"...we have an Administration that has embraced this ideology of
lawlessness."
"...the Administration is telling the Congress -- again -- that they
can go and pass all the laws they want which purport to liberalize or
restrict the President's powers, and it does not matter, because the
President has and intends to preserve the power to do whatever he
wants regardless of what those laws provide."
"They are telling the Congress to its face that all of the grand
debates it is having and the negotiations it is conducting are all
irrelevant farces, because no matter what happens, the President
retains unlimited power and nothing that Congress does can affect that
power in any way."


CICBush43 has assumed unitary and dictatorial powers over the American
people, unfettered by Congress or the Judiciary. King George rules...

David Bier


Saturday, March 25, 2006

Administration tells Congress (again) - We won't abide by your "laws"

The Republicans and Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee
submitted detailed questions to the Bush Administration regarding the
NSA program, and the DoJ's responses to both the Democrats' questions
and its responses to the Republicans' are now available.
(http://rawprint.com/pdfs/HJCrawstory2.pdf)
(http://rawprint.com/pdfs/HJCrawstory1.pdf)

There are numerous noteworthy items, but the most significant, by far,
is that the DoJ made clear to Congress that even if Congress passes
some sort of newly amended FISA of the type which Sen. DeWine
introduced, and even if the President "agrees" to it and signs it into
law, the President still has the power to violate that law if he wants
to. Put another way, the Administration is telling the Congress --
again -- that they can go and pass all the laws they want which
purport to liberalize or restrict the President's powers, and it does
not matter, because the President has and intends to preserve the
power to do whatever he wants regardless of what those laws provide.

Question number (5) from the Committee Republicans asked "whether
President Carter's signature on FISA in 1978, together with his
signing statement," meant that the Executive had agreed to be bound by
the restrictions placed by FISA on the President's powers to eavesdrop
on Americans. This is how the DoJ responded, in relevant part:


    The Constitution is the supreme law of the land, and any statutes
inconsistent with the Constitution must yield. The basic principle of
our system of government means that no President, merely by assenting
to a piece of legislation, can diminish the scope of the President's
constitutional power. . . .

    Just as one President may not, through signing legislation,
eliminate the Executive Branch's inherent constitutional powers,
Congress may not renounce inherent presidential authority. The
Constitution grants the President the inherent power to protect the
nation from foreign attack, and Congress may not impede the
President's ability to perform his constitutional duty.“ (citations
omitted).


Can that be any clearer for you - Congressmen, Senators, journalists?
The President is bestowed by the Constitution with the unlimited and
un-limitable power to do anything that he believes is necessary to
"protect the nation." Thus, even if Congress passes laws which seek to
limit that power in any way, and even if the President agrees to those
restrictions and signs that bill into law, he still retains the power
to violate it whenever he wants.

Thus, Sen. DeWine can pass his cute little bill purporting to require
oversight, or Sen. Specter can pass his, or they can do nothing and
leave FISA in place. None of that matters, because no matter what
Congress or even the President do with regard to the law, the law does
not restrict what the President can do in any way. They are telling
the Congress to its face that all of the grand debates it is having
and the negotiations it is conducting are all irrelevant farces,
because no matter what happens, the President retains unlimited power
and nothing that Congress does can affect that power in any way.

The reality is that the Administration has been making clear for quite
some time that they have unlimited power and that nothing -- not even
the law -- can restrict it. But here, they are specifically telling
Congress that even if Congress amends FISA and the President agrees to
abide by those amendments, they still have the power to break the law
whenever they want. As I have documented more times than I can count,
we have a President who has seized unlimited power, including the
power to break the law, and the Administration -- somewhat commendably
-- is quite candid and straightforward about that fact.

I believe that even people who are aware of these facts have not
really ingested or accepted the reality that we have an Administration
that has embraced this ideology of lawlessness. Yesterday, I received
numerous e-mails from people asking why I had not written about this
report from the Boston Globe, which reported:
(http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/03/24/bush_shuns_patriot_act_requirement/)


    When President Bush signed the reauthorization of the USA Patriot
Act this month, he included an addendum saying that he did not feel
obliged to obey requirements that he inform Congress about how the FBI
was using the act's expanded police powers.


