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Executive Power and Privilege

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Title: Executive Power and Privilege


1
Executive Power and Privilege
2
Four Textual Dimensions of the President
  • Text II(1)(1) The executive Power shall be
    vested in a President (overarching scope)
  • II(2)(1) shall be CIC, etc. (role)
  • II(2)(2), (3) shall have Power (authority)
  • II(3) shall do (activities)

3
The Key Case Youngstown
  • Truman, Korea and the steel mills
  • A rush to judgment?
  • The variety of voices . . .

4
Truman v. Whom?
5
Whats NOT Executive Power? (Why Did Truman
Overreach?)
  • Black in Youngstown President should not
    legislate (formalist position)
  • Douglas President should not encroach on either
    Congressional turf or individual rights
    (structuralist approach)
  • Jackson President was aggrandizing here he
    should just play nicely with the other branches
    (functionalist) (NOTE POWER ZONE THEORY)
  • Frankfurter its being difficult in the sense of
    offending past practice, custom, precedent
    (historicist, traditionalist)
  • But see Vinson et al. Executive power is large
    on such matters compared with the judiciarys
    (judicial restraint)

6
Present Applicability
  • Is the NSAs wiretapping lawful?
  • See the Administrations defense
    http//www.epic.org/privacy/terrorism/fisa/doj1190
    6wp.pdf
  • Which is the more applicable authority indicating
    the congressional view, the general authorization
    of a reaction to terrorism or the more specific
    amendment of the wiretapping procedural laws?

7
Privilege
  • A particular and peculiar benefit or advantage
    enjoyed by a person . . . beyond the common
    advantages of other citizens . . . A right,
    power, franchise, or immunity held by a person or
    class, against or beyond the course of law.
  • What privileges does the U.S. President enjoy,
    and should be entitled to?

8
Watergate and U.S. v. Nixon
9
U.S. v. Nixon, 1973
  • Was deciding this privilege claim the same sort
    of saying what the law is job that the Court
    took up in Marbury (as Court claims)? Or
    something a bit different? Court as interpreter
    Court as arbiter
  • When might a privilege claim ever succeed?
    Consider the opinions dicta
  • Application in this case . . .

10
Four Factors in Weighing Privilege
  • 1. identity of inquirer(s) (citizen, Congress,
    judiciary, state(s), or what combo thereof?),
  • 2. identity of target of inquiry (how far
    removed from President?),
  • 3. subject matter of inquiry (see U.S. v. Nixon
    list national security, for example, versus
    personal business?),
  • 4. reason for inquiry (just politics, civil,
    criminal?).

11
A Contemporary Application of Executive Privilege
Doctrine
  • In the Cheney case (Cheney v. U.S. District
    Court, 2004), the VP asserted a right not to
    disclose energy advisory groups discussions with
    him to Sierra Club, Judicial Watch, in extrinsic
    civil litigation
  • Denied writ of mandamus absent a finding of
    exceptional circumstances and a finding of no
    judicial usurpation of power not yet shown in
    this case

12
Recusal?
  • Aside a possible exercise of judicial
    self-restraint (here, recusal) in the situation
    involving Scalia hunting with Cheney during the
    briefing of Cheneys S. Ct. case?

13
Increasing Presidential Power Clinton v. NYC
  • The Line Item Veto and I(7)(2) did it violate
    the Presentment Clause or not?
  • An alternative ground SOP disrupted?
  • Kennedy Individual Rights at stake
  • Aside Why no standing in Raines? And why was
    standing okay here?

