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Dangerous Privilege
It's time to do something about executive privilege.
Having stretched the Constitution to the snapping point, the White House now brandishes "executive privilege," talismanlike, to ward off discovery of its wrongdoing. White House counsel Fred Fielding not only refuses to provide specific evidence to Congressional committees investigating the firing of US Attorneys but makes the unprecedented claim that the President can block former advisers from appearing before Congress. Echoing an argument last heard in the infamous torture memo of August 2002, the President also claims unfettered control over federal criminal prosecutions--hence barring one way of challenging Fielding's startling arguments.
This obfuscation, though, is not merely an extension of the Administration's pet theory of monarchical executive power; it is also a calculated strategy to avoid accountability. The Administration knows that federal courts have long been reluctant to force secrets from the executive, and is thus willing to fight the House Judiciary Committee's contempt citations against Joshua Bolten and Harriet Miers. By playing hardball until the clock runs out on the Bush II era, the White House hopes to eliminate accountability for warrantless wiretapping, partisan manipulation of the Justice Department--and even torture. Worse, it sends the message to future Presidents that they can do the same.
The case for limiting executive privilege by a clear law does not rest on White House shenanigans alone. In fact, executive privilege is a vague concept that has metastasized in a short half-century. To prevent it from undermining democratic government, reform is urgently needed.
Start with the Constitution, which makes no mention of executive privilege. To the contrary, only Article I--listing Congress's powers--even mentions secrecy. Article II, describing the presidency, does not. It is not surprising that the branch of government worst structured for keeping secrets receives the sole constitutional power to do so, for the Constitution embodies a presumption toward disclosure. It mandates elections, which are mere farce without information about what a government does. And by constraining government power to muzzle criticism, the First Amendment deepens the constitutional tilt toward transparency. Nevertheless, Presidents since George Washington have exploited the absence of clear constitutional rules to withhold information. With the exponential growth of government after the New Deal and World War II, such inchoate and ill-defined claims suddenly became a potent weapon in the battle over separation of powers.
By the time of Bush II, the President's personal right to keep conversations with advisers confidential had morphed into a bottomless well of secrecy obscuring not only the Oval Office but the entire White House. It extended to cover advisers like Miers and their conversations with people outside the White House. It hid from Congress the August 6, 2001, President's Daily Brief, which revealed that Bush had been warned about Al Qaeda's determination to attack. And of course it sheltered Dick Cheney, who made the startling argument that the office of the Vice President entitles him to keep secret not only conversations with Administration officials but also with private citizens.
The problem will not vanish in 2009. The executive branch has the greatest capacity to create secrets, thanks to its enormous intelligence apparatus. The growing risk of abuse, and the greater capacity for corrosive secrets, means we must find new ways to constrain the Article II leviathan. Moreover, arguments defending the privilege are much weaker than supposed. Foremost among these is what Bush calls the need for "crisp decision-making." Without secrecy, he implies, Presidents do not get candid advice.
There are three reasons this canard ought not to fend off a new law. First, executive privilege is never absolute: The Supreme Court in United States v. Nixon ordered the disclosure of intimate conversations between a President and his advisers. Second, claims for executive privilege are now untethered from any decision-making process that involves the President; they have been extended, viruslike, to the sprawling White House policy-making staff. Third, is it so bad for officials to feel the eyes of the people on their back? After all, they have a fidelity not only to the person who happens to sit in the Oval Office but also, via the Constitution, to the people. Why should officials ever forget their second--and arguably greater--obligation?
By contrast, the risk that Congress will abuse its investigative powers is smaller than generally imagined. Congressional overreaching is mitigated because the President's party is always on hand in Congress to publicize and condemn partisan investigations. Congressional misuse of power, unlike its executive counterpart, is always open to public criticism and condemnation.
An effective law on executive privilege would define and limit it. A law would clarify not only which communications are covered but when Congress can overcome the privilege: Allegations of criminal wrongdoing or violations of law would suffice to dissolve any absolute claim of nondisclosure. The law could then create mechanisms for threshold disclosure to a limited pool of legislators and staff. For disputes that persist, it would expedite judicial appeal. Courts would be obligated to resolve cases of constitutional moment quickly, to stop the clock from being run out. And clear sanctions would be imposed on the privilege's abuse.
The struggle over testimony today is but a fraction of a larger fight. The White House's effort to cloak its dismal legacy should not obscure the importance of the larger battle over the fundamental balance of constitutional power.
Aziz Huq directs the liberty and national security project at New York University's Brennan Center for Justice. In addition to representing detainees in military custody, he is co-writing a book on presidential power and national security, to be published in 2007 by the New Press.
