February 21, 2001
In recent years, there has been renewed interest in the proper use and possible abuse of executive orders and other presidential directives. Many citizens and lawmakers expressed concern over the content and scope of several of President Bill Clinton's executive orders and land proclamations. Congress responded with hearings and the consideration of several bills designed to curb the President's authority to issue such directives. In an exceedingly rare act, the courts reacted by striking down one of President Clinton's executive orders, and litigation to contest the validity of other directives is ongoing.
Despite the increased public attention focused on executive orders and similar directives, public understanding regarding the Legal foundation and proper uses of such presidential decrees is limited. Thus, the increased public attention generally has been accompanied by confusion and occasional misunderstandings regarding the legality and appropriateness of various presidential actions. This Legal memorandum provides a general overview of the President's use of executive directives, including a discussion of the historical practice, the sources of presidential authority, the Legal framework of analysis, and reform proposals related to the use and abuse of presidential
directives.
THE SEPARATION OF POWERS
Yet, in the previous Administration, a baser motive seemed to prevail in the use of executive power. Former President Bill Clinton proudly publicized his use of executive decrees in situations where he failed to achieve a legislative objective. Moreover, he repeatedly flaunted his executive order power to curry favor with narrow or partisan special interests. If this were not enough, Clinton's top White House political advisers made public statements about his use of executive decrees that were designed to incite a partisan response, saying, for example, that the power was "cool" and promising that he would wield that power to the very end of his term.2
A President who abuses his executive order authority undermines the constitutional separation of powers and may even violate it. History will show that President Clinton abused his authority in a variety of ways and that his disrespect for the rule of law was unprecedented. Given this pattern, no one should be surprised that President Clinton sometimes abused his executive order authority as well. But it would be a mistake to try to restrict a President's lawful and proper executive order authority because of one abusive President.
Moreover, defenders of executive authority will find much in President Clinton's use of executive orders and proclamations that is instructive--even if they dispute the lawfulness or policy goals of the individual decrees. In short, some helpful lessons can be learned from recent experience about how an aggressive President can use his power for appropriate and beneficial purposes, and these lessons can help guide the current and future Presidents of the United States in making executive decisions.
In the end, the constitutional separation of powers supports both sides of the argument over a President's proper authority. It reinforces a President's right or duty to issue a decree, order, or proclamation to carry out a particular power that truly is committed to his discretion by the Constitution or by a lawful statute passed by Congress. On the other hand, the constitutional separation of powers cuts the other way if the President attempts to issue an order regarding a matter that is expressly committed to another branch of government; it might even render the presidential action void. Finally, separation of powers principles may be unclear or ambiguous when the power is shared by two branches of government.
Thus, no simple recitation of governing law or prudential guidelines is possible. However, History and practice are useful tools in understanding the President's authority, and a Legal framework of analysis exists to help determine issues of validity. Beyond questions of legality, there are many separate but important issues of policy. Two broad policy questions present themselves: (1) whether a given power the President possesses ought to be used to advance a particular policy objective, and (2) whether a particular draft directive effectively advances such a policy goal.
One of the great and enduring gifts from the Founders' generation was the inclusion of separation of power principles in the United States Constitution. The Framers had studied the writings of Montesquieu and other political philosophers as well as the workings of the separate branches of their own state governments. Their conscious design to enforce this separation of functions was carefully explained in The Federalist Papers and during the debates over ratification of the United States Constitution. The separation of powers is now enshrined in both the structure of the Constitution and various explicit provisions of Articles I, II, and III."There can be no liberty where the legislative and executive powers are united in the same person."
--Charles-Louis de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu1"The accumulation of all power, legislative, executive, and judiciary in the same hands...may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny."
