Bush’s Bogus Theory of Absolute Power
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
The Bush administration
has a theory to explain why the Founding Fathers secretly intended
for the president to have boundless power. Even though the new unitary
executive theory is nowhere in the Constitution, White House
officials continually invoke it to justify scorning federal law.
The fact that the administration is getting away with this charade
symbolizes how docile much of the American media and political opposition
have become.
Earlier this
year, members of Congress anguished publicly over how many of the
original USA PATRIOT Act surveillance powers should be renewed.
A bipartisan agreement was finally reached, giving the White House
almost everything it wanted. As part of the deal to renew the Patriot
Act, Bush administration officials agreed to provide Congress more
details on how the new powers were being used.
However, Bush
reneged in a signing statement quietly released after
a heavily hyped White House signing ceremony on March 9. He decreed
that he was entitled to withhold any information that would impair
foreign relations, national security, the deliberative process of
the executive, or the performance of the executives constitutional
duties. He announced that he would interpret any provision
in the law obliging notifying Congress in a manner consistent
with the presidents constitutional authority to supervise
the unitary executive branch and to withhold information.
In other words,
any provision of the law that requires disclosure is presumptively
null and void. The crux of the unitary executive is
that all power rests in the president, and that checks and
balances are an archaic relic. This is the same principle
the Bush administration invoked to deny Congress everything from
Iraqi war plans to the records of the Cheney Energy Task Force.
Bush has invoked the unitary executive doctrine almost
a hundred times since taking office, according to a study by Miami
University professor Christopher Kelley.
One of the
starkest statements of this theory came in the confidential August 2002
Justice Department/White House memo justifying torture. That memo
revealed, In light of the presidents complete authority
over the conduct of war, without a clear statement otherwise, criminal
statutes are not read as infringing on the presidents ultimate
authority in these areas. And even if Congress did try to
explicitly restrain executive power, any such law would be unconstitutional
because of the inherent power vested in the presidency, according
to the memo. When he was White House counsel, Alberto Gonzales spoke
of a commander-in-chief override to justify scorning
the Anti-Torture Act.
The Bush administrations
sense of entitlement is obvious from the ongoing controversy over
warrantless National Security Agency wiretaps of Americans. Such
wiretaps are clearly prohibited by the 1978 Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act. Yet Bush declared that he is entitled to order
such wiretaps because of the inherent authority of the presidency.
The administrations
attitude toward both the law and Congress was stark in the responses
recently delivered to congressional questions on the scope and nature
of the NSA warrantless wiretap program.
The basic
answer to almost all the questions was, None of your business.
Again and again, the White House declared that decisions about
what communications to intercept are made by professional intelligence
officers. Apparently, the job titles of the NSA officials
automatically negate the Fourth Amendments requirement for
a warrant before the feds can intrude.
The Bush administration
has claimed that the wiretaps are legal because of the
presidents duty to protect America. Democratic members of
the House Judiciary Committee asked, What is the limiting
principle of the presidents claimed inherent authority as
commander in chief?
The administration
replied, In light of the strictly limited nature of the Terrorist
Surveillance Program, we do not think it a useful or a practical
exercise to engage in speculation about the limits of the presidents
authority as commander in chief. There is no reason to accept
that the program is strictly limited because Bush in 2004
publicly declared that no wiretaps could be done without a court
order. The administration has done nothing since then to signal
greater respect for the truth. And Attorney General Alberto Gonzaless
written responses to Senate Judiciary Committee questions hinted
that there may be other surveillance programs not yet revealed to
the public.
The
Bush White House also asserted that the September 2001 Authorization
to Use Military Force resolution passed by Congress after
9/11 entitled Bush to tap Americans phones. But if the authorization
actually entitled the president to do whatever he thinks necessary
on the home front, then Americans have been living under martial
law for the last four and a half years.
At
this point, Americans can only guess which laws Bush feels obliged
to obey. According to Newsweek, Steven Bradbury, head
of the Justice Departments Office of Legal Counsel, recently
informed the Senate Intelligence Committee that Bush could order
killings of suspected terrorists within the United States.
Americans
cannot expect to have good presidents if presidents are permitted
to make themselves czars. The unitary executive theory
is simply another in a long series of intellectual cons crafted
to trample freedom. The sooner that it is tarred and feathered and
ridden out of Washington on a rail, the safer Americans remaining
rights will be.
April
8, 2006
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright ©
2006 The Future of Freedom Foundation
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