© 2007 The Nation
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12 Comments so far
Show AllIf "executive privilege" is not even mentioned in the USA Constitution, why is George W. Bush practicing it? He is NOT above the law. In fact, he is the steward and servant of the American people - supposedly. George W. Bush also needs to understand that he swore to defend the USA Constitution from threats foreign and domestic. He seems to not be doing this, yet there are still a select few, mainly Christians and racists, who believe that George is the most morally positive person to have ever walked the planet. The choices of George will run your nation down, and you have no one to blame but yourselves - and I will laugh senseless when that happens, as Americans will receive what they rightly deserve - the destruction of their nation. From within no less.
Yes there are people who have put down my reflections on things. Remember though, I am NOT an American, so forgive me if I speak from ignorance to a certain extent on how the USA works and how you ignorant greeddy people are. For example, I do know that George W. Bush spent most of his life and built his successes in Texas and that people who live in the South, and Christians who put down gay people (which are the majority of Christians), remind me that not ALL Christians or people who live in the South are not hate mongers or who are truly intelligent - although do not speak English correctly. Well...that is sentimental but does do no good if said groups of people are the main culprits promoting international hatred of Americans.
Perhaps never I should type my comments in English again. I bother some people with what I say.
"An effective law on executive privilege would define and limit it"
An effective, impartial and uncorrupted Judiciary is first necessary.
For every law created, the unscrupulous will find ways around. As is amply demonstrated by GW/DC.
We Progressives are in denial: the Constitution is not in a "crisis," it's already a dead document. When you can be disappeared on a whim forever, the Constitution is dead. When the government can spy wantonly, the Constitution is dead. When your name appears on a secret No Fly List, or any other secret list, the Constitution is dead. When National Security Letters eliminate the receiver's First Amendment rights, the Constitution is dead. When Congress is lied to directly and repeatedly without consequence, the Constitution is dead. When habeas corpus is no longer operational - for anyone - the Constitution is dead. When the government can ignore the Supreme Court, a half dozen Federal Courts, subpoenas, et al, the Constitution is dead.
Disagree? Okay, then tell us - which part of the Constitution is still alive, and how many of the Bill of Rights are left? Do I hear crickets...
in his novel about the life and times of aaron burr, gore vidal portrays the title character as a unique mix of cynic and patriot. questioned on a point of law, the fictional burr answers "the law, sir, is whatever is boldly asserted and plausibly maintained."
Sir Melvin,
Perhaps you should not comment in English as it is abundantly clear that you do not have sufficient grasp of the language to make any sense.
Do remember though, when we in America go "down", everyone else is sure to fall, too.
The Executive Office clearly needs a codified definition, &/OR, a rational and constitutional justification for a limited concept of "executive" privelege.
There also needs to be some workable mechanism for an independent reveiw of all matters classified, by all branches of government, and deemed as prohibited from public view, i.e., "secret information," so called by someone, based on something, that can be interrupted as in the national interest or in the interest of national security.
"Democracy" wearing a hood of secrecy, is certainly unworthy of the name. Only an informed public can demonstrate "informed consent", or "informed non-consent". All ideas shine or flag, according to their worth, in the light of day.
Sir Melvin:
I am not American either, but I have lived in yhe US for a better part of 20 years. I understand you and what you are saying is perfectly clear.
There is one thing though I must say. When I was outside America, I used to put all Americans in one basket, and most people outside, even in Canada, still do. The Americans are themselves to blame for this because the world geographical and cultural knowledge of large sections of American people, even of many academics at top universities, is so pathetic that the MSM can only get a story or point across by stereotyping entire continents, peoples and religions (curently Islam). Putting down peoples, especially non European peoples is special talent of Americans, and it also feeds their hubris making them the proverbial "ugly" American .
Nevertheless, as I mentioned above, when one lives in the country, one realises how vast and diverse it is. I used to live in a liberal or "blue" state, but I have visited the red states. The difference is like night and day. I mean you would think that you are in two entirely different countries if you go from Massachusetts to Alabama. In fact most people in both states have never visited each other.
Consequently you run into areas where there are urbane, cultured and educated people, largely progressive so that you feel like being in Sweden, and then you go into some Southern yahoo trailer park community, and God help you if you are a visble minority. I managed to avoid most of the insults because though I am an Asian, born in Africa, my skin shade is pale enough to be able to pass off as a Latin Euro. They hate Latins too, allowing only Nordic whites to be counted as white, but not as much as they hate a truly brown or black person.
BushCo largely derives its support from this Judeo-Christo white trash. Sure many are poor whites, but they are so moronic that they vote against their own interests. Of course, many millions have escaped North or West or East to from these fundamentalist hell holes.
