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LoungeMachine
01-08-2006, 01:41 AM
Posted on Fri, Jan. 06, 2006


Bush using a little-noticed strategy to alter the balance of power

BY RON HUTCHESON AND JAMES KUHNHENN

Knight Ridder Newspapers


WASHINGTON - President Bush agreed with great fanfare last month to accept a ban on torture, but he later quietly reserved the right to ignore it, even as he signed it into law.
Acting from the seclusion of his Texas ranch at the start of New Year's weekend, Bush said he would interpret the new law in keeping with his expansive view of presidential power. He did it by issuing a bill-signing statement - a little-noticed device that has become a favorite tool of presidential power in the Bush White House.
In fact, Bush has used signing statements to reject, revise or put his spin on more than 500 legislative provisions. Experts say he has been far more aggressive than any previous president in using the statements to claim sweeping executive power - and not just on national security issues.
"It's nothing short of breath-taking," said Phillip Cooper, a professor of public administration at Portland State University. "In every case, the White House has interpreted presidential authority as broadly as possible, interpreted legislative authority as narrowly as possible, and pre-empted the judiciary."
Signing statements don't have the force of law, but they can influence judicial interpretations of a statute. They also send a powerful signal to executive branch agencies on how the White House wants them to implement new federal laws.
In some cases, Bush bluntly informs Congress that he has no intention of carrying out provisions that he considers an unconstitutional encroachment on his authority.
"They don't like some of the things Congress has done so they assert the power to ignore it," said Martin Lederman, a visiting professor at the Georgetown University Law Center. "The categorical nature of their opposition is unprecedented and alarming."
The White House says its authority stems from the Constitution, but dissenters say that view ignores the Constitution's careful balance of powers between branches of government.
"We know the textbook story of how government works. Essentially what this has done is attempt to upset that," said Christopher Kelley, a presidential scholar at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, who generally shares Bush's expansive view of executive authority. "These are directives to executive branch agencies saying that whenever something requires interpretation, you should interpret it the way the president wants you to."
Other presidents have used similar tactics. For example, Jimmy Carter rebuffed congressional efforts to block his amnesty program for Vietnam-era draft dodgers. But experts say Bush has taken claims of presidential power to a whole new level.
In the case of the torture ban, Bush said he would interpret the law "in a manner consistent with the constitutional authority of the president," with the goal of "protecting the American people from further terrorist attacks."
Because Bush has already claimed broad powers in the war on terror - including the right to bypass existing laws restricting domestic surveillance - legal experts and some members of Congress interpreted the statement to mean that he would ignore the torture ban if he felt it would harm national security.
Opponents of the ban say torture should not be ruled out in a case where abusive interrogation might prevent an imminent terrorist attack.
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said Bush was defending a principle, not signaling his intention to ignore the torture prohibition.
"The president has said that we follow the law. Of course we will follow this law as well," she said.
Some members of Congress aren't so sure.
"He issues a signing statement that says he retains all of the inherent power that will permit him to go out and torture just the way they've gone ahead and tortured before," said Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. "That process is an arrogance of power."
Congress has clashed with Bush over signing statements before. In 2002, lawmakers from both parties vigorously objected when Bush offered a narrow interpretation of whistleblower protections in legislation on corporate fraud. After a series of angry letters from Congress to the White House, the administration backed down.
But monitoring the implementation of new laws is a complicated task, especially when Bush is ambiguous about his intentions. Cooper said Bush's assertion of his constitutional authority in dealing with the torture ban is typical of his approach.
"It doesn't explicitly say what he's going to do or not do, but it gives him the authority to do whatever he wants to do," Cooper said. "The administration has clearly concluded that the Republican-dominated Congress is not prepared to force a confrontation on a lot of these issues."
The roots of Bush's approach go back to the Ford administration, when Dick Cheney, then serving as White House chief of staff, chafed at legislative limits placed on the executive branch in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal and other abuses of power by President Nixon. Now the vice president and his top aide, David Addington, are taking the lead in trying to tip the balance of power away from Congress and back to the president.
They may soon have an ally on the Supreme Court. As a Justice Department lawyer in the Reagan administration, Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito wrote a 1986 memo outlining plans for expanded use of presidential signing statements.
Although Alito told his bosses that the aggressive use of assertive signing statements "would increase the power of the executive to shape the law," he acknowledged doubts about their legal significance.
Reagan adopted the strategy and used signing statements to challenge 71 legislative provisions, according to Kelley's tally. President George H.W. Bush challenged 146 laws; President Clinton challenged 105. The current president has lodged more than 500 challenges so far.
Bush and his legal advisers offer a variety of arguments to support their claims to power. In their view, the Constitution's directive that "the president shall be commander in chief" gives Bush virtually unlimited authority on issues related to national security.
They also rely heavily on the "unitary executive" theory to resist congressional directives to federal agencies. The theory rests on the Constitution's clause that says that "executive power shall be vested in a president."
Bush has cited the theory, which has not been fully tested in court, more than 100 times in his signing statements.
Skeptics say the president and his advisers overlook the Constitution's checks and balances, noting that the Framers had a deep distrust of excessive executive power, having rebelled against a king. The Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war, and shared power over executive spending, for example.
Lawmakers from both parties have questioned Bush's assertion of his wartime authority.
"If you take this to its logical conclusion, because during war the commander in chief has an obligation to protect us, any statute on the books could be summarily waived," said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.
"The Constitution says that if the president doesn't like it (a bill), he can veto it. And we have an opportunity to override the veto," Kennedy noted.
Some members of Congress from both parties also question the legal authority of presidential signing statements.
"He can say whatever he likes, I don't know if that has a whole lot of impact on the statute. Statutes are traditionally a matter of congressional intent," said Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
In 2003, lawmakers tried to get a handle on Bush's use of signing statements by passing a Justice Department spending bill that required the department to inform Congress whenever the administration decided to ignore a legislative provision on constitutional grounds.
Bush signed the bill, but issued a statement asserting his right to ignore the notification requirement.
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LoungeMachine
01-08-2006, 01:45 AM
Originally posted by LoungeMachine



