Will
You Love Every Future President?
by
Tom
Engelhardt and David
Swanson
by Tom Engelhardt and David Swanson
Recently by Tom Engelhardt: Lost
in Military Limbo
Presidential
power has been on a pathway
of expansion beyond what the Constitution outlined, and what a government
of, by, and for the people requires, since George Washington was
president. That expansion, which hit the highway after World War
II, got a turbo
boost during the co-presidency of George
W. Bush and Dick
Cheney.
Some of the
new powers that those two stole from Congress, the courts, the states,
and us the people are being abused less severely in this new age
of Obama; others, more so; but far more crucially, in a pattern
followed by recent presidencies, all are being maintained,
if not expanded, and thus more firmly cemented into place for future
presidents to use. Wherever you fall on the political spectrum,
you are likely to strongly oppose some major decisions of some future
presidents. So it shouldn't be hard to envision some pretty undesirable
consequences that might flow from presidential power that increasingly
approaches the absolute.
Our television
news and newspapers don't seem terribly interested in this story,
despite scraping its surface with reports on the many "czars" Obama
has appointed or lectures on the importance of renewing, or only
marginally amending, the PATRIOT Act. And Congress seems, if possible,
even less interested. That's not so surprising, given that we've
replaced the three branches of government with the two parties,
so that at any given time roughly half the members of Congress take
as their leader a president who is theoretically supposed to execute
the will of Congress. And the other half usually obey their party's
"leaders" in Congress, whose primary interest is in electing one
of their own as the next president. Both parties continue to value
presidential power itself either for its uses in the present, or
for when their candidate is elected. Everyone wants to inherit the
imperial presidency, not constrain it.
Under these
circumstances, bills
to create
commissions investigating presidential abuses, to place
a judicial check on claims of "state secrets," limit
the use of presidential signing statements, or to allow
more than eight members of Congress to be given "security" briefings
by the executive branch prove not to be priorities for either party.
These days,
the old-fashioned idea of checking executive abuses of existing
laws through the issuance
of subpoenas or by
impeachment is, in Washington,
widely considered a scandalous proposition. Congress impeached a
judge this year who had groped his employees, but Jay
Bybee, who signed secret memos purporting to legalize aggressive
war and torture,
and who now holds a lifetime seat on the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals, is protected from such a step by his recent membership
in the executive branch (and the displeasure Fox News would express
toward his impeachment).
In April,
Senator Patrick Leahy, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee,
asked
Bybee to testify, and the judge refused, just as many of his former
colleagues in the Bush administration had
in 2007 and 2008. Leahy may be unwilling to follow up by issuing
a subpoena that even the new Department of Justice might refuse
to enforce. The current department, for instance, allowed the White
House Counsel to negotiate
partial compliance with a House Judiciary Committee subpoena by
former presidential advisor Karl Rove. And if Leahy is like most
members of Congress, he will not even consider the
option of using the Capitol Police to enforce a subpoena himself
something that no committee has done in 75 years.
All Power
to the President
Any quick
survey of the powers the presidency now claims would have to include
the power to make laws, the power to make wars, the power to spend
money, the power to make treaties, the power to grant immunity for
crimes, the power to operate in secrecy, the power to spy without
warrants, the power to detain without charge, and the power to torture.
Laws are still
made by Congress, but they can be rewritten via signing
statements; that is, statements announcing a president's intention
to violate particular sections of the very bill he is signing into
law. Neither Congress nor President Obama has thrown out all of
Bush's extensive signing statements that did indeed alter laws.
In fact, Obama has
announced that his subordinates will review his predecessor's
signing statements only as the need arises.
This policy
might please those imagining that the Obama administration will
always make the right decision about whether to maintain or reject
a Bush-made amendment to a law, but it does nothing to strip the
presidency of the power to use the mechanism of the signing statement
to re-make or amend or alter new laws. As it happens, Obama has
already published his
own law-making signing statements.
Presidents
now also routinely determine
national policy through executive orders and, in doing so, run the
country out of the White House rather than through departments headed
by officials approved by Congress. They also increasingly dictate
a legislative agenda to Congress and both members of Congress
and members of the public generally accept without comment or opposition
that inversion of our constitutional system. And then there are
the secret
memos.