The reason I didn't was because, as extraordinary as this signing
statement is in one sense, it really reveals nothing new. We really do
have an Administration which believes it has the power to break all
laws relating, however broadly, to defending the country. It has said
this repeatedly in numerous contexts and acted on those beliefs by
breaking the law -- repeatedly and deliberately. They are still
breaking the law by, for instance, continuing to eavesdrop on
Americans without the warrants required by FISA.

This is not theory. The Administration is not saying these things as a
joke. We really do live in a country where we have a President who has
seized the unlimited power to break the law. That's not hyperbole in
any way. It is reality. And the Patriot Act signing statement only
re-iterates that fact.

In response to the Republicans' question (number 27) about whether
President is exceeding his power by not just executing the laws but
also interpreting them, the DoJ said this:


    In order to execute the laws and defend the Constitution, the
President must be able to interpret them. The interpretation of law,
both statutory and constitutional, is therefore an indispensable and
well established government function. . . .

    The President's power to interpret the law is particularly
important when he is engaged in a task -- such as the direction of the
operations of an armed conflict -- that falls within the special and
unique competence of the Executive Branch.


The "unique competence of the Executive Branch," to them, encompasses
pretty much everything of any real significance, including what can be
done to U.S. citizens on U.S. soil. With regard to all such matters,
the President not only executes the law, but interprets it, and
Congress is without power to do anything to restrict the power in any
way. Here they are -- saying exactly this, again.

Put another way, the Administration has seized the power of Congress
to make the laws, they have seized the power of the judiciary to
interpret the laws, and they execute them as well. They have
consolidated within themselves all of the powers of the government,
particularly with regard to national security. This situation is, of
course, exactly what Madison warned about in Federalist 47; 
(http://www.constitution.org/fed/federa47.htm) it really is the very
opposite of everything our Government is intended to be:


    From these facts, by which Montesquieu was guided, it may clearly
be inferred that, in saying "There can be no liberty where the
legislative and executive powers are united in the same person, or
body of magistrates," or, "if the power of judging be not separated
from the legislative and executive powers," he did not mean that these
departments ought to have no partial agency in, or no control over,
the acts of each other.

    His meaning, as his own words import, and still more conclusively
as illustrated by the example in his eye, can amount to no more than
this, that where the whole power of one department is exercised by the
same hands which possess the whole power of another department, the
fundamental principles of a free constitution are subverted. This
would have been the case in the constitution examined by him, if the
king, who is the sole executive magistrate, had possessed also the
complete legislative power, or the supreme administration of justice;
or if the entire legislative body had possessed the supreme judiciary,
or the supreme executive authority.


As usual, the most amazing aspect of all of this is not that the
Administration is claiming these powers. It is that even as it claims
them as expressly and clearly as can be, the Congress continues to
ignore it and pretend that it still retains power to restrict the
Administration by the laws it passes. And the media continues to fail
in its duty to inform the country about the powers the Administration
has seized, likely because they are so extreme that people still do
not really believe that the Administration means what they are saying.
What else do they need to do in order to demonstrate their sincerity?

posted by Glenn Greenwald | 8:54 AM  

    Name:Glenn Greenwald 

For the past 10 years, I was a litigator in NYC specializing in First
Amendment challenges (including some of the highest-profile free
speech cases over the past few years), civil rights cases, and
corporate and security fraud matters.

View my complete profile 
http://www.blogger.com/profile/14509826


----

Posted by David Bier, CADRE Intel Mgr
http://groups.google.com/group/publicintel

“Most men would rather believe than know” (Ben Franklin)

Cargo Security:
http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Sections/Newsweek/Components/Photos/Mag/060306_Issue/060225_perspcartoon_wide.hlarge.jpg






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