In fact, Bush has used signing statements to reject, revise or put his spin on more than 500 legislative provisions. Experts say he has been far more aggressive than any previous president in using the statements to claim sweeping executive power - and not just on national security issues.




In some cases, Bush bluntly informs Congress that he has no intention of carrying out provisions that he considers an unconstitutional encroachment on his authority.





The roots of Bush's approach go back to the Ford administration, when Dick Cheney, then serving as White House chief of staff, chafed at legislative limits placed on the executive branch in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal and other abuses of power by President Nixon. Now the vice president and his top aide, David Addington, are taking the lead in trying to tip the balance of power away from Congress and back to the president.

blueturk
01-08-2006, 01:53 AM
I doubt if Dubya thought this up himself...

blueturk
01-08-2006, 01:53 AM
Other Presidents And Dubya

Other presidents have used the tactic far less than President Bush, said Christopher Kelley, a presidential scholar at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, who generally shares Bush's expansive view of executive authority.

* Jimmy Carter rebuffed congressional efforts to block his amnesty program for Vietnam-era draft dodgers.

* Ronald Reagan adopted the strategy and used signing statements to challenge 71 legislative provisions.

*George H.W. Bush challenged 146 laws.

* Bill Clinton challenged 105.

•*George Bush has lodged more than 500 challenges so far.


http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/news/13570702.htm

LoungeMachine
01-08-2006, 01:54 AM
Oh, but 9/11 changed everything you commie libs......

Hardrock69
01-09-2006, 11:24 PM
SPY POWERS
Can the president eavesdrop on private citizens without a judge's ok?

The high court said 'no' in 1972 Wiretaps: Ruling requires warrants for spying at home

Bob Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer

Sunday, January 8, 2006

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/01/08/MNGHGGK8OC1.DTL


Thirty-five years ago, President Richard Nixon claimed constitutional authority to wiretap Americans' phone calls to protect national security without asking a judge -- the same assertion that President Bush is making today in the name of fighting terrorism.

The Supreme Court ruled unanimously against Nixon, saying the Constitution granted the powers he was claiming to judges, not presidents. If the current court eventually reconsiders that 1972 ruling, it may affect the fate of Bush's decision to authorize the National Security Agency to wiretap calls between Americans and alleged al Qaeda suspects in foreign countries.

Presidents have approved wiretaps without court orders since the 1940s, but the legality of the practice was thrown into doubt after the Supreme Court ruled in 1967 that electronic eavesdropping was a search, and thus covered by the prohibition on unreasonable searches in the Constitution's Fourth Amendment.

The case Nixon chose as a test of presidential authority arose during a turbulent period, in circumstances that must have seemed to favor the government: the prosecution of members of the radical White Panthers on charges of bombing a CIA office in Ann Arbor, Mich., in 1968.

The prosecution's evidence included phone conversations by one defendant, Lawrence "Pun" Plamondon, whom federal agents had taped without a warrant on the authority of Nixon's attorney general, John Mitchell.

In defense of its conduct, the administration submitted a sworn statement in 1971 from Mitchell saying agents needed to conduct the surveillance to protect the nation from "attempts of domestic organizations to attack and subvert the existing structure of the government.'' The administration said there had been 1,562 bombing incidents in the United States in the first half of 1971, most of which involved government buildings.

The arguments did not sway the Supreme Court, which ruled 8-0 that the wiretaps exceeded the president's constitutional power.

