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The President May Have More Powers Than You Think
Townhall.com ^ | August 26, 2018 | Erich Reimer

Posted on 08/26/2018 10:07:32 AM PDT by Kaslin

The Presidency of Donald Trump, and in particular the past few months and weeks, have been full of discussions about the precise boundaries of Presidential privilege and authority. These have ranged from the President’s discretion with his pardon power to control of federal agencies such as DOJ, from the nature of a potential impeachment to his immunity from subpoenas and prosecution.  

Though the executive branch is argued to be overpowered in our modern day that sentiment is in fact mostly from an administrative state that has taken on a life of its own and grown to often be just as powerful as the three constitutional branches. In contrast, we are accustomed to a President who themselves is actually extraordinary limited in true policymaking or even policy implementation power.

This, in short, defies both the Founding Father’s intentions and much of American history.

As a lawyer in DC, I remember back to my days at the University of Virginia School of Law and a class called “Presidential Powers” I took from distinguished conservative legal scholar Professor Sai Prakash, who also served as advisor to our chapter of the constitutionalist Federalist Society I was a leader in. 

He also wrote the noteworthy book “Imperial from the Beginning: The Constitution of the Original Executive,” a detailed legal treatise explaining in exhaustive fashion how the Founding Fathers intended for the President to be a relatively strong leader with powers even many monarchs at the time did not have. 

The history of the Presidency in the United States indeed follows this theory closely, as throughout our history even with the legislative branch’s fundamental impeachment power the executive has retained extraordinary policymaking and implementation ability, particularly through extensive national security powers.

The great “breaking” of the Presidency undoubtedly took place in the wake of Nixon’s Watergate scandal. The resulting massive public angst over the executive resulted in the courts and Congress asserting themselves more firmly, a position they’ve held to since – although in recent decades the regulatory state has grown apart from them and even the executive it is nominally under. 

We have seen Presidents since then try hard to regain ground. From fighting term limits to advocating line-item vetoes, Presidents from across the aisle from Reagan to Clinton, from Bush to Obama, have tried to assert executive powers on a greater scale again.

Yet the idea of them pursuing extraordinary executive leadership in the styles of 

Turning to our founding times, it is true that the American experiment was against the will of a King who had become reckless with his power and ignored his constituents in the colonies. However it also should be remembered that the American Revolution was also just as much against the British Parliament, who at the time held the King in what was already a limited constitutional monarchy position just a century after the English Civil War, Cromwell’s dictatorship, and the “Glorious Revolution” that put parliament at its height. It was also the British Parliament who were the ones that passed the various taxes that provided the immediate spark for our nation’s birth.

Indeed the whole reason for the creation of the Constitution of the United States and it replacing the decade-long experiment in the Articles of Confederation was to bring about not only a stronger federal government but also in particular a stronger head at all of it, specifically by creating an actual chief executive.

As Alexander Hamilton describes passionately in Federalist No. 70 in defending the idea of a strong executive as the Constitution was in the midst of being ratified by the states,  “A feeble Executive implies a feeble execution of the government…the ingredients which constitute energy in the Executive are, first, unity; secondly, duration; thirdly, an adequate provision for its support; fourthly, competent powers.

Citing the government models of past and current states such as Rome, Greece, England, and the Colonies, Hamilton essentially explains how the executive power being concentrated in one empowered figure is beneficial for public policy and governance, as long as that person derives their position from the support of the people and retains other real checks and limitations for overruns. 

A strong executive does not mean a system in which the executive predominates. Rather, it is thinking about what it truly means when we think of our three branches of government as theoretically co-equal. 

In our modern time this idea is difficult and complex to apply as we have an immense body of law on the relationships between the branches and the powers of the President himself, as well as the unique factual situations we find ourselves presented with. 

Nonetheless it is a reminder that for those who believe in the Founding Fathers’ intentions and the precedent set by American governance for the bulk of our history, the Office of the President was intended far more strength, discretion, and deference than it currently is provided at the moment. 

As we move forward in the upcoming few years it will undoubtedly be interesting to see how the legal, policy, and public precedents become tested.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 08/26/2018 10:07:32 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

well, who’s going to tell him?


2 posted on 08/26/2018 10:13:59 AM PDT by proust ("The rule is, jam tomorrow and jam yesterday, but never jam today.")
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To: Kaslin
It would be nice to be assured now and then that the president has at least as much power as some circuit court judge in Oregon.

Because, every day it seems for the past year or so, we are told otherwise.

3 posted on 08/26/2018 10:14:55 AM PDT by daler
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To: Kaslin

Dems better hope they can get the House or they may see a different, more empowered President if the Pubbies retain it.

He will be wiser to the deep state, etc.


4 posted on 08/26/2018 10:21:05 AM PDT by TomGuy
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To: Kaslin

Kaslin, thanks for posting this as it takes some mental acuity to take this and all the rest and frame it into a game plan.

Trump has done this as well as the others in his circle, in my opinion there are many here who truly think he is caught off guard or is out of control and naive

I will leave all of that to the side as I do not share that opinion one bit

The game is on, and this is well beyond anything I have seen is my lifetime spanning well past 6 decades and many events, Trump is the right man for the times


5 posted on 08/26/2018 10:26:44 AM PDT by 100American (Knowledge is knowing how, Wisdom is knowing when)
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To: proust

The problem is our own party who have told their President he better not fire Sessions, even Rosenstein. He better not do this or that, etc.

Democrats never ordered their President about nor did they even dare to threaten him.

I am just disgusted with our party hog tying our President.


6 posted on 08/26/2018 10:49:30 AM PDT by Engedi (The)
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To: Kaslin

Hussein altered US tax law 19 times all by himself without a peep from anyone. Can Trump give everyone another tax cut with just a signature?


7 posted on 08/26/2018 11:16:33 AM PDT by Libloather (Trivial Pursuit question - name the first female to lose TWO presidential elections!)
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To: Kaslin

Interesting article.

FTA: “we are accustomed to a President who themselves is actually ....”

Seriously? Get some grammar lessons or a proofreader. PLEASE. This is painful to read.


8 posted on 08/26/2018 11:16:40 AM PDT by generally ( Don't be stupid. We have politicians for that.)
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To: All
"The resulting massive public angst over the executive resulted in the courts and Congress selectively asserting themselves more firmly, a position they’ve held to since..."

Fixed it...

9 posted on 08/26/2018 11:40:51 AM PDT by rockrr ( Everything is different now...)
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To: Engedi

The problem is our own party....

That is a major factor but there are others such as activist judges, total dem obstruction, a leftist bureaucracy, etc.

Trump is facing almost the entire establishment which is arrayed against him.

I don’t know why he won’t give Nunes and company the docs they’ve subpoenaed. Maybe he’s waiting until Cavanaugh is confirmed.

If we get to see the docs, the dems might look bad enough to lose heavily in the midterms. Then dem obstruction becomes less of a factor, the rinos back off, and the swamp gets rolled back. The courts will get better over time.

Trump needs to be the guy who came down the elevator before Nov arrives.


10 posted on 08/26/2018 12:03:44 PM PDT by Ceebass (20 year freeper. Hooray for me!)
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To: Kaslin

No. He has just the powers I thought he had. The UniParty and Deep State refuse to honor that.


11 posted on 08/26/2018 3:35:59 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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