The Obama administration is lowering the volume in a long-running argument between Congress and the executive branch over when, if ever, a president has the power to bypass federal statutes he has signed into law.PRESIDENTS SHOULD VETO LAWS WITH PROVISIONS THEY THINK ARE UNCONSTITUTIONAL OR TAKE THEM TO THE SCOTUS RIGHT AWAY.
Legal scholars said the administration’s new approach, which avoids repeating claims of executive power that the White House has previously voiced, could avoid setting off fights with lawmakers. But the approach will make it harder to keep track of which statutes the White House believes it can disregard, or to compare the number of laws challenged by President Obama with former President George W. Bush’s record.
In Mr. Obama’s first months in office last year, he followed recent precedent and frequently issued statements, when signing bills into law, that the executive branch could disregard provisions that he considered unconstitutional restraints on executive power.
But Mr. Obama has not issued a signing statement since last summer, when one claim set off a bipartisan uproar in Congress. And the administration has decided that Mr. Obama will sometimes sign bills containing provisions it deems problematic without issuing a signing statement that challenges those sections.
Still, the administration will consider itself free to disregard new laws it considers unconstitutional, especially in cases where it has previously voiced objections elsewhere, officials said.
THE POTUS CAN'T MAKE THESE CALLS UNILATERALLY.
IT'S A DANGEROUS PLACE TO BE.
A one man-child determination of Constitutional...
ReplyDeleteI believe it doesn't work that way, nation of laws not of men, if I recall correctly.
Obama-Chavez is way out of his league. He should try this crap in Indonesia instead of America.