Obama, the Imperial President, Will Act on His Own


In a recent email to supporters, President Obama lamented the frustrating inadequacy of his office. “There’s only so much I can do on my own” without Congress, he confessed.

As a matter of constitutional interpretation, he’s right. But in practice, the President has shown a distinct contempt for the legal limits on his power.

Obama’s imperial presidency has manifested itself in many ways. Often he willfully neglects his constitutional duty to “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.” As we’ve seen with education, immigration, and health care, suspending the law amounts to rewriting the law.

Other times, the President is more direct. The legislative power may be vested in Congress, but that didn’t stop him from rewriting welfare legislation on his own, hollowing out the successful federal work requirements.

Unfortunately, it appears that this is only the beginning of Obama’s imperialism.

Once liberated from the constraints of reelection, he wasted little time signaling his enthusiasm for unilateral action in his second term.

“Congress is tough right now,” he recently declared, “but that’s not going to stop me.”

Armed with electoral immunity, the President is also more candid in justifying his actions.

[W]here Congress is unwilling to act, I will take whatever administrative steps that I can in order to do right by the American people.

From this perspective, the legislature is more of an inconvenience than one of the three co-equal branches of government. Constitutional prerogatives are up for grabs; whoever is most willing to write the laws wins.

The President’s view of how our system works is not only dangerous, but it also flatly contradicts the Founders’ understanding of government.

The President sees no need to bother with all the arguing, deal-making, compromising, rivalries—in a word, politics—involved in the constitutional order. Reserving to Congress its lawmaking authority is an unnecessary obstacle to progress.

But our system was intentionally designed for messy political fights. The Founders understood that the alternative is even worse. Experience with Britain taught them the dangers of a government that tended toward the accumulation of powers.

Read the rest via Obama, the Imperial President, Will Act on His Own.



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