Posted on 12/28/2005 9:31:48 AM PST by Valin
As I write this a few days before Christmas, reports about the Bush Administrations electronic surveillance of communications between suspected terrorists and people within our borders has substantially raised the level of political rhetoric. Talk about impeaching President Bush has made its way from the fever swamps of the left blogosphere to the somewhat more respectable precincts of Capitol Hill, where Senator Barbara Boxer has dipped her toe in the murky water, Congressman John Lewis (D-GA) has dived in, and Senator John Kerry has announced that he voted for swimming before he voted against it. Congressman John Conyers (D-MI) has covered all the bases, introducing a resolution calling for the creation of a committee to investigate whether the President has committed impeachable offenses, as well as one calling for the Presidents censure, on the grounds that he hasnt responded to Congressional demands for information regarding his alleged manipulation of pre-war intelligence. These politicians have been joined by a few serious commentators, including Newsweeks Jonathan Alter, who has said that President Bush is acting like a dictator and called him a lawbreaker, and the University of Chicagos Geoffrey Stone, who asserts that the Presidents actions are a blatant and arrogant violation of American law.
Whatever happened to peace on earth, goodwill toward men?
This particular skirmish between the Bush Administration and its domestic critics pits those who assert the inherent power of the Presidency against those who call for respecting every jot and tittle of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. In the final analysis, it will not, I think, be settled in a court of law, but rather in the court of public opinion.
What the President and his supporters are ultimately asserting is executive prerogative, given its classic definition by the seventeenth-century English political philosopher John Locke in his Second Treatise of Government:
[The] power to act according to discretion, for the public good, without the prescription of law, and sometimes even against it, is that which is called prerogative. (My emphasis.)
For Locke, executive prerogative was necessary to respond to three failings inherent in the nature of law itself. First, the general categories in any law are never fully adequate to the particularities of the situations in which we find ourselves. There are always exceptions to the general rule. When those exceptions present themselves, if justice is to prevail, if the public good is to be secured, someone must act against the law. The executive power to grant reprieves and pardons (as many recently demanded for Tookie Williams, whatever the particular merits of his situation) is one example of this kind of prerogative.
Second, since human beings lack perfect foresight, law will never provide for all the situations that might arise, however amenable they might eventually be to general legislation. If the executive cant act in the absence of legal authority, then he cant adequately handle the novel situation he confronts. President Bushs assertions that 9/11 changed everything suggest thinking along these lines.
Finally, Locke notes, in language echoed by Alexander Hamilton in The Federalist Papers, that legal mechanisms are sometimes too slow for the dispatch requisite to execution. This, too, is reminiscent of arguments made by the Presidents defenders regarding the functioning of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.
Hamilton also insists upon the importance of secrecy as an essential element in executive power. The more people involved in making and carrying out a decision, the less likely it can be kept secret. The less likely it can be kept secretin certain crucial instancesthe less likely it will be successful. President Bush has already made the case that untimely leaks have hindered our ability to track and apprehend al Qaeda operatives.
President Bush is not the first to assert this prerogative, and he will not be the last. Some of his defenders argue that, with respect to the electronic surveillance at issue here, the courts have never questioned Presidential authority and have, indeed, expressly affirmed it. That may be so, but the courts have, from time to time, repudiated other assertions of executive prerogative. In Ex parte Milligan, for example, the Supreme Court overturned a military tribunals verdict against a notorious Southern sympathizer, arguing that the fact that civilian courts were functioning (albeit perhaps inefficiently and ineffectively from the governments point of view) precluded the imposition of martial law. In Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co. v. Sawyer, the Court overturned President Trumans effort, in the name of national security, to impose a settlement in a labor dispute, arguing that Congress had already provided a mechanism for settling the dispute, thereby precluding any extralegal Presidential action.
That many courts are deferential to assertions of executive authority in wartime does not mean that they all will be, nor does it mean that when they defer, the President is right, and when they resist, the President is wrong. One of the facts about our system of separation of powers that is all too frequently overlooked is that, if the branches are in fact separated and equal, checking and balancing one another, there is no reason why the judiciary should simply and always have the final word when it disputes the authority of a co-equal branch of government. To affirm that proposition would be to acquiesce in judicial tyranny.
Locke, who wrote before the American innovation regarding judicial review, offered another way of resolving disputes about the use and abuse of executive prerogative. If the issue is, as he says, the public good, the final arbiter can be none other than the public. He expected people to acquiesce in assertions of executive prerogative whilst it is in any tolerable degree employed for the use it was meant. That is, he expected people to be relatively forgiving of assertions of prerogative, responding only to the proverbial long train of abuses manifestly tending toward tyranny.
For all practical purposes, then, when we examine assertions of executive prerogative, were called upon to render a political judgment, making a political argument about the tendency of executive action. We have a number of avenues we can pursue here. We can conduct the kind of debate now being conducted in Congress, our newspapers, over the airwaves, and in the blogosphere. Congress can hold hearings, exposing what it regards as abuses or misuses of executive power. It can attempt legislatively to impose new limits and use its appropriations power to tie the executives hands. At the limit, the House can vote articles of impeachment and the Senate can try them.
