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The Debt Ceiling and the Fourteenth Amendment
Dan Miller's Blog ^ | January 9, 2013 | Dan Miller

Posted on 01/09/2013 12:43:16 PM PST by DanMiller

The Fourteenth Amendment does not grant the President unilateral authority to ignore the debt ceiling imposed by the Congress. But what if he does it anyway?

Obama takes oath

There has been talk since at least 2011 about presidential reliance on the Fourteenth Amendment unilaterally to ignore the debt ceiling. In view of the approach of a new debt ceiling debate and President Obama's stated position that he will not negotiate concerning it, such talk is again au courant (as Senator Kerry, our next Secretary of State, might put it).

The Obama Administration position, as stated by Press Secretary Carney on December 6, 2012, was

that the Obama administration does not believe they can unilaterally raise the nation's borrowing limit under the 14th Amendment to the Constitution.

"This administration does not believe that the 14th Amendment gives the president the power to ignore the debt ceiling -- period," Carney told reporters Thursday.

I don't think that President Obama will need to assert such authority because the Congress will cave. However, should he find it appropriate to do that, his statements tend to have undisclosed expiration dates.

The Fourteenth Amendment

Section 4 of the Fourteenth Amendment provides,

The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned. But neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave; but all such debts, obligations and claims shall be held illegal and void.

The Heritage Organization argued here, I think persuasively, that

At most, this clause might require the federal government to prioritize debt payments on existing debt, but no one doubts there is enough tax revenue to cover service on existing debt—without incurring more debt. Besides, the President’s unilateral action to add new debt in violation of a debt limit would not be “authorized by law” and so would be the opposite of what the clause requires.

In addition, unilateral action by the President to take on additional debt would be a clear violation of the Constitution’s separation of powers. After all, the Constitution vests in Congress—and withholds from the Executive—the power to commit to spending, to raise revenue by enacting taxes, and to incur public debt. The Fourteenth Amendment did not alter this. Congressional control of borrowing, through the debt limit, and section four of the amendment are in unison, not tension.

The Judicial system

obama kisses pelosi

New U.S. Supreme Court Poses For "Class Photo"

The branch of government that one would expect to provide a definitive interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment is the judicial branch, ultimately U.S. Supreme Court. For the Court to make such an interpretation, it would have to be presented with a case in which to do it. The case would presumably begin in one of the inferior Federal courts and take a long time to get to the Supreme Court, should it get there at all.

The doctrine of "standing" would most likely prevent substantive judicial review.

There are three requirements for Article III standing: (1) injury in fact, which means an invasion of a legally protected interest that is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical; (2) a causal relationship between the injury and the challenged conduct, which means that the injury fairly can be traced to the challenged action of the defendant, and has not resulted from the independent action of some third party not before the court; and (3) a likelihood that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision, which means that the prospect of obtaining relief from the injury as a result of a favorable ruling is not too speculative. Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 112 S. Ct. 2130, 2136 (1992) (Lujan). The party invoking federal jurisdiction bears the burden of establishing each of these elements.

Should President Obama rely on the Fourteenth Amendment to ignore the debt ceiling, it is unlikely that anyone could demonstrate a legally cognizable injury due to his action.

As Matthew Zeitlin has argued in TNR, if Obama invoked the Fourteenth Amendment to raise the debt ceiling unilaterally, the most likely outcome is that the Supreme Court would refuse to hear the case. The conservative justices have long required clear evidence of legal “standing” before opening the courthouse door—something they showed in their recent 5-4 decision rejecting a taxpayer’s challenge to an Arizona school vouchers program—and it’s hard to imagine who could establish enough of a legal injury to establish standing in this case. Individual senators and representatives wouldn’t have standing to sue on their own, according to a 1997 Supreme Court precedent, and although the House and Senate could, in theory, pass a joint resolution asserting that the president has injured Congress by usurping its power, they’re unlikely to find the votes to do so. (If the House alone passed a resolution asserting a constitutional injury, its legal status is less certain.)

When it comes to individual taxpayers, they’re likely barred from establishing standing to sue by the definitive precedent on the debt clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, the 1935 Perry case. In that case, a bondholder asserted that the Congressional joint resolution taking the U.S. off the gold standard violated section Four of the Fourteenth Amendment, which says: “The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, … shall not be questioned.” The Court, in an opinion that supports Obama’s position in every respect, expansively interpreted the constitutional text and said it did indeed prohibit any government policy that “concerns the integrity of the public obligations.” But the Court went on to say that although the bondholder had suffered a constitutional injury, he had no legal standing to sue, since it was impossible to calculate precisely how much of an economic loss he had suffered.

Is that good? No, and I don't like it. Regardless of what I like, that seems to be "the law" and the best that can reasonably be anticipated is that the courts might take a stand on presidential authority under the Fourteenth Amendment years after he had exercised it. Considering the present (and likely future) composition of the Court, if and when it does consider the matter, I have little confidence that it will concur with the Heritage Foundation's (and my) views on the intent of the Fourteenth Amendment.

What could the Congress do?

The Congress, particularly the House of Representatives, has arrows in its quiver should President Obama attempt to avoid the debt ceiling through reliance on the Fourteenth Amendment. The House can simply refuse to appropriate any more money and to authorize any additional debt or taxes. Without affirmative vote of the House, any action the Senate might take on the matter would have no legal effect. Under Article I, Section 7,

All Bills for raising Revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives; but the Senate may propose or concur with Amendments as on other Bills.

Under Section 8,

The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

To borrow Money on the credit of the United States; (Emphasis added.)

What could the President do then?