The freedoms protected by the Fourth Amendment "cannot properly be guaranteed if domestic security surveillance may be conducted solely within the discretion of the executive branch,'' wrote Justice Lewis Powell, a Nixon appointee.

"Fourth Amendment protections become more necessary when the targets of official surveillance may be those suspected of unorthodoxy in their political beliefs,'' Powell said.

The ruling led prosecutors to drop the White Panther case and, in conjunction with a Senate committee's later revelations of government spying on dissidents, drove Congress to pass the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act in 1978.

That law established a court, appointed by the chief justice, to meet in secret and issue warrants for searches and wiretaps related to foreign terrorism and spying, under more relaxed standards than the ones judges use for ordinary search warrants. Bush, however, has asserted the power to bypass the court and authorize wiretaps for foreign intelligence purposes in a series of orders since 2002.

The president claims two sources of legal authority: Congress' post-Sept. 11, 2001, resolution authorizing him to use force to repel terrorist threats, and his inherent constitutional power over military and foreign policy matters.

The standards that the court set for future cases in its 1972 ruling don't resolve either of those claims. The court did not anticipate a law such as the use-of-force resolution, although the justices rejected a similar argument by the Nixon administration that the existing wiretap law allowed the president to order surveillance for national security.

As for the constitutional issue, Powell's opinion specified that the court was considering only the president's authority over domestic security, and was expressing no view about foreign intelligence.

But two lawyers who opposed Nixon in the case say the issues today are virtually identical.

The 1972 ruling "makes clear that the warrant requirement applies to all searches within the United States, even if the president alleges that it's an intelligence search,'' said Abraham Sofaer, a senior fellow at the conservative Hoover Institution on the Stanford University campus. Sofaer, as a Columbia University law professor, wrote the main brief challenging the wiretap, later served as a federal judge and then became the chief legal adviser to the State Department under President Ronald Reagan.

Although the case involved domestic surveillance, the court made it clear that "there's no inherent power to eavesdrop for foreign intelligence purposes within the United States,'' Sofaer said.

A liberal law professor, Herman Schwartz of American University, said the Bush administration was offering the same arguments that Nixon advanced in 1972: that the president has broad powers to protect the nation, and that national security surveillance requires more speed, secrecy and technical competence than judges are capable of providing.

Although today's scenario is different, "the threats (described by the government) are the same, and the claims are the same,'' said Schwartz, who filed written arguments for the American Civil Liberties Union in 1972. As in the earlier case, he said, "there's a danger that this (wiretapping) will be used to check on people who are simply protesting.''

Other liberal lawyers were less confident that the 1972 ruling could be used to scuttle Bush's program.

Cass Sunstein, a University of Chicago constitutional scholar, said the Supreme Court had not ruled out presidential authority over international surveillance, and lower federal courts since 1972 have upheld comparable claims of presidential power.

David Cole, a Georgetown law professor and lawyer for the Center for Constitutional Rights, told The Chronicle that the 1972 case was potentially helpful to those who might challenge Bush but wouldn't settle the issue.

In a recent article in Salon.com, Cole said a clearer precedent was the Supreme Court's 1952 ruling rejecting a wartime claim of inherent presidential power -- Harry Truman's attempt to seize most of the nation's steel mills during the Korean War.

Truman, citing his powers as commander-in-chief of the armed forces, had claimed the federal takeover was essential to the war effort because a nationwide steel strike was threatening the supply of munitions.

But the court said the president had no power to defy Congress, which had refused to authorize presidential seizure of strike-bound industries.

Similarly, Cole argued, Bush's wiretap program defies Congress' refusal in passing the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act to allow government wiretaps without a warrant.

On the other hand, some of Bush's defenders contend the Supreme Court's 1972 ruling strengthens the president's position.

John Eastman, a law professor at Chapman University in Orange County and director of the Claremont Institute's Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence, said the Supreme Court's chief rationale in 1972 for rejecting the government's wiretaps -- that they could be used against dissidents, not just criminals -- would be less compelling in an international case.

"The distinction between war powers and domestic authority is a strong one,'' Eastman said. "There's a much greater risk to free speech when (the president is) eavesdropping on domestic groups.''

He pointed to a footnote in the 1972 ruling that cited a lower court decision saying a presidential wiretap order might be constitutional for foreign intelligence even if the same order would be invalid for domestic eavesdropping. Although that decision reached no conclusion, Eastman said the Supreme Court's uncritical reference to it could be read as a suggestion that the president has such powers, and if so, "Congress couldn't limit him.''

The Supreme Court ruling is United States vs. U.S. District Court, 407 U.S. 297.

Warham
01-10-2006, 07:28 AM
I wish Ronnie was still president.

::sigh::