14
Non-Delegation and its Demise An Answer to the
Bureaucratic State?
  • Schechter, 1935, and Panama Refining, 1935
    (introducing the notion of the non-delegation
    doctrine while striking elements of the NIRA)
  • Mistretta (upholding sentencing guidelines), 1989
  • Whitman v. American Trucking, 2001 (unanimously
    rejecting the non-delegation)
  • Most recently, 2005 some independent restraint
    on the sentencing guidelines from a 6th amendment
    right-to-jury-trial perspective

15
Chadhas Approach to Immigration Decision-Making
16
Chadha and the Demise of the Legislative Veto,
1983
  • Context radical growth in presidential power
    since 1937 see New Deal, strong president, heavy
    delegations of authority to the president
  • Legislative veto devised as a device for
    Congress to maintain some control
  • But struck down why? Consider formalism,
    structuralism and concern that governmental
    scale itself may be anti-republican
  • White offers plausible practice-based and
    functionalist rejoinder

17
The Independent Counsel Morrison v. Olson, 1988
  • Is the Independent Counsel an inferior or
    principal officer and so what?
  • Is the judiciary being asked to step outside its
    Article III role?
  • Does this scheme undermine the Executive branch,
    violating the rough balance in the SOP?

18
J. Scalias Dissent
  • the concept of a government of separate and
    coordinate powers no longer has meaning
  • In what other sense can one identify the
    executive Power . . . except by reference to
    what has always and everywhere . . . been
    conducted never by the legislature, never by the
    courts, and always by the executive
  • utter incompatibility of the Courts approach
    with our constitutional traditions (?)

19
J. Scalia Vivid and Caustic
  • B. N.J. 1936
  • Immigrant Catholic family
  • Harvard Law 1960
  • Taught UVA Law from 67
  • Served Nixon and Ford
  • Appointed by Reagan 86
  • Most impressive in Morrison, Mistretta
  • 2006 one would have to be an idiot to believe
    constitutional relevance depends on interpreting
    it as a living document

20
Some other executive powers
  • Appointment (principal officers, inferior
    officers, non-officers policymaking,
    independence, tenure)
  • Removal (Myers, Humphreys Executor, , Wiener,
    Bowsher, Morrison) president can fire, but
    Congress can to some extent limit presidential
    removal in cases of desirable independence of the
    official
  • Executive Orders e.g., the Emancipation
    Proclamation

21
The Presidents Powers in Foreign Affairs
  • Curtiss-Wright, 1936 strong statement of
    executive power
  • Dames Moore, 1981 Youngstown revisited with a
    different practical result, while using Jacksons
    zone approach
  • War and the Concurrent Authority with Congress
    (considering the War Powers Resolution) why
    unconstitutional?

22
Recent restraints on Executive Power Even in
Wartime
  • Rasul v. Bush (2004) aliens detained in
    Guantanamo have right to statutory habeas review
  • Padilla v. Rumsfeld (2004) though an American
    citizen could be detained abroad as an enemy
    combatant, citizen entitled to meaningful factual
    hearing
  • Hamdi v. Rumsfeld (2004) procedural avoidance of
    questions involving habeas claims of American
    citizen held in U.S. as an enemy combatant

23
Hamdi and Rumsfeld
24
Hamdis Voices
  • OConnors plurality functionalism Congress
    has authorized it in the AUMF of 2001 over the
    1971 repeal of the Emergency Detention Act of
    1950, plus precedent of Quirin, Milligan and
    Mathews v. Eldridge
  • Souter and Ginsberg functionalism read
    differently Congress disagrees
  • Scalia, Stevens structuralism, SOP rights
  • Thomas war trumps rights

25
Military Tribunals
  • Executive Order of November 13, 2001 To what
    extent is it constitutional? What are its
    constitutional limits?
  • Ex Parte Quirin (1942) (upholding military
    commissions in WWII)

26
The President as Defendant
  • Nixon v. Fitzgerald no presidential civil
    liability for official actions
  • Clinton v. Jones presidential civil liability
    and amenability to suit for pre-presidential
    actions
  • Breyers (missing) concurrence distortion and
    distraction?
  • Can the President be prosecuted criminally?
  • The question of unanimity in SOP cases . . .

27
Next Up Three Federal Limits on the States
  • Preemption
  • Dormant Commerce Clause
  • IV.2. Privileges and Immunities
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