What is wrong with Congress? Why are they not more vigorously opposing
this power grab by the President?
And what is wrong with us, the people. Why
are we not fighting for a strict adherence to the Constitution's demand that
only Congress can declare war? Why are we allowing this protracted undeclared
war? (MC)
The New York Times / July 23, 2007 / Editorial Observer / By ADAM COHEN
Just What the Founders
Feared: An Imperial President Goes to War
The nation is heading toward a constitutional showdown over the Iraq war. Congress
is moving closer to passing a bill to limit or end the war, but President Bush
insists Congress doesn’t have the power to do it. “I don’t
think Congress ought to be running the war,” he said at a recent press
conference. “I think they ought to be funding the troops.” He added
magnanimously: “I’m certainly interested in their opinion.”
The war is hardly the only area where the Bush administration is trying to
expand its powers beyond all legal justification. But the danger of an imperial
presidency
is particularly great when a president takes the nation to war, something the
founders understood well. In the looming showdown, the founders and the Constitution
are firmly on Congress’s side.
Given how intent the president is on expanding his authority, it is startling
to recall how the Constitution’s framers viewed presidential power. They
were revolutionaries who detested kings, and their great concern when they established
the United States was that they not accidentally create a kingdom. To guard against
it, they sharply limited presidential authority, which Edmund Randolph, a Constitutional
Convention delegate and the first attorney general, called “the foetus
of monarchy.”
The founders were particularly wary of giving the president power over war.
They were haunted by Europe’s history of conflicts started by self-aggrandizing
kings. John Jay, the first chief justice of the United States, noted in Federalist
No. 4 that “absolute monarchs will often make war when their nations
are to get nothing by it, but for the purposes and objects merely personal.”
Many critics of the Iraq war are reluctant to suggest that President Bush went
into it in anything but good faith. But James Madison, widely known as the
father of the Constitution, might have been more skeptical. “In war, the honors
and emoluments of office are to be multiplied; and it is the executive patronage
under which they are to be enjoyed,” he warned. “It is in war,
finally, that laurels are to be gathered; and it is the executive brow they
are to encircle.”
When they drafted the Constitution, Madison and his colleagues wrote their
skepticism into the text. In Britain, the king had the authority to declare
war, and raise
and support armies, among other war powers. The framers expressly rejected
this model and gave these powers not to the president, but to Congress.
The Constitution does make the president “commander in chief,” a
title President Bush often invokes. But it does not have the sweeping meaning
he suggests. The framers took it from the British military, which used it to
denote the highest-ranking official in a theater of battle. Alexander Hamilton
emphasized in Federalist No. 69 that the president would be “nothing more” than “first
general and admiral,” responsible for “command and direction” of
military forces.
The founders would have been astonished by President Bush’s assertion that
Congress should simply write him blank checks for war. They gave Congress the
power of the purse so it would have leverage to force the president to execute
their laws properly. Madison described Congress’s control over spending
as “the most complete and effectual weapon with which any constitution
can arm the immediate representatives of the people, for obtaining a redress
of every grievance, and for carrying into effect every just and salutary measure.”
The framers expected Congress to keep the president on an especially short
leash on military matters. The Constitution authorizes Congress to appropriate
money
for an army, but prohibits appropriations for longer than two years. Hamilton
explained that the limitation prevented Congress from vesting “in the
executive department permanent funds for the support of an army, if they were
even incautious
enough to be willing to repose in it so improper a confidence.”
As opinion turns more decisively against the war, the administration is becoming
ever more dismissive of Congress’s role. Last week, Under Secretary of
Defense Eric Edelman brusquely turned away Senator Hillary Clinton’s questions
about how the Pentagon intended to plan for withdrawal from Iraq. "Premature
and public discussion of the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq reinforces enemy
propaganda that the United States will abandon its allies in Iraq,” he
wrote. Mr. Edelman’s response showed contempt not merely for Congress,
but for the system of government the founders carefully created.
The Constitution cannot enforce itself. It is, as the constitutional scholar
Edwin Corwin famously observed, an “invitation to struggle” among
the branches, but the founders wisely bequeathed to Congress some powerful
tools for engaging in the struggle. It is no surprise that the current debate
over
a deeply unpopular war is arising in the context of a Congressional spending
bill. That is precisely what the founders intended.
Members of Congress should not be intimidated into thinking that they are overstepping
their constitutional bounds. If the founders were looking on now, it is not
Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi who would strike them as out of line, but George
W. Bush,
who would seem less like a president than a king.