Without congressionally authorized funding where might the President, as the head of the Executive Branch, get the money needed to run the government? In some circumstances it might be possible to borrow it, although under Section 8, quoted above, that power is vested in the Congress. However, it seems likely that the pucker factor in the debt markets would be quite high in view of Article I, the Fourteenth Amendment and the questions they raise about whether the borrowed funds would ever have to be repaid. Many investors might well prefer to invest in Greek bonds, solar energy and windmills. The House could also go on strike and decline to pass any legislation sought by the Administration.

The President then would likely relish his great opportunity to lambast the heartless and dangerously obstructionist Republicans, the Tea Party and all other domestic terrorist organizations for their maliciously racist actions, characterizing them as the sole cause of the likely downgrade of the nation's finances and possibly her utter destruction. The mass media would support his thesis and many would agree.

What is the Congress more likely to do instead?

Whether its leaders would have the testicular fortitude to do much beyond cave is highly questionable.

congress_seal_kick_can_down_obama_road copy

Unfortunately, such fortitude is uncommon and has been for quite a while. As contended in this article by George Will, the entitlement state has grown like Topsy; not because it has been good for the nation but because it has been politically convenient; politicians speak glowingly of their public service, but their principal objective seems to be reelection.

[A]s explained by the Hudson Institute’s Christopher DeMuth in the Dec. 24 Weekly Standard:

Deficit spending once was largely for investments — building infrastructure, winning wars — which benefited future generations, so government borrowing appropriately shared the burden with those generations.

Now, however, continuous borrowing burdens future generations in order to finance current consumption. Today’s policy, says DeMuth, erases “the distinction between investing for the future and borrowing from the future.”

December’s maneuverings made clear that most Americans will be spared the educational experience of fiscal cliff-related tax increases and spending cuts, which would have been a small but instructive taste of the real costs of the entitlement state. Still, December’s maneuverings taught three lessons.

First, there will be no significant spending restraint. Democrats — you know, the people respectful of evidence and science — even rejected a more accurate measurement of the cost of living that would slightly slow increases in myriad government benefits. Accuracy will be sacrificed to liberalism’s agenda of government growth.

Second, Barack Obama has (as Winston Churchill said of an adversary) “the gift of compressing the largest amount of words into the smallest amount of thought.”

His incessant talking swaddles one wee idea — raising taxes on “millionaires and billionaires,” including couples earning less than half a million. He has nothing pertinent to say about the steadily worsening fiscal imbalance that will make sluggish growth —under 3% — normal.

. . . .

As economists Glenn Hubbard and Tim Kane explain in National Affairs quarterly, America’s political system “cannot govern the entitlement state” that “exists largely to provide material benefits to individuals.”

Piling up unsustainable entitlement promises — particularly, enactment of Medicare in 1965 and the enrichment of Social Security benefits in 1972 — has been improvident for the nation but rational for the political class. The promised expenditures, far in excess of revenues, would come due “beyond the horizon of political consequences.”

“Our politicians,” say Hubbard and Kane, “are acting rationally” but “politically rational behavior is now fiscally perverse.” Both parties are responding to powerful electoral incentives to neither raise taxes nor cut spending. Hence, “the clash over raising the debt limit that gripped Washington during the summer of 2011 was just the beginning, not the end, of our fiscal woes.”

But the perils of the entitlement state are no longer (in Hubbard’s and Kane’s words) “safely beyond the politicians’ career horizons.” Furthermore, a critical mass of Republicans reject the careerists’ understanding of “politically rational” behavior. These Republicans have a different rationale for being in politics.

How many members of the Congress -- even of the Republican majority in the House -- would be willing to suffer the political consequences of a Government shutdown? Social Security checks unsent, welfare payments unsent, EBT cards refused (even at strip joints), no pay for Federal employees (including members of the military) and on and on and on? Probably not enough to do it. If they did it, what would be the likely outcome in the 2014 congressional elections? Probably not pretty. 2016 presidential election? Would they make effective use of the multiple social media available? They might try, but their voices seem likely to be overwhelmed by those of the Obama-friendly mass media.

If, as President Obama has declared ex cathedra, we don't have "a spending problem" -- similar to an alcoholic who has no drinking problem if he can get enough booze -- how can the farce continue without ever-increasing revenues, a.k.a. taxes, borrowing or both? It can't. Because of this conundrum, I seriously doubt that Speaker Boehner and his "honorable" colleagues on the Hill will exhibit the testicular fortitude necessary even to try to tame the beast. Instead, public pronouncements notwithstanding, they will allow the farce to continue and perhaps even seek encores.

BoehnerJohnCrying1

Isn't it time to tell the children that playtime is over and to stop sniveling, and for the adults to take over?


TOPICS: Government; Politics
KEYWORDS: 14thamendment; courts; debt; obama
What's up, Mr. Speaker?
1 posted on 01/09/2013 12:43:25 PM PST by DanMiller
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To: DanMiller
The 14th Amendment gives us the information that seems to elude this administration. After Section 4 comes Section 5, which states, precisely ...

Section 5.
The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.

Regardless of this administrations protests that the debt ceiling impairs their ability to continue borrowing, the debt ceiling law is precisely the "appropriate legislation" inspired by Congress in the words this administration despises.

2 posted on 01/09/2013 12:58:38 PM PST by Sgt_Schultze (A half-truth is a complete lie)
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To: Sgt_Schultze
Yep, the Constitution has lots of wonderful stuff and more should pay attention to it.

Of no particular relevance, an article I wrote in late December of 2011 entitled The U.S. Constitution and Civil War has now had far more views than any other at my little blog, 22,054. This month it has had an average of 573 per day.

3 posted on 01/09/2013 1:36:35 PM PST by DanMiller (Dan Miller)
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