Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Executive odor

A couple of posts down, we discussed the ominous new executive order which removes all property from any U.S. "person" determined to have aided violence in Iraq. The wording is open to broad interpretation: The target can be anyone guilty of "undermining efforts to promote economic reconstruction and political reform in Iraq or to provide humanitarian assistance to the Iraqi people," as defined by the Bush administration.

The order prohibits prior notice to any person Bush feels has contributed to his problems in Iraq. Anyone donating to any legal defense fund organized on behalf of an affected person will also lose everything he or she owns. Moreover, the order prohibits:
the making of any contribution or provision of funds, goods, or services by, to, or for the benefit of any person whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to this order, and (ii) the receipt of any contribution or provision of funds, goods, or services from any such person.
So let's say that someone considered guilty (by Bush, not by a judge or jury) of fomenting violence in Iraq does a little web site design for your organization. ALL OF YOUR PROPERTY CAN BE TAKEN AWAY, even if you knew nothing about the individual who did the design work.

How can we overturn such a draconian executive order?

We can't. At least, not if we speak in practical terms.

If we are speaking in technical or historical terms, an EO can be overturned in two ways.

First, the court may rule against it on the ground that the EO makes law rather than interprets or enforces law. The Supreme Court has done so on two occasions, under Truman and Clinton.

Here's where matters get cute. Nearly every executive order offers room for the argument that the President has made a new law without the involvement of Congress. The current order is certainly open to such a challenge.

So why would the Supreme Court focus on one EO and not the others? What makes one order a no-no while all the other ones are yes-yesses?

Politics.

And politically speaking, the Supreme Court is on the side of the Republican Party. So scratch that option.

The second possibility: Congress can refuse to fund whatever it is that the President has ordered. Sounds easy, right? Here's the problem: The President can veto any bill sent to him by Congress, including any bill that makes an EO unenforceable. Congress can override the veto, but doing so requires a two-thirds majority. Very difficult to accomplish, that.

Could Bush use the latest EO to go absolutely freaking nuts? Could he, in short, institute the long-dreaded Big Blogger Roundup?

Maybe; maybe not. If his actions become too outrageous, then a two-thirds majority becomes politically possible. Of course, impeachment would probably come first. But if all Republican congressfolk remain loyal to party and prez, Caesar will have done the Rubicon thang and all of our current democratic legalities may seem quaint.

The good news: If a Democrat gets into the White House again, both sides of the aisle in Congress might be willing to contemplate the idea of restricting Executive power. The Murdochian hordes love the idea of weakening the Presidency -- if the President has a D next to his name.

I say: Let's take that opportunity. The whole EO system needs re-thinking.

Of course, we would have to proceed with caution, since EOs have accomplished many good things over the years. The Louisiana Purchase. The Emancipation Proclamation. Integration of the military. School desegregation. The Equal Employment Opportunities Commission. FEMA.

But Dubya's EOs tend to convey a distinct "Emperor Palpatine" vibe. For example, Executive Order 13233 placed a dark curtain of covertness over Presidential Records. Historians will have the devil's own time (was that just a figure of speech?) trying to acquire a behind-the-scenes view of what Bush and Cheney have been up to.

My suggestion: Congress should assume the right to determine whether an EO has usurped its legislative function, a determination to be made via a simple majority. Is this course of action constitutional? I'm not sure. Then again, the very concept of the executive order is of questionable constitutionality.

The most recent EO has a precedent. Last year, W signed a similarly-worded order seizing property from anyone contributing to violence in the Cote d'Ivoire. Few paid attention to that one.

I hope you're paying attention now!

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Joe:
"Then again, the very concept of the executive order is of questionable constitutionality."

As is the National Security Act of 1947 that brought the EO into it's all too powerful second life but that's a tough row to hoe.

I think this boils back down to action from the citizens, themselves. This will be a long fight but we have to start the process. I strongly believe in giving the system a chance to work things out but if it doesn't work (and Soon) we need to strongly consider non-violent engagement and work stoppage, right now. It's go time.
Sooner or later, folks will freak out and do this, anyway, without any organization or direction. And when that happens, something much worse will come in and fill the vacuum. Trust me. That's not paranoia. That's history. See: French Revolution.

Anonymous said...

Hi Joseph,

I probably am running counter to the overall sense of this in the blogosphere. When this was first raised on DU, I wrote that this EO is somewhat more routine than it looks -- although given everything else Bush has done, it has greater scope for abuse than similar EOs.

In other words, a bit of research shows that, sadly, Congress has ceded too much authority to the presidency for decades. According to Wiki, we have been under one form of presidential emergency or another since 1933! To summarize a very complicated legal story in a few words, in the 70s, Congress realized that many "emergencies" had been declared over the years -- over strikes, the actions of foreign governments, and even trivial matters -- and decided to regularize the process of the creation and expiration of presidential emergencies. One result was the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, cited in this EO, which specifies how the president can declare an emergency and when they end (automatically after a year unless renewed). Most EOs under this law basically empower the president to impose sanctions on a country. Sanctions were imposed on Iraq during the first Iraq war. After Bush toppled Sadam, sanctions and EOs were revoked. This EO is part of a process of selectively reimposing financial controls over the chaotic environment there.

This is just one of these EOs, and bears a striking resemblance to similar EOs promulgated by Bush the first and Clinton. Here are two "national emergencies" declared by Clinton concerning Israeli-Palestinian negotiations and Bush concerning Serbia:

http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=51612

http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=23630

Here's one by Bush the younger on Congo:

http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=24252

Notice the amount of lawyer's boilerplate that appears in these EOs and the one by Bush II that has everyone's hair on fire:

http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=75570

I'm not saying that Bush doesn't want to seize the property of anyone who opposes his policies in Iraq. What I am saying is that (1) it is appalling how much power Congress ceded to the presidency to declare these emergencies and seize or freeze property, and (2) we need to focus on the precise language of this EO that is different from the ones declared in the past. I'll try to do a word by word comparison for this purpose and post the results on DU with the next day or so.

HamdenRice from DU

Anonymous said...

if that mandate had been in existence in 1940 shrubs grandaddy would have died in jail and destitute

Anonymous said...

If terrorism in Iraq has increased since Bush/Cheney lied us into the mess - shouldn't they be held under the same executive order? Haven't they even admitted to aiding violence in Iraq by "taking the fight to Iraq" in the first place? And if he veto's a funding bill - isn't he aiding violence in Iraq? And if he doesn't withdraw troops isn't he aiding violence in Iraq? I say arrest them both now.

Miss P.

Anonymous said...

Bush and Cheney's actions do not surprise me any longer, but what about Conyers having peace activists arrested and saying impeachment is off the table?
I am wondering whether this administration is holding something(s) over Democrat's heads.
And I am not a tranny, I swear(and I am not talking about 9/11). It's just that when 2 and 2 do not add up to 4, you start wondering what is up. I am really looking for explanations and not trying to start a conspiracy.