--James Madison, Federalist 46
Yet, in the previous Administration, a baser motive seemed to prevail in the use of executive power. Former President Bill Clinton proudly publicized his use of executive decrees in situations where he failed to achieve a legislative objective. Moreover, he repeatedly flaunted his executive order power to curry favor with narrow or partisan special interests. If this were not enough, Clinton's top White House political advisers made public statements about his use of executive decrees that were designed to incite a partisan response, saying, for example, that the power was "cool" and promising that he would wield that power to the very end of his term.2
A President who abuses his executive order authority undermines the constitutional separation of powers and may even violate it. History will show that President Clinton abused his authority in a variety of ways and that his disrespect for the rule of law was unprecedented. Given this pattern, no one should be surprised that President Clinton sometimes abused his executive order authority as well. But it would be a mistake to try to restrict a President's lawful and proper executive order authority because of one abusive President.
Moreover, defenders of executive authority will find much in President Clinton's use of executive orders and proclamations that is instructive--even if they dispute the lawfulness or policy goals of the individual decrees. In short, some helpful lessons can be learned from recent experience about how an aggressive President can use his power for appropriate and beneficial purposes, and these lessons can help guide the current and future Presidents of the United States in making executive decisions.
In the end, the constitutional separation of powers supports both sides of the argument over a President's proper authority. It reinforces a President's right or duty to issue a decree, order, or proclamation to carry out a particular power that truly is committed to his discretion by the Constitution or by a lawful statute passed by Congress. On the other hand, the constitutional separation of powers cuts the other way if the President attempts to issue an order regarding a matter that is expressly committed to another branch of government; it might even render the presidential action void. Finally, separation of powers principles may be unclear or ambiguous when the power is shared by two branches of government.
Thus, no simple recitation of governing law or prudential guidelines is possible. However, History and practice are useful tools in understanding the President's authority, and a Legal framework of analysis exists to help determine issues of validity. Beyond questions of legality, there are many separate but important issues of policy. Two broad policy questions present themselves: (1) whether a given power the President possesses ought to be used to advance a particular policy objective, and (2) whether a particular draft directive effectively advances such a policy goal.
DEFINING PRESIDENTIAL DIRECTIVES
In order to place these issues of legality and policy in their proper context, it is important to start with an understanding of the nature and historical usage of such executive decrees.
From the founding of this nation, American Presidents have developed and used various types of presidential or executive "directives." The best known directives are executive orders and presidential proclamations, but many other documents have a similar function and effect. Reduced to their common core, presidential directives simply are written, rather than oral, instructions or declarations issued by the President. Because we would not expect or want the President to limit himself solely to oral instructions and declarations, it is not surprising that every President has used written directives to run the executive branch of government.
A few months later, a joint committee of Congress requested that President Washington "recommend to the people of the United States a day of public thanksgiving."5 On October 3, 1789, President Washington responded with a proclamation urging the people to recognize Thursday, November 26, 1789, as the day of thanksgiving.6 Heads of state had issued proclamations commemorating victorious battles and national holidays for centuries, and there was no reason for Congress or the President to conclude that the Constitution removed this ceremonial function from our head of state. Congress may go farther than the President and pass laws fixing a particular holiday and granting paid leave to federal employees, but the President is free in the absence of congressional action to recommend such celebrations as he sees fit.
Executive orders also have been used to direct foreign policy since the presidency of George Washington, when he issued a proclamation in 1793 stating that the United States would be "friendly and impartial toward the belligerent powers" of Britain and France. In this "Neutrality Proclamation," Washington justified his power to issue such a statement based on the "law of nations," but a firmer ground would have been the constitutional powers vested in the President over foreign affairs. Washington, with the concurrence of Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson and Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, did not convene the Congress to debate the proclamation before issuing it. James Madison, among others, criticized Washington's proclamation as an overextension of executive authority and an infringement on Congress's authority to decide issues of war and peace. Congress later gave approval to Washington's course of action by passing the Neutrality Act of 1794, at Washington's request, giving the President the power to prosecute violators of the proclamation. However, this early episode demonstrates that the President and Congress may have overlapping responsibilities, and in such situations, the scope of the President's power to act unilaterally is sometimes unclear.