It is true that the quagmire of problems this neo-con/fascists have created will suck them in, never to be heard of again as a great nation. Also, it could destabilise some parts of the world that are dependent on America. But the mess they have created in the last 6 years has also been a disguised blessing to many countries outside. The latter have decoupled their economies from America. That is why, if it declines, it decilnes by itself without causing the world much problem. And the decline will be the internal economic entropy (unrealised chaos) that they have created in the economy as well as major climate changes.
Americans still have some time, about 10 years to minimise the effects of the meltdown (can't prevent it - - its too late for that). But I do not think they have the wisdom or the leaders to do it in time. The blue, progressive states will probably come ot better then the red christo-zombie states because the blues have much more knowledge wealth than the religious nuts.
Do see the difference in this analysis compared to assuming that the fate of all the 300 million will be homogeneously bad. That is a false belief of outsiders who have not seen the diversity and ingenuity from this diversity of America.
Not to worry. Hillary will win the 2008 election, but will not make any attempt to withdraw the troops. As a result, Republicans will sweep the 2010 midterm elections. Controlling the House and Senate, the Republicans will proceed to emasculate the executive branch and reinstate congressional checks.
Problem solved.
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/video_popups/pop_vid_impeachment1-2.html
According to John Nichols of the Nation magazine, "Impeachment isn't a constitutional crisis. It's a cure for a constitutional crisis" and "The Founders said monarchical behavior -- the behavior of a king, acting like one -- is an impeachable offense. You need not look for specific laws or statutes. What you need to look for is a pattern of behavior that says the presidency is superior not merely to Congress but to the laws of the land -- to the rule of law."
Using Campaign Spending Limits to Get America Better Politicians is the Only Way to Solve America's Problems Enough
FRANK: It's in a temporary coma, not dead.
SAMSKI: Great point! As much as I think Aziz has laid out a powerful, scholarly recipe, the crux of this particular issue hinges on the singular detail that you have raised.
AYMON: I live around the people you mentioned in the red state category. They are what you have described, but I would like to tweak your compassion button here. These people are to an extent victims of an orthodoxy. It would be one thing if we cited the "free will" clause, and/or spoke of their obligation to educate themselves. It must be remembered that MANY of these rural people have been cordoned off like sheep and exposed to extreme Biblical thought using words like "hell" and "damnation." These castigations thrown at them from impressionable young ages before their own intellects have had time to crystallize keeps them in a deadlock. The fear of challenging authority, which goes to the formation of that legion of person defined by John Dean ("Conservatives without Conscience") as the authoritarian sector, chains them to beliefs that work against their own well being and that of others. It is very difficult to liberate people from false faith, when the faith tells them to mistrust science and secular leaders. This same hypnosis falls over true believers of conservative Judaism and Islam.
When one has long hair and it gets impossibly tangled, it takes patience to comb out the knots. What forces of nature and the spiritual hierarchy are used to comb out the knots of peoples' tangled minds, I cannot say. You and I both believe that a time of spiritual reckoning is fast approaching. In Western law, an individual is ideally punished for his/her violation of a statute at the level of their understanding. In the Buddhist faith this respect for nuance is also seen. Therefore, the callous rightwing religious preacher who USES the impressionable intellects of the young to implement a "good christian army" is far more evil than the kid who goes along because he is an awkward teenager with acne and wants to experience a sense of belonging to a group. Banishment is exceedingly painful, and few can deal with being cast as an outsider. This is why only a small percentage of any society actively rebels.
If you drive the state of FLorida or California you see how many mini worlds exist in both. Truly this land is a cultural patchwork quilt... it's been usurped by dark powers and as you know, many in this forum have good hearts and clear minds and are vying for ways to regain the nation's steering wheel...
aymon,
A few points I would like to make.
I AM an Alabamian who is a resident of a "Southern yahoo trailer park community".
While I agree in general with your depiction of what is probably the majority of "us" I feel obliged to point out that it is like all stereotypes. Only partly true.
I have lived in California and other very "blue" states.
I was stunned by the percentage of the population in those states that are every bit as dumb and regressive as any in the Deep South.
And Alabama has more than once voted for Ralph Nader in higher percentages than the national average. Myself included.
One may hold reservations about Nader's candidacies, myself included, but he sure ain't conservative.
In other words I have doubts as to whether or not the commonly held notion of "Red" staters being more backward than "Blue" staters holds up to close scrutiny.
Sir Melvin Cleophus,
You just KEEP ON WRITING as far as I am concerned.
Perhaps your grammar is not perfect.
But IMHO the opinions stated in your comment are spot on.
"The choices of George will run your nation down, and you have no one to blame but yourselves - and I will laugh senseless when that happens, as Americans will receive what they rightly deserve - the destruction of their nation. From within no less".
This "ALABAMA TRAILER TRASH" COULD NOT AGREE WITH YOU MORE.
all the best