In those secret
memos, Bush's lawyers in the Department of Justice dutifully "legalized"
numerous illegal acts, including aggressive
war and torture.
Despite years of public back-and-forth between the White House and
the Congress over the question of whether to ban torture, any act
of complicity in torture was already a felony in the U.S. code under
the Anti-Torture
Act, which enforced the Convention
Against Torture signed by President Ronald Reagan. However,
the secret Justice Department memos were taken as the final word
in legality, no matter what the law said.
Obama has directed
the Justice Department not to prosecute those at the highest levels
responsible for producing those memos, though he has permitted
consideration whether seriously intended or not of
the possibility of prosecuting a handful of low-ranking staffers
who strayed beyond the illegal policies outlined in the memos. Not
only does this bestow immunity on the most prominent criminals,
reversing the approach starting at the top that the
U.S. took at the Nuremburg war crimes trials after World War II,
but it has the potential to create a terrifying precedent for the
future. If a president can use his justice department to legalize
a crime simply by asking a lawyer to write a memo, then who can
doubt that a president has something approaching absolute power?
Presidents,
not Congress, do indeed make wars now, whether or not they consult
Jay Bybee's memo on the subject. They make wars without congressional
declarations of war, using instead vague bills to maintain a pretense
of congressional involvement and then they don't even comply
with the terms outlined in those authorizations. Illegal (as well
as unconstitutional) as they may be, these wars can be expanded
into apparently
permanent occupations that include the construction of gigantic
military bases from which additional wars may be launched. In the
process, mercenaries often take the place of soldiers, and as "private
contractors" they then operate
even further from congressional oversight or the law.
To invade
Iraq, President Bush spent
money not appropriated for that purpose. He also gave himself the
power to transfer money into "black budgets" beyond the purview
of all but a few members of Congress, and so use it for secret tasks
signed off on by his officials. Of course, massive secret budgets
under the control of the president are nothing new, though they've
grown through the years. Neither are they constitutional or sustainable.
On October
6th, the leaders of the two parties met with President Obama and,
by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's account, let
him know that he could end, decrease, maintain, or escalate
the war in Afghanistan and Pakistan as he saw fit. The Senate had
voted the previous week not to call on war commander Stanley McChrystal
for public testimony about that ongoing war until after the
president determines his war policy, which of course means a war
policy for all of us. Two days later, in a surprising flicker of
dissent, House Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey released
a statement suggesting that, contrary to everything he'd said for
years, he recognizes that Congress has the power to choose not to
fund those wars and thereby to end them.
As his presidency
was winding down, George W. Bush concluded
an unofficial treaty (though it was called a Status of Forces Agreement)
with the government of U.S.-occupied Iraq for three more years of
war there without feeling the slightest need for it to be ratified
by the Senate. Ever since, the U.S. military has actually violated
the terms of that document, while its key commanders continued to
publicly
state their intention to remain in Iraq beyond the end of 2011,
a clear violation of the agreement. In the meantime, this White
House has used the treaty as cover for an ongoing illegal occupation
of Iraq with, at this point, 120,000 U.S. troops and tens of thousands
of private contractors.
Is Congress
Broken?
When many
feared
that Bush might pardon his subordinates for crimes
he had himself authorized, the consensus among members of Congress
and scholars was that he could, in fact, do such a thing. In some
ways what both Bush and Obama have actually done is worse. With
a big assist from Congress in the form of bills like the Military
Commissions Act and the FISA
Amendments Act, they have worked to grant immunity for crimes
without even naming the criminals or revealing what they have done.
Obama's Department of Justice is now arguing,
appealing, or re-appealing in various
court
cases
to keep secret
the abuses of government officials and corporations
involved in torture and warrantless spying. Recently, the Justice
Department even argued
that, when it comes to denying information to a court or the public,
telecommunication corporations must be considered a part of the
executive branch of the federal government, and earlier this year
the administration threatened
the British government with an end to intelligence sharing if it
revealed evidence of torture.