On August 7, 1794, President Washington issued a proclamation ordering those engaged in the Whiskey Rebellion to disperse and calling forth the militia to put down the rebellion. This proclamation was issued pursuant to statutory authority delegated to the President.7 The statute provided that the President first had to warn citizens to disperse and return to their homes, but that he could call forth the militia to deal with any individuals who did not follow this command.8 Thus, the Whiskey Rebellion Proclamation may have been the first directive issued pursuant to power conferred by Congress.
On December 25, 1868, President Andrew Johnson issued a proclamation (the "Christmas Proclamation") pardoning "all and every person who directly or indirectly participated in the late insurrection or rebellion" related to the Civil War.9 President Johnson's Christmas Proclamation was grounded squarely on his constitutional pardon power.10 The Supreme Court subsequently ruled that the proclamation was "a public act of which all courts of the United States are bound to take notice, and to which all courts are bound to give effect."11
As the Christmas Proclamation demonstrates, the President's authority to issue written directives is not limited to express language in the Constitution that grants him power to issue such directives. The President possesses additional authority to issue directives where that is the reasonable implication of the power granted (implied authority) or if it is inherent in the nature of the power conferred (inherent authority). The term "Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy" (as used in Article II of the Constitution) necessarily implies that the commander can issue oral and written commands, and it is inherent in the nature of a military commander that he do so.
If the President's authority is implied or inherent in a statutory grant of power, Congress remains free to negate or modify the underlying authority. Congress also has some latitude in defining or refining the procedures the President must take in the exercise of that authority, although there are some constitutional limits to Congress's power to micromanage executive branch decision-making procedures.12
When the President is exercising powers inherent in Article II of the Constitution, Congress has much less ability to regulate or circumscribe the President's use of written directives. Some of President Clinton's claims of implied and inherent authority were outrageous.13 The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit struck down one of his executive orders that was based on such an overly broad claim,14demonstrating that a President's claim that he is exercising inherent constitutional power will not always prevail. But when the President really is exercising a legitimate constitutional power--for example, his authority as Commander in Chief--Congress and the courts have little or no say in how the President communicates his commands.
The President also may issue directives in the exercise of his statutorily delegated authority, unless Congress has specified in law that the statutory power may be exercised only in a particular way. A few examples of Congress's conditional grant of statutory authority are mentioned herein, but as previously explained, there are limits to how far Congress can go in an attempt to micromanage even the President's statutorily delegated authority.23 For example, Congress can grant the President (or his Attorney General) the authority to deport certain illegal aliens, but it cannot attempt to retain a veto over the final decision as it tried to do in the Immigration and Nationality Act.24
In sum, a President has broad discretion to use written directives when he is lawfully exercising one of his constitutional or statutorily delegated powers. Any broad power or discretion can be abused, but it would be wrong to confuse such potential or real abuse with the many legitimate uses.
In order to place these issues of legality and policy in their proper context, it is important to start with an understanding of the nature and historical usage of such executive decrees.
From the founding of this nation, American Presidents have developed and used various types of presidential or executive "directives." The best known directives are executive orders and presidential proclamations, but many other documents have a similar function and effect. Reduced to their common core, presidential directives simply are written, rather than oral, instructions or declarations issued by the President. Because we would not expect or want the President to limit himself solely to oral instructions and declarations, it is not surprising that every President has used written directives to run the executive branch of government.
Early Presidential Directives
On June 8, 1789, three months after he was sworn in as President of the United States, George Washington sent an instruction to the holdover officers of the Confederation government asking each of them to prepare a report "to impress me with a full, precise, and distinct general idea of the affairs of the United States" that they each handled.3 Although the term "executive order" was not used until 1862, President Washington's instruction was the precursor of the executive order and was unquestionably proper. Every chief executive has the inherent power to order subordinates to prepare reports for him on the performance of their duties. The United States Constitution expressly provides that the President may require his principal officers to prepare such reports.4A few months later, a joint committee of Congress requested that President Washington "recommend to the people of the United States a day of public thanksgiving."5 On October 3, 1789, President Washington responded with a proclamation urging the people to recognize Thursday, November 26, 1789, as the day of thanksgiving.6 Heads of state had issued proclamations commemorating victorious battles and national holidays for centuries, and there was no reason for Congress or the President to conclude that the Constitution removed this ceremonial function from our head of state. Congress may go farther than the President and pass laws fixing a particular holiday and granting paid leave to federal employees, but the President is free in the absence of congressional action to recommend such celebrations as he sees fit.
