as last week, I still found talk of impeachment a bit fanciful. I'm no longer so sure.
Bush's claim to unchecked power stands in direct contradiction to Article II section 4 of the Constitution, which provides for impeachment for, among other things, high crimes and misdemeanors. If the president had the power to declare any act he authorized to be lawful, then he could never commit a high crime or misdemeanor.
ReplyDeleteIt is up to congress to re-assert its constitutional role, and make the president accountable for its usurpation of the legislative and judicial functions.
Excellent! Everyone should refresh their memories on the Federalist papers - they clarify much that may be left unclear by the Constitution.
ReplyDeleteImpeach Bush and Cheney - 2006.
Thank you. Great work.
ReplyDeleteGulp. Scary.
Well, from the tax cuts, we knew they were economic royalists...
ReplyDeleteYou have clearly stated the grounds for impeachment. Although i have been predicting a death by a 1,000 cuts for this administration, this is a huge gash and when Republicans are outraged also, maybe we will see some action.
ReplyDeleteGlenn, with regard to this:
ReplyDeleteIf the naked assertion of absolute power by the Bush Administration -- and the use of that power to eavesdrop on American citizens without any judicial review -- does not finally prompt the public regardless of partisan allegiance to take a stand against this undiluted claim to real tyrannical power, then it is impossible to imagine what would ever prompt such a stand.
There are some GOP voices, including a loud one on Fox News, who rail against The Patriot Act and the recent revelations that the National Security Agency has been conducting warrantless eavesdropping. While I did not see Shep Smith's interview yesterday of Judge Andrew Napolitano, I read at Protein Wisdom that the Judge thought we are entering Watergate territory vis-a-vis the NYT revelations.
Given Napolitano's strong and clear-headed commitment to civil liberties, that would be expected. Just as it is expected that he would be a conservative that many of the folks at National Review hate.
First of all, great site. Thank you
ReplyDeletefor this piece.
That "The New York Times" withheld this information from the public is scandalous. Their duty is to inform the public regardless of the wishes of government officials. Have they no shame?
An excellent piece. More people need to read it and even steal quotes from it because you have summed it up so well. Love the quote from Scalia, too...
ReplyDeleteShouldn't John Yoo, the Justice Department lawyer who wrote the classified memo that declared Bush could name himself King whenever there's any kind of crisis in the country, lose his license to practice law? Really. The guy isn't even well enough versed in the constitution, much less high-school-history-book-level knowledge of the American Revolution to advise anyone, much less the President on such matters.
OUTSTANDING!
ReplyDeleteSEND A COPY TO RUS FEINGOLD!
I HOPE TO SEE A FILLIBUSTER WITH FLOOR TIME USED FOR READING POSTS SUCH AS YOURS.
Thank you so much for an illuminating post on a most disturbing and frightening subject.
ReplyDeleteThat the NYTimes did not publish this for a year is more evidence that the MSM is no longer a "fourth branch" of the government but a part of it.
What justification is possible from the administration that would allow it to nullify the Constitution.
My friends, these are dark, dark times.
I fear for the Republic.
It had to be Yoo. Or something. John Yoo is the theorist behind the Inherent BS of unchecked executive power. Oy.
ReplyDeleteKeep up the fine work.
It is wishful thinking to believe that the disclosure of such abuse would prompt a bipartisian stand against this undiluted claim to tyrannical power. All one has to do is hang around the message boards on Yahoo, CNN, Boston.com and other sites offering this said feature to witness the blind loyalty they have to this administration and the poisoness and caustic rhetoric they use against to any opposing view.
ReplyDeleteI fear less for the administration's abuse of power, than their ability to mesmerize and brainwash a non trivial number of the US population.
I came across this outstanding article via a link WAY down in comments on a DKos diary. It deserves to be front page, required reading.
ReplyDeleteNo disrespect intended for your website, but your analysis deserves MUCH higher visibility, please consider reposting to DKos or Josh Marshall's TPM site.
Thanks for your work.
Doesn't your assertion (Bush claiming unchecked power) fail wrt the Judicial Branch? The Judicial Branch is the Check.
ReplyDeleteFrom the quote you provided, the legal opinion of Yoo claims that Congress can't curtail the President's Constitutional authority by statute. That still leaves the Judicial branch to determine the scope of the President's constitutional authority. Nothing in your analysis provides a quote where the President claims that the Judicial branch cannot determine the scope of Executive Consitutional power (even in a time of war).
Even if the Judiciary agrees with the President (or does nothing), the Citizens of the US can STILL limit the President's power by amending the Constitution. In addition, the Congress can STILL check the President's actions through the power of the purse.