President
Obama announced
that he will only claim the right to hide information from a court
on the grounds that important "state secrets" are involved after
careful review by lawyers at the Department of Justice. This may
be an improvement over the Bush years not exactly a hard
standard to reach but notably this decision still cedes not
an ounce of power to any branch other than the executive, even as
Obama's lawyers make radical "state secrets" claims in attempts
to block entire court cases, rather than over particular pieces
of information.
While this
president is ceding modest amounts of territory claimed by the previous
one, he is ceding nothing when it comes to presidential power itself.
For example, the president said he would release White House visitor
logs (as the Bush administration had not), just not those already
recorded, including the ones that held records of the visits of
deal-making health insurance executives, nor any future logs that
he thinks would endanger "national security." That offers
change of a sort, however modest, but leaves it entirely in the
president's hands to decide which logs to release.
This administration
has indeed released
some of the secret memos that Bush's Department of Justice used
to justify torture and never shared with the public, but only when
compelled by courts. The Justice Department has, in fact, fought
fiercely against their release and has redacted significant sections
of them before making them public.
Bush claimed
for the presidency the power to detain people without charge or
legal process and then used it. Obama stood in front of the
U.S. Constitution in the National Archives in Washington and asserted
the same power, in violation of the right of habeas corpus
found in that torn and tattered document. Director of Central Intelligence
Leon Panetta and presidential advisor David Axelrod have similarly
made
clear that the president still claims the power to engage in
"harsh interrogation techniques" but chooses not to use it. Torture
in this way has been transformed from a crime into a policy choice,
with the intended message apparently being that we can stop torture
temporarily by choosing to elect Democrats. This is perilous territory.
Perhaps presidents
simply cannot be expected to give back powers gained by the executive
branch, but shouldn't we expect Congress to work to take them back
on our behalf? When Alberto Gonzales resigned as attorney general,
he did so because a rapidly growing list of members of Congress
signed onto a one-sentence bill directing the House Judiciary Committee
to investigate possible grounds for his impeachment. Such an approach
toward Judge Jay Bybee could begin to restore
the power of Congress to assert itself in other areas as well,
while pressuring the Justice Department to enforce the law, and
potentially making public a great deal of information through the
subpoenas involved in any impeachment hearing, which does not permit
claims of "executive privilege." Information subpoenaed in an impeachment
hearing must be produced, or the failure to produce it can
become another impeachable offense.
Many
of us probably consider our current president a much nicer guy than
our local congressional representative. That doesn't change the
fact that influencing a president, or even a senator, via grassroots
pressure is infinitely more difficult than influencing a member
of the House of Representatives.
This is not
a new discovery. After all, isn't this, in part, why the House was
given the power of the purse and the power of impeachment? Being
closer to the ground, that body is, by its nature, going to be more
amenable to democratic pressure and direction. If we want once again
to have a real hand in making our nation's policies, our best shot
admittedly still a distinctly uphill course is to
focus on the person who represents us in the House.
Unfortunately,
we have to compel each of them to do something they have come to
collectively fear: taking back the power originally bestowed on
them and not on behalf of their party, but of their branch of government,
of the Constitution to which they've sworn an oath, and of the proper
sovereigns of this nation: we the people. Otherwise the chief legacy
of the Obama years will, like those of his immediate predecessors,
be the slide from republic into empire and the continuing growth
of an imperial presidency.
October
19, 2009
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
co-founder
of the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com, is the co-founder of
the American Empire
Project. His book, The
End of Victory Culture, has recently been updated in a newly
issued edition. He edited, and his work appears in, the first best
of TomDispatch book, The
World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso), an alternative history of the mad Bush years. David
Swanson served as press secretary for Kucinich for President
in 2004, runs the AfterDowningStreet.org
website, and is the creator of Impeachbybee.org.
His new book is Daybreak:
Undoing the Imperial Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union
(Seven Stories Press).
Visit his website.
He is now touring the country for the book. You can find out when
the tour will be in your town by clicking here.
Copyright
© 2009 David Swanson
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