Executive orders also have been used to direct foreign policy since the presidency of George Washington, when he issued a proclamation in 1793 stating that the United States would be "friendly and impartial toward the belligerent powers" of Britain and France. In this "Neutrality Proclamation," Washington justified his power to issue such a statement based on the "law of nations," but a firmer ground would have been the constitutional powers vested in the President over foreign affairs. Washington, with the concurrence of Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson and Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, did not convene the Congress to debate the proclamation before issuing it. James Madison, among others, criticized Washington's proclamation as an overextension of executive authority and an infringement on Congress's authority to decide issues of war and peace. Congress later gave approval to Washington's course of action by passing the Neutrality Act of 1794, at Washington's request, giving the President the power to prosecute violators of the proclamation. However, this early episode demonstrates that the President and Congress may have overlapping responsibilities, and in such situations, the scope of the President's power to act unilaterally is sometimes unclear.
Sources of Presidential Authority
Although President Washington's Thanksgiving Proclamation was hortatory, other proclamations or orders communicate presidential decisions that have a legally binding effect. Authority for these directives must come from either the Constitution or statutory delegations.On August 7, 1794, President Washington issued a proclamation ordering those engaged in the Whiskey Rebellion to disperse and calling forth the militia to put down the rebellion. This proclamation was issued pursuant to statutory authority delegated to the President.7 The statute provided that the President first had to warn citizens to disperse and return to their homes, but that he could call forth the militia to deal with any individuals who did not follow this command.8 Thus, the Whiskey Rebellion Proclamation may have been the first directive issued pursuant to power conferred by Congress.
On December 25, 1868, President Andrew Johnson issued a proclamation (the "Christmas Proclamation") pardoning "all and every person who directly or indirectly participated in the late insurrection or rebellion" related to the Civil War.9 President Johnson's Christmas Proclamation was grounded squarely on his constitutional pardon power.10 The Supreme Court subsequently ruled that the proclamation was "a public act of which all courts of the United States are bound to take notice, and to which all courts are bound to give effect."11
As the Christmas Proclamation demonstrates, the President's authority to issue written directives is not limited to express language in the Constitution that grants him power to issue such directives. The President possesses additional authority to issue directives where that is the reasonable implication of the power granted (implied authority) or if it is inherent in the nature of the power conferred (inherent authority). The term "Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy" (as used in Article II of the Constitution) necessarily implies that the commander can issue oral and written commands, and it is inherent in the nature of a military commander that he do so.
If the President's authority is implied or inherent in a statutory grant of power, Congress remains free to negate or modify the underlying authority. Congress also has some latitude in defining or refining the procedures the President must take in the exercise of that authority, although there are some constitutional limits to Congress's power to micromanage executive branch decision-making procedures.12
When the President is exercising powers inherent in Article II of the Constitution, Congress has much less ability to regulate or circumscribe the President's use of written directives. Some of President Clinton's claims of implied and inherent authority were outrageous.13 The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit struck down one of his executive orders that was based on such an overly broad claim,14demonstrating that a President's claim that he is exercising inherent constitutional power will not always prevail. But when the President really is exercising a legitimate constitutional power--for example, his authority as Commander in Chief--Congress and the courts have little or no say in how the President communicates his commands.
Legitimate Uses of Presidential Directives
As the foregoing discussion suggests, there are many legitimate uses of presidential directives. The following functions of the President expressly mentioned in the U.S. Constitution are among the more important under which the President may issue at least some directives in the exercise of his constitutional and statutorily delegated powers:- Commander in Chief.15 The President's power as Commander in Chief is limited by other constitutional powers granted to Congress, such as the power to declare war, raise and support the armed forces, make rules (i.e., laws) for the regulation of the armed forces, and provide for calling forth the militia of the several states. However, the President's power as military commander is still very broad with respect to the armed forces at his disposal, including some situations in which Congress has not acted to declare war.