And, lest we forget, we the people have the opportunity, every two years, to vote.
Let me repeat: All of these processes are political, not legal. Even a Senate trial of high crimes and misdemeanors is a political trial. I dont mean to use the word in a pejorative sense. To render a political judgment, to conduct a political debate, is to focus on the public or common good. We attempt to answer the question whether we are safer, whether our rights are more or less secure, with or without electronic surveillance of the sort that the Bush Administration has apparently undertaken. We ask whether the provocations the President has asserted, and the safeguards he has outlined, are sufficient. We ask ourselves whether he and his colleagues can be trusted with this fateful authority.
We offer answers, and we attempt to persuade our fellow citizens. In so doing, we put our own reasons and our own characters on display, as well as the reasons and the characters were criticizing, because we cant hide behind the impersonal law. So I invite Senators Boxer and Kerry, Representatives Lewis and Conyers, and anyone else to make their best case about what the real threats to our safety and security are, and about whether President Bush and his colleagues can be trusted with the authority they have asserted.
I know wholl win the debate. I know who has earned the trust of the American people. Bring it on!
Joseph Knippenberg is a professor of politics and associate provost for student achievement at Oglethorpe University in Atlanta, Georgia. He is a weekly columnist for The American Enterprise Online and a contributing blogger at No Left Turns.
Oh sob! And me so young and fair.
Good find, Valin
I say put it to a vote immediately. Put up or shut up.
The '06 shift in the House will be that the majority party will add more seats. And momentum will build for a candidate to succeed President Bush who will carry on his policies.
Too bad the Rats don't fight the terrorists with the same vigor they fight the President!
Pray for W and Our Victorious Troops
In the words of Chairman Hao: Yeee-arrghhh!! Let's impeach him for monitoring the calls of terrorists and the people who talk with terrorists. That's a great Democratic recipe for an election year. Ranks up there with the bin Laden "don't vote for Bush" message of 2004.
Fine... Let them.
Bring on the impeachment. It will ensure that the Democrats remain out of power for at least another generation.
Nope, no chance, MSM has lost too much credibility. The percentage of Americans that trust the MSM is closer to single digits than 20%.
You are correct that the loon left would try without considering consequences, but this will lose them votes not gain them any.
President Bush is not a conservative. Never has been, at least when you put yourself as the "center" and anyone to your left is a liberal, and anyone to your right a (true) conservative.
Have you ever considered the possibility that those to your right would consider you to be a liberal?
Could President Cheney win as an incumbent in 2008?
If they hold off until after 1-20-2006 Cheney could run for a 2nd full term in 2012.
See reply 12
Cheney could possibly be the worst person the Republicans put up for nomination. If Hillary is the Dem's nominee, the only person the Republican party has is Condi and we all know Condi will beat Hillary.
This talk of impeachment is one of the many reasons we cannot lose in 2006. How some of you are talking, however, it looks like arrogance is taking over, as it has been. Once that happens, we lose. I'd love to see 60+ Republicans in the Senate (to overcome those damn fillibusters) but I think I'd have a better chance of winning the lottery.
As for Condi, I've loved her as a person ever since she gave a speech at a Bush 1 Presidential convention. It was little covered, but was the second best speech given there (Reagan's last convention speech was, well, Reaganesque.) She is a brilliant, supremely competent woman. I've never seen her out debated by anyone on any subject. Sadly perhaps even more importantly, she embodies a demographic wedge that could kill off what's left of the coalition that used to be the Democratic party. As a potential President there are a few blanks about her I'd like to fill before I jump on her large Internet bandwagon. We know little about her beliefs on many important domestic issues. Most importantly, we don't know whether she wants the job, nor even whether she'd take it if presented with it on a silver platter.
Don't be so quick to rate Hillary's chances. She'd start with a very large anyone-but-Hillary base which won't shrink and may well grow during the campaign. Many of the people that would "vote for the girl" as a novelty item are the same folks that would otherwise vote for the Democrat out of sheer habit. The MSM will fawn all over her in providing one sided coverage, but how much more can they do of that than they have done? She's brighter than the average Democratic candidate, but she's not as bright as the MSM claims and she lacks her husband's blinding charisma. She'd be a tough opponent, but not an impossible one for a good conventional GOP candidate. Of course this begs the question of does the GOP have a good conventional candidate on deck at this time. George Allen, maybe. He was a pretty good Governor from what I recall. Everyone else currently posturing has two few cajones and/or two many horns.
I'd guess they might be. I just remember when the Republicans made the right decision a few years ago and refused to pass the budget because of the games the Democrats were playing. The Republicans came out on the short end of the stick because of the way the media covered the story. I'm concerned about the same effect because the media is even more riled up this time then they were then. They lost in 2000 when their candidate lost after doing just about everything they could do to help him. They lost again in 2004 when they through the rule book out in desperation. The MSM sees this as an opportunity to rectify the loss that they still don't understand. They are bitter and vindictive.
Being a conservative is an impeachable offense in the eyes of dumb liberals, like Barbara Boxer and John Conyers.
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