President
Supports Constitutional Amendment
Says Move Is Needed To Defend American Families
THE
AFFILIATED PRESS
Reported by Adam Young
by Adam Young
WASHINGTON,
D.C. President Bush on Tuesday backed a controversial constitutional
amendment a
move the president said was needed to stop judges from clinging
to the traditional American definition of the "most enduring
human institution."
"After
more than two centuries of American jurisprudence and millennia
of human experience, a few judges and local authorities are refusing
to change the most fundamental institution of our civilization,"
the president said in urging Congress to approve his amendment.
"Their action has created confusion on an issue that requires
clarity."
Mr.
Bush's amendment, appropriately titled The President's Amendment,
would amend the Constitution of the United States to officially
retire the constitution, and places all secular and religious authority
in the hands of the President of the United States, who would be
given the additional titles of Defender of the Constitution and
Liberator of the Americans with the power to legislate by executive
order, to tax on his own authority, to expropriate property and
hold Americans and foreigners in prison indefinitely without charges.
Mr.
Bush, during his White House address, stated the need for this unusual
move, which many commentators interpreted as an election season
tactic to intimidate rivals and the courts and to silence critics.
In
his statement, Mr. Bush noted actions by State Courts and the U.S.
Supreme Court to question his claim to be the sole interpreter of
Constitutional provisions guaranteeing certain rights for native-born
Americans and foreign-born nationals captured or killed by American
forces at home and abroad. This, Mr. Bush said, is contrary to his
interpretation of Constitutional law. A president has the authority
to interpret and enforce that interpretation on the other branches
of government and the state and local governments as well, Mr. Bush
said. “The government is the most fundamental institution of human
civilization, and I am the government.”
Mr.
Bush, who casts himself as a "compassionate conservative,"
left the door open for civil trials as an alternative to military
tribunals or summary executions.
"Unless
action is taken, we can expect more arbitrary court decisions, more
litigation, more defiance of my law by local and other officials
all of which adds to uncertainty in my regime and our popular
war against evil," Mr. Bush said. "By taking this action,
I can protect America's families from evil, defend their freedom,
and ensure essential American justice from the despotism of the
courts, the press and the French."
Democrats
accused Mr. Bush of attacking the document that is the bedrock of
American democracy to divert election-year attention from his economic
record an allegation the White House denied. Sen. John Kerry,
D-Mass., who still hopes to run against Mr. Bush if there is a presidential
election this year, said: "I believe President Bush is wrong.
This is throwing the baby out with the bathwater."
"All
Americans should be concerned when a president who is in political
trouble treats the Constitution of the United States with such disrespect,"
said Kerry, who opposes recognizing that foreigners possess natural
rights, but will oppose the Presidential Amendment if it reaches
the Senate floor. Mr. Bush is "looking for a wedge issue to
divide the American people," Kerry said. "And say what
you will about the American people, many still support having a
constitution." Sen. Kerry did add, "Bring it on!"
Campaigning
in Georgia, Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., said he was against the president's
idea of amending the constitution. "I don't personally support
presidential dictatorship," he said. "My position has
always been that it's for the states to decide."
A
major libertarian Republican group, Republicans for a Functioning
Constitution, accused Mr. Bush of "pandering to the totalitarians"
and "discriminating against the Constitution."
The
American Center for Law, Justice and the State, which focuses on
legal and bureaucratic issues, applauded Mr. Bush's announcement,
saying it "serves as a critical catalyst to energize and organize
those who will work diligently to ensure that the presidency remains
the central institution in the daily life of every man and woman."
White
House press secretary Scott McClellan said Mr. Bush believes that
legislation for the Presidential amendment, submitted by Rep. Katherine
Harris, R-Florida, meets his principles in protecting the "sanctity
of American justice."
However,
California Republican Rep. David Dreier said a constitutional amendment
might not be necessary.
"I
will say that I'm not supportive of amending the Constitution on
this issue," said Dreier, a co-chairman of Mr. Bush's campaign
in California in 2000. "I believe that we should continue with
the normal process of simply ignoring the constitution, and I think
that we're at a point what with the Patriot Act, the Iraq
War, our other spending priorities where amending the constitution
simply isn’t necessary."
John
Podhoretz, author of the new book Bush
Country and a strong supporter of the president added, "This
is just further evidence that this president thinks in broad strokes.
Our president is a history-making president and I think Americans
can rest assured that America will be a long time recovering from
our president's example of moral and enlightened stewardship."
The
neoconservative wing of his party has been anxious for Mr. Bush
to follow up his rhetoric on the issue with action. In recent weeks,
Mr. Bush has repeatedly described himself as a "war president"
and described his term as "historic times."
February
27, 2004
Adam
Young [send him mail] is
co-founder of The Resume Store, a Canadian-based service offering
résumés and cover letters.
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