- Head of State.16 The President is solely responsible for carrying out foreign policy, which includes the sole power to recognize foreign governments, receive foreign ambassadors, and negotiate treaties. Congress may enact laws affecting foreign policy, and two-thirds of the Senate must ratify any treaty before it becomes binding law, but Congress must still leave the execution of foreign policy and diplomatic relations to the President.
- Chief Law Enforcement Officer. The President has the sole constitutional obligation to "take care that the laws be faithfully executed,"17 and this grants him broad discretion over federal law enforcement decisions. He has not only the power, but also the responsibility to see that the Constitution and laws are interpreted correctly.18 In addition, the President has absolute prosecutorial discretion in declining to bring criminal indictments. As in the exercise of any other constitutional power, one may argue that a particular President is "abusing his discretion," but even in such a case, he cannot be compelled to prosecute any criminal charges.
- Head of the Executive Branch. The Framers debated and rejected the creation of a plural executive. They selected a "unitary executive" and determined that he alone would be vested with "[t]he executive power" of Article II. After much debate, the Framers also determined that the President would nominate and appoint (with the Senate's consent in some cases) all officers in the executive branch. With very few exceptions, all appointed officials who work in the executive branch serve at the will and pleasure of the President, even if Congress has specified a term of years for a particular office.19 All of this was designed to ensure the President's control over officials in the executive branch20and to promote "energy in the executive."21
The President also may issue directives in the exercise of his statutorily delegated authority, unless Congress has specified in law that the statutory power may be exercised only in a particular way. A few examples of Congress's conditional grant of statutory authority are mentioned herein, but as previously explained, there are limits to how far Congress can go in an attempt to micromanage even the President's statutorily delegated authority.23 For example, Congress can grant the President (or his Attorney General) the authority to deport certain illegal aliens, but it cannot attempt to retain a veto over the final decision as it tried to do in the Immigration and Nationality Act.24
In sum, a President has broad discretion to use written directives when he is lawfully exercising one of his constitutional or statutorily delegated powers. Any broad power or discretion can be abused, but it would be wrong to confuse such potential or real abuse with the many legitimate uses.
THE Legal FRAMEWORK OF ANALYSIS
President Abraham Lincoln used presidential directives to run the early months of the Civil War, presenting Congress with the decision either to adopt his practices as legislation or to cut off support for the Union army. Within his first two months in office, on April 15, 1861, Lincoln issued a proclamation activating troops to defeat the Southern rebellion and for Congress to convene on July 4. He also issued proclamations to procure warships and to expand the size of the military; in both cases, the proclamations provided for payment to be advanced from the Treasury without congressional approval. These latter actions were probably unconstitutional, but Congress acquiesced in the face of wartime contingencies, and the matters were never challenged in court.During his time in office, President Franklin Roosevelt greatly expanded the use of executive orders, partly in response to the growth of government and partly in response to the demands placed on him as Commander in Chief during World War II. Unfortunately, FDR also showed a tendency to abuse his executive order authority and claim powers that were not conferred on him in the Constitution or by statute.25 President Harry Truman followed this pattern of governing by executive order. Some of President Truman's executive orders were to his credit, such as the integration of the armed forces,26 and some were to his shame, such as the attempted seizure of the steel industry during the Korean conflict.27
The Supreme Court's opinion in the "Steel Seizure Case" striking down Truman's executive order,28 as well as subsequent practice, helped create a workable understanding regarding when a President's executive order authority is and is not valid. A slight modification of Justice Robert Jackson's famous framework of analysis is as follows: The President's authority (to act or issue an executive order) is at its apex when his action is based on an express grant of power in the Constitution, in a statute, or both. His action is the most questionable when there is no grant of constitutional authority to him (express or inherent) and his action is contrary to a statute or provision of the Constitution. Although this framework of analysis is a helpful starting point, a deeper understanding still requires a substantive knowledge of the relevant statutory law and a President's and Congress's constitutional powers.