From your account, the Executive branch is NOT claiming unchecked power. It only claims that Congress may not curtail the Executive Branch's Constitutional Authority by Statute.
Thank you so much.
ReplyDeleteA question: John Yoo seems to have based much of his theories and advice to the President on the work of Carl Schmitt - yet he does not give attribution.
Do you think this is so?
Why did you feel the need to truncate the quote from the legal opinion?
ReplyDeleteNeither statute, however, can place any limits on the President's determinations as to any terrorist threat, the amount of military force to be used in response, or the method, timing, and nature of the response. These decisions, under our Constitution, are for the President alone to make.
Link: Last paragraph of Opinionhttp://www.usdoj.gov/olc/warpowers925.htm
The scope of this legal opinion is narrower than you assert.
OK, it was the NYT that asserted the scope of the legal opinion. Responsibility lies with the NYT for the Yoo quote.
ReplyDelete(other) anonymous - the Bush administration has argued that the judiciary, also, has no authority over the executive in a time of war. Look at the administration arguments in the Guantanamo Bay cases such as Rasul v. Bush.
ReplyDeleteIt's also definitely worth taking a look at the original memos written by John Yoo - which claim that laws against torture are unconstitutional if they block executive branch interrogation in wartime.
--Anonymous Prime
heck, even the judiciary argues that it has no authority over the executive.
ReplyDeleteread william rehnquist in his 1998 apologia "all the laws but one", where he praises judicial deference to government in times of national peril. (see: wilson, roosevelt, lincoln) survival of the nation being, of course, the highest "compelling state interest."
the assumption is that the constitution pragmatically bends, and when danger has passed, bounces back with a period of healthy reappraisal. there just might even be the possibility of an enlargement of the franchise.
however, that argument is moot when faced with perpetual emergency and a permanent crisis government. the constitutional and statutory framework, a muddled patchwork, offers little clear guidance in terms of the critical domestic emergencies (terrorism, natural catastrophes)that face us today.
long live the ad hocracy!
long live the constitution!
-anon trivial aka likavik
UNITED STATES v. UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT, 407 U.S. 297 (1972)
Glenn, this is off topic, but I was just reading an E.J. Dionne column and wondered why, instead of allowing the Repubs to mis-cast the arguments and outright lie, the Dems don't challenge them to a series of nationally televised debates on the the issues. Hit up some of the deep pockets out there, buy the television time, and call these liars out into the public square. Don't wait until the 2008 elections - do it now, before November. If no one accepts the challenge, use the air time for a public forum anyway.
ReplyDeleteThis is one of the best summaries I've read on the topic. Thanks for taking the time to put it together.
ReplyDeleteAs Yale Law School Dean Howard Koh put it in testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, the program is blatantly illegal. Where are the democrats, the EJ Dionne's making these points? And how is the media treating this issue? As if it was a controversy with two reasonable sides, or downplaying it.
ReplyDeleteGlenn, if you happen to read this, nice article. .
ReplyDeleteAs I wrote here
[The Article II, Section 3] requirement that the President see that “the laws be faithfully executed,” is not magically suspended (particularly when it is the executive branch itself that is not following the law), by Article II, section 2's, "Commander in Chief" clause, just because the executive branch can make an argument that it somehow relates to a war effort. To do so would render the separation of powers concept virtually meaningless in any time of war, stated or implied. This is also something which clearly would have been noted -- were this our Founders' bizarre intent -- by some constitutional reference beyond "Commander in Chief." Nor is this an inconsequential point, as the separation of powers concept, prior to the Bill of Rights, was perhaps the most fundamental purpose of, and basis for, our Constitution.
somehow the media has to do a far better job at covering this issue. after all, the internet has a lot of information on it, but it is mainly self selecting (where people go to sites to reinforce their already existing notions, or the internet portals for mainstream news sites), so people still get most of their info from the mainstream media, and they have covered the issue poorly.
I find "democratic" individuals such as the Washington Post's associate editor David Ignatius, Harvard educated, normally intelligent and reasonable, as metaphorical talisman for our times, when they start reciting inane arguments that evince not even a remotely sophomoric understanding of the Constitution in order to seem balanced, or worse, because they want "big brother" to protect them.
Uh oh, there are two Via's posting here.
ReplyDeleteI agree with the other Via's excellent suggestion about the debates. Unless our Democratic leaders are able to articulate the dangers that the Unitary Executive poses on all the major network and cable news programs, the majority of Americans are not going to create the heat necessary to galvanize our leadership into making a stand against this madness.