Is The American Constitution Our National Emergency?

For all the awfulness buried inside the most recent appropriations bill, there is one provision that Republicans added. It is rumored to give the President authority to pull resources for the Wall from other agencies or departments. There is ample reason to dislike this.

We objected when Obama went all “phone and pen.” He did that because Congress wouldn’t give him what he wanted. That gave us DACA and DAPA which began the recent drug and border crisis. It was unconstitutional then.

Now, we’ve got Congress rumored to have transferred some of its authority to the executive branch for appropriations. It sounds better on its surface than a president just assuming that right, but it is no less unconstitutional even if you support the intended purpose.

Building a ‘Wall.’

We like the idea of a more secure southern border. The drug crisis has been a national emergency. Most of the drugs are coming in from Mexico. Gangs are trafficking women and children. It needs to stop. 

Republicans wasted an opportunity to make it right when they had the majority. They did not capitalize. Now we are left with this. A national emergency declaration whose funding teeth allegedly come from a transfer of legisaltive power to the executive.

We are not amused.

Rep. Justin Amash clarified the issue in a series of tweets compiled here at RedState

A thread on national emergencies and our Constitution:

Congress makes laws.
The president executes laws.
The Supreme Court decides cases.

This is our constitutional system.

Congress cannot delegate legislative powers to the president by statute.

Going back to the Framers of the Constitution, Americans have recognized the president’s inherent power as chief executive to act swiftly in an emergency, especially a sudden attack on the United States. But such power exists only so long as Congress has no opportunity to act.

Over the years, Congress has passed laws to create an orderly process for receding the president’s inherent emergency power as an emergency subsides—the War Powers Resolution and the National Emergencies Act are two examples.

Laws like the War Powers Resolution and the National Emergencies Act are not—and, under our Constitution, cannot be—grants of legislative powers to the president. They were adopted to transition authority back to Congress when unilateral executive action is no longer appropriate.

Congress can make no law permitting the president to assume permanent legislative powers, even in a single area, simply by his declaring an emergency. The president may act quasi-legislatively only in an actual emergency—when Congress has no time to act—and then only temporarily.

Congress cannot turn the executive branch into the legislative branch. Such an effort fails for lack of conformity to our Constitution. The validity of an emergency declaration is limited by the definition of “emergency” itself and cannot be expanded by statutory openness.

Can Congress make a law permitting the president to conduct the entire appropriations process by his declaring an emergency? Of course not. That would impermissibly grant him legislative powers. The same principle applies when addressing a portion of the appropriations process.

Some have replied that Congress still retains legislative powers should the president abuse an emergency declaration. They note that Congress can pass legislation to override the president’s actions. Though true, this arrangement turns the Constitution on its head.

It would mean that a simple majority of each chamber could delegate legislative powers to the president, but only a two-thirds majority or greater could reject their application to a particular case or repeal the delegation altogether.

Congress should (and I will) work to repeal laws that ostensibly grant legislative powers to the president. But even if Congress does no such thing, such laws are void under our Constitution, and an emergency declaration by the president for a non-emergency is likewise void.

It is a polarizing issue. There is ample evidence to justify getting the job done.  But there has already been a legal challenge to stop or slow it.

Business as usual. Ignore the safety and security of regular Americans. Violate the constitution. Another day in American Government.

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Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, award-winning blogger, and a member of the Board of Directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor, Executive Editor, assistant editor, Editor, content curator, complaint department, Op-ed editor, gatekeeper (most likely to miss typos because he has no editor), and contributor at GraniteGrok.com. Steve is also a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, The Republican Volunteer Coalition, has worked for or with many state and local campaigns and grassroots groups, and is a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

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