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- <text id=93TT1186>
- <title>
- Mar. 15, 1993: The Case for a Big Power Swap
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 15, 1993 In the Name of God
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 78
- The Case for a Big Power Swap
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Michael Kinsley
- </p>
- <p> Bitter arguments between the President and the Congress
- are built into our constitutional system. What isn't necessarily
- built in are the bitter arguments of recent years over the
- constitutional division of labor itself. Controversies over a
- wide range of issues--independent-counsel prosecutions,
- Supreme Court nominees, funding of the Nicaraguan contras, the
- Persian Gulf War, the federal budget deficit--all turned into
- fights about the separation of powers between the Legislative
- and Executive branches.
- </p>
- <p> During the era of divided government, conservatives
- developed an enormous and historically uncharacteristic
- enthusiasm for presidential power. Conservative legal scholars
- produced elaborate theories establishing to their own
- satisfaction that the independent counsel is unconstitutional;
- that the President not only needs but already has a line-item
- veto over congressional appropriations; and so on. This trend
- culminated in President Bush's breathtaking assertion--never
- put to the test--that he could send half a million American
- troops into battle halfway around the globe without so much as a
- nod to Congress's constitutional power to "declare war."
- </p>
- <p> Now divided government is gone. And already we can see the
- Republican enthusiasm for Executive authority fading and a new
- respect growing for the prerogatives of the legislature.
- </p>
- <p> But Democrats also face a test of their principles. And
- with control of both branches, the Democrats are in a position
- to put their principles into practice. Democrats could serve the
- Constitution and the country by making a "grand bargain" between
- Congress and the White House. In foreign policy, the President
- should acknowledge and begin honoring Congress's war power. In
- domestic and budgetary policy, Congress should restore meaning
- to the President's veto power by giving him the line-item veto.
- Fair enough?
- </p>
- <p> Congress's war power has become the most flagrantly
- disregarded provision in the Constitution. There have always
- been debates over the extent of the President's authority to
- respond to unexpected emergencies. But the real erosion began
- after World War II. During the cold war era, there were claims
- that the hair-trigger nuclear stalemate made the notion of
- consulting Congress obsolete. From Vietnam through the invasion
- of Panama, there were arguments about what was and was not a
- "war." In the 1980s the issue was usually whether Congress was
- trying to "micromanage" foreign-policy issues short of actually
- sending in the troops. By 1991, however, President Bush could
- claim with a straight face that he didn't need congressional
- approval for Operation Desert Storm: a deliberate, unhurried,
- post-cold war decision to start a war.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, Congress approved Desert Storm. But only after
- America's prestige and hundreds of thousands of troops had been
- committed and the President had made clear he would go ahead
- with or without that approval. And since then there has been no
- talk of asking Congress's approval for further adventures in
- Somalia and Bosnia. As legal scholar John Hart Ely explains in a
- forthcoming book on this subject, restoring the war power is no
- special favor to the Legislative Branch. "The legislative
- surrender was a self-interested one: accountability is pretty
- frightening stuff." It's been too easy for members of Congress
- to play the hindsight game, supporting military adventures that
- turn out well and blaming the President for ones that turn out
- badly.
- </p>
- <p> President Clinton faces the challenge of creating a
- post-cold war foreign policy. He seems to want it to be
- activist, including the possibility of military action in
- support of democracy and human rights. Especially given his own
- lack of military experience, he should be happy to abandon any
- claim to the right to commit U.S. troops unilaterally (except in
- genuine emergencies)--a right he does not possess under the
- Constitution in any event.
- </p>
- <p> The line-item veto is also a matter of forcing a delinquent
- branch of government to take responsibility for its actions (or
- rather, its inactions). In this case, the guilty party is the
- Executive Branch. For 12 years we have been hearing from
- Presidents that the budget deficit is the legislature's fault
- because "Congress appropriates every dime." That's true. But
- Presidents submit an annual budget, and neither Bush nor Ronald
- Reagan ever came close to submitting a balanced one.
- </p>
- <p> Critics of Congress have a point when they say the
- legislature has eviscerated the President's constitutional veto
- power by submitting gigantic, combination-platter spending
- bills, often at the last minute. The President then has a
- Hobson's choice of signing on to the whole thing or shutting
- down the government. The line-item veto, which 43 Governors
- (including the Governor of Arkansas) have in one form or
- another, would give the President authority to approve or
- disapprove individual spending proposals. It would also,
- thereby, deny him the luxury of blaming Congress for excessive
- spending.
- </p>
- <p> A genuine line-item veto would require a constitutional
- amendment. But Congress could achieve the same result by
- agreeing to submit every appropriation and tax item as a
- separate bill for the President to sign or veto. Senator Bill
- Bradley has suggested adopting this practice as a two-year
- experiment. The Democratic-controlled Congress should have
- tried this experiment back when Republicans controlled the
- White House. It would have been a sparkling exercise in bluff
- calling. Now they can grant the power to one of their own.
- Politically, it would be no special favor to Clinton. But if he
- is serious about leading us out of the deficit, it is a burden
- he should be willing to accept.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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