Obama Suspends the Law. What Would Lincoln Say?

The current president's hero tried to abide by the Constitution and
enlist Congress's support.

By NICHOLAS QUINN ROSENKRANZ

The Obama administration announced last month via blog post that the
president was unilaterally suspending ObamaCare's employer
mandate—notwithstanding the clear command of the law. President
Obama's comments about it on Aug. 9—claiming that "the normal thing
[he] would prefer to do" is seek a "change to the law"—then added
insult to constitutional injury. It also offers a sharp contrast with a
different president who also suspended the law.

On April 27, 1861, President Lincoln unilaterally authorized his
commanding general to suspend the writ of habeas corpus so that he could
detain dangerous rebels in the early days of the Civil War. Lincoln's
order was constitutionally questionable. The Constitution provides that
"The privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended,
unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may
require it."

A rebellion was in progress, so suspension was permissible. But the
Constitution doesn't specify who can suspend the writ in such
circumstances. Since the Suspension Clause appears in Article I of the
Constitution, which is predominantly about the powers of Congress, there
is a strong argument that only Congress can suspend the habeas writ.

Lincoln's order was legally dubious, but what he did next showed
remarkable constitutional rectitude. On July 4, 1861, he delivered a
solemn message to Congress, in which he did everything possible to
square his action with the Constitution. In this message, he set forth
the best possible constitutional arguments that he had unilateral power
to suspend the writ. These arguments may have been wrong, but they were
serious, and they were presented seriously, in good faith.

Lincoln also made a powerful argument about the necessity of his action.
Even if he was wrong, and only Congress had the power to suspend the
writ, surely the circumstances had to be considered: Congress was in
recess and the South was in open rebellion. "The whole of the laws which
were required to be faithfully executed, were being resisted, and
failing of execution, in nearly one-third of the states," Lincoln said
to Congress.

Should Lincoln have refrained from suspending habeas, if doing so meant
that the republic would fall? As he put it: "[A]re all the laws, but
one, to go unexecuted, and the government itself go to pieces, lest that
one be violated?"

Lincoln also invited Congress to ratify his actions: "Whether there
shall be any legislation upon the subject, and, if any, what, is
submitted entirely to the better judgment of Congress." On Aug, 6, 1861,
Congress did indeed retroactively ratify "all the acts, proclamations,
and orders of the President . . . respecting the army and navy of the
United States." And later, on March 3, 1863, Congress expressly
authorized the president to suspend the writ.

Scholars have debated whether Lincoln exceeded his power by suspending
the writ and whether Congress's retroactive ratification cured any
constitutional infirmity. Whatever one's answer, this is a case of a
president—himself a constitutional lawyer—trying, under
impossible circumstances, to be as faithful to the Constitution as
possible.

Contrast all of this with President Obama's announcement that he is
unilaterally suspending part of the Affordable Care Act. Like Lincoln,
Mr. Obama is a constitutional lawyer. And like Lincoln's action, Mr.
Obama's was a unilateral executive suspension of the law. But in every
other way, the president's behavior could not have been more different
from Lincoln's.

First, Lincoln's action was at least arguably constitutional, while Mr.
Obama's is not. The Constitution has a provision for suspending habeas.
It has no general provision for executive suspension of laws. English
kings used to suspend laws, but the Framers rejected that practice: The
president "shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed."

Second, Lincoln volunteered an articulate constitutional defense of his
action. Mr. Obama seemed annoyed when the New York Times dared to ask
him the constitutional question. When the reporter asked whether he had
consulted with lawyers about the legality of the mandate's delay, he
declined to answer.

As for Republican congressmen who had the temerity to question his
authority, Mr. Obama said only: "I'm not concerned about their
opinions—very few of them, by the way, are lawyers, much less
constitutional lawyers." Mr. Obama made no mention of Iowa Sen. Tom
Harkin—a Democrat, a lawyer and one of the authors of
ObamaCare—who said: "This was the law. How can they change the law?"

Third, Lincoln offered a brilliant and compelling argument about the
necessity of his action, given that the republic was in imminent danger.
Mr. Obama's official version of the constitutional-necessity argument
was nothing more than a breezy blog post attributed to an assistant
secretary for tax policy. The title? "Continuing to Implement the ACA in
a Careful, Thoughtful Manner."

Fourth, and most strikingly, Lincoln promptly looked to Congress to
ratify his unilateral action. Congress agreed with Lincoln, and the
president welcomed and signed new legislation. President Obama says only
that he wishes he could follow the same course. Last week, he said he
would like to "simply call up the Speaker" of the House to request a
"change to the law" that would achieve his desired delay.

In fact, as the president knows, he doesn't even need to pick up the
phone: On July 17, the House of Representatives passed the Authority for
Mandate Delay Act (with 229 Republicans and 35 Democrats voting in
favor). This would authorize President Obama's desired suspension of the
law, just as Congress ratified Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus.

But unlike Lincoln, President Obama doesn't welcome this congressional
ratification. He has called the House bill that fixes the constitutional
problem he created "unnecessary," and he threatened to veto it. Why?
Because the House also passed a companion bill that would delay the
individual mandate too. For political reasons, the president doesn't
want to be in the inconvenient position of signing one bill that would
give companies a reprieve from ObamaCare, while vetoing another that
would grant individuals the same delay. The Democratic-controlled Senate
will quietly kill the House bill and save Mr. Obama the awkwardness of
having to veto it.

Faced with military exigencies, Lincoln did everything possible to
enlist Congress's support—and thus to follow the Constitution. Mr.
Obama, faced with mere political and bureaucratic inconveniences,
spurned Congress's support and flouted the Constitution.

Mr. Rosenkranz is a professor of law at Georgetown and a senior fellow
in constitutional studies at the Cato Institute.

Reply via email to