For example, a careful review of the substantive law shows why President Truman's desegregation of the armed forces was proper notwithstanding Congress's constitutional authority regarding the military. Congress has the power to create or abolish the military forces, and it has the power to "make Rules for the Government and regulation" of the military,29 including the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Congress's constitutional power permits it to establish standards for the induction of soldiers, including height, weight, and age restrictions. When Congress has acted pursuant to its constitutional authority and its act does not violate any other provision of the Constitution, its rules govern who shall serve in the military, what their pay and retirement age shall be, etc.
But when President Truman desegregated the armed forces, he was not interfering with any congressional power over induction or any military rules of conduct.30 President Truman exercised his authority as Commander in Chief to assign individual soldiers lawfully in his command to units that he deemed appropriate. Truman also had a constitutional duty to stop government racial discrimination.31 Thus, even if Congress wanted to override the desegregation order, it possessed no authority to tell the President how to detail or utilize the soldiers already in his command, and the President had an obligation to end racial discrimination. This example demonstrates that an application of the Legal framework requires careful attention to the underlying constitutional and statutory powers of each branch.
There may be close cases in which the validity of the executive order is uncertain, such as when a claim of inherent constitutional authority is arguable and where Congress has been silent or its will is unclear. Nevertheless, Presidents since Truman were generally more careful to stay within their constitutional and statutory grants of authority in the exercise of their executive order authority--until the Administration of President Clinton. Although the number of illegal executive orders issued by President Clinton does not constitute a large percentage of his total of 364, the pattern of illegal orders, often without any claim of statutory or constitutional authority, is still striking. The clearest example was Clinton's "striker replacement" executive order. The Legal decision it spawned provides additional guidance in determining the legality of future executive orders and thus is worthy of a brief discussion.
In 1993, President Clinton urged Congress to enact a statute that would prohibit employers from hiring permanent replacements for workers who are on strike. The right to hire such permanent replacement workers was firmly established in the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) and in decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court. Congress refused to authorize the change in law in 1993-1994. Shortly after Republicans gained control of Congress in 1995, the President issued Executive Order 12954 in an attempt to achieve through executive fiat what he could not achieve through legislation. Clinton claimed authority under the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act (the "Procurement Act")32 to require all large government contractors, which employed roughly 22 percent of the Labor force, to agree not to hire permanent replacements for lawfully striking employees.
The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit unanimously overturned the executive order and the implementing regulations that had been issued by the Secretary of Labor.33 The court first determined that it had jurisdiction over the case despite what the court described as President Clinton's "breathtakingly broad claim of non-reviewability of presidential actions." In short, the court said that it did not have to defer to the President's claim that he was acting pursuant to lawful authority under the Procurement Act. On the merits, the court ruled that since the NLRA "undoubtedly" grants an employer the right to hire permanent replacements for striking workers, it would not read the general purposes of the Procurement Act as trumping this specific right of employers. The court distinguished Executive Order 11246 (which guaranteed equal employment opportunities) and Executive Order 12092 (which restricted wage increases for government contractors) as not being in conflict with any other statute.
The striker replacement case stands for the seemingly obvious proposition that the President may not use his statutory discretion in one area to override a right or duty established in another law. As a Legal matter, however, it does not stand for the proposition that the President may not use his statutory discretion in one area to advance other lawful policy goals. Whether it is wise to do so is a separate question. Some thoughtful people have argued that a President ought not to use his procurement power or similar administrative discretion to promote unrelated policy goals, but that is a political and prudential matter about which reasonable people can differ.
Lawful Orders, Bad Policy
A narrow focus on illegal executive orders, however, would not include many arguably Legal orders that are still highly improper as a matter of policy. This distinction between illegal and improper executive orders is important for a variety of reasons. While almost all of President Clinton's illegal executive orders were in furtherance of an improper policy or political objective, many of the most objectionable are within the outer bounds of what is legal. President Bush should carefully review and rescind or revise both types of "bad" executive orders, but his Legal duty and his policy options in doing so might be affected by this distinction. Thus, it is helpful to keep the various categories of executive orders and proclamations in mind (see Table 1).
In addition to the Legal evaluation, two broad questions mentioned earlier may help guide the policy evaluation: (1) whether a given power the President possesses ought to be used to advance a particular policy objective, and (2) whether a particular draft directive effectively or appropriately advances such a policy goal. The first question raises issues of precedent and macro-policy; the second raises issues of drafting and prudence.
Types of Presidential Directives
Most presidential directives fit into one of two functional categories represented by the two types of directives issued by President Washington in 1789.34 One broad category includes documents with written instructions from the President to executive branch officials on how they are to carry out their duties. Most executive orders fall into this category. Another category includes written statements that communicate a presidential decision or declaration to a broad group of people that might include government officials, the general public, or even foreign governments. Most presidential proclamations fall into this second category.
Not much turns on even this distinction, however, because different types of directives can have the same effect. Some statutes delegating authority to the President provide that he must exercise that authority by issuing a particular type of directive--such as an executive order or a proclamation. But there is no statute or other authority that defines different presidential directives or distinguishes one type from another. Apart from tradition, historical usage, and a few words common to each device (such as the title), there are no rules regarding the substance of each directive. In short, a President can comply with a statute that requires him to make a particular statutory determination by proclamation simply by placing the word "Proclamation" at the top of the document and using a phrase like "it is hereby proclaimed" somewhere in the text before the determination.
The distinction between executive orders and proclamations was even less clear in other eras. President Abraham Lincoln directed much of the early Civil War by proclamation, including calling forth the militia. Calling forth the militia is now typically accomplished by executive order.35 In 1862, President Lincoln issued the first formally designated "executive order." But later that year, he ordered federal officials not to return captured former slaves to the states in rebellion in his "Emancipation Proclamation."36 In sum, there is not much that distinguishes Lincoln's executive orders from his wartime proclamations--apart from the title. Likewise, President Andrew Johnson could have issued an executive order (instead of a proclamation) on Christmas Day 1868 that all public officials recognize and give effect to his decision to pardon all persons recently in rebellion. Modern practice has delineated the borders of these devices somewhat more, but there is little to constrain a President from departing from the modern practice.
The presidential "signing statement" demonstrates that hybrid directives are even harder to categorize. Presidents often issue such written statements when they sign a bill into law. Presidential signing statements are themselves a type of directive, but they can incorporate language similar to that in an executive order or a presidential proclamation. For example, some signing statements identify a provision of the bill that the President believes is unconstitutional and instructs executive branch officials not to enforce the provision.37 Assuming the President has this power--and the author believes he does38 --the wording of his signing statement should not matter. A signing statement ordering all executive branch officials not to enforce a particular provision in the statute because it is unconstitutional would have the same effect as a signing statement in the form of a proclamation to all concerned that the President believes a particular provision to be null and void. A faithful servant in the executive branch ought to give both statements the same effect. An official outside the executive branch ought to give both statements the same deference, regardless of what level of deference that is.
Many Forms of Directives.
One scholar has identified 24 different types of presidential directives,39 although even his list is incomplete. A partial list includes administrative orders; certificates; designations of officials; executive orders; general licenses; interpretations; letters on tariffs and international trade; military orders; various types of national security instruments (such as national security action memoranda, national security decision directives, national security directives, national security reviews, national security study memoranda, presidential review directives, and presidential decision directives); presidential announcements; presidential findings; presidential reorganization plans; presidential signing statements; and proclamations.
Despite the specialized settings in which some of these directives are used, it is a bit misleading to overclassify presidential directives as comprising separate and distinct "types" just because they have different headings at the top of the first page. The distinctions between some of these directives are merely convenient or the result of an arbitrary bureaucratic evolution. As the list of directives also demonstrates, a new President and a creative bureaucracy could come up with 24 new "types" if they wished to do so.
There are, however, some practical constraints that limit, or at least influence, a President's decision on which form of directive to use. As mentioned earlier, tradition and historical practice will often lead to a particular choice. For example, a President will probably want to use a published executive order to repeal or modify a previously published executive order. Political considerations may also weigh in favor of a more or less public directive. But unless a statute requires a President to use one form of directive in the exercise of his statutory (as opposed to constitutional) authority, the President can revoke or modify a previous directive or issue a new one orally or in any written form he chooses. To a military officer in the field of battle, telephone calls, cables, or handwritten notes from the President are, and should be, equally compelling orders.40
Despite the variety of directives used, there are sound reasons why scholars focus most of their attention on executive orders and presidential proclamations. Executive orders and presidential proclamations are the forms most frequently used by Presidents to convey important decisions that affect the general public. Because better records have been kept of executive orders and proclamations, it is also possible to compare the relative use of them by different Presidents. In addition, most other presidential directives can be analogized to a typical executive order or presidential proclamation, so the discussion of them can be applied elsewhere.
Procedures for Issuing Proclamations and Executive Orders.
The federal law governing presidential decrees is sparse. Since 1935, a federal statute provides that presidential proclamations and executive orders "of general applicability and Legal effect" must be published in the Federal Registerunless the President determines otherwise for national security or other specified reasons.41 In addition, some federal statutes that delegate statutory authority to the President require him to exercise that authority through the issuance of a particular type of directive, generally a published proclamation or an executive order. Other than these few rules, a President is free to adopt procedures regarding the issuance and publication of directives as he sees fit.
For over 100 years, the President has asked the Attorney General or another senior official in the Department of Justice to review draft executive orders and proclamations with regard to their form and legality. Since 1962, the proper form and routing of executive orders and proclamations has been governed by Executive Order 11030, which makes the Director of the Office of Management and Budget responsible for shepherding such directives through the process.
The Attorney General's review responsibility is currently delegated to the head of the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) in the Department of Justice. OLC staff attorneys work with lawyers in the Office of Management and Budget, the Office of White House Counsel, and the originating agency (if there is one) to ensure that the draft order or proclamation is Legal and in the proper form. Once the order or proclamation is revised to his satisfaction, the Assistant Attorney General for OLC transmits it with a formal letter that dates back to the 19th century. The letter begins with the salutation "My dear Mr. President." It summarizes the proclamation or order in a few paragraphs and then assures the President that the document for his signature has been approved with regard to form and legality.
Some directives, including many military and national security orders, remain secret unless and until they are declassified. Others may not be secret, but they are not published either. Many presidential designations of officials, such as a White House special assistant to the President, are so routine that they do not merit publication. Of increasing use and importance are "presidential memoranda to the heads of executive departments and agencies." These memoranda also are rarely published, but some of them are more important than many executive orders that are published.
It is worth keeping in mind that a President may use one of the less public types of directives in almost any circumstance in which he could issue a published executive order or presidential proclamation. In some instances, President Clinton may have selected a memorandum format for political reasons precisely because he did not want to draw heightened attention to his act. President Clinton's initial instruction to allow open homosexuals in the military42 and his order to allow abortions to be performed on military bases overseas43 were issued by memorandum. Thus, it is unwise to arbitrarily exclude nontraditional directives, such as memoranda, when examining a President's rule by executive decree. That said, a review of published directives will include most of the important directives that affect the public.
Presidential Proclamations and Executive Orders by the Numbers
More than 7,300 presidential proclamations have been issued since 1789. Although they were not numbered sequentially until early in the 20th century, the earlier proclamations have been numbered retroactively, and newer ones are assigned a number upon issuance. As is discussed elsewhere, the overwhelming number of modern proclamations are ceremonial or hortatory, such as the commemoration of Thanksgiving or recognition of some particular interest. The two exceptions in modern practice do not make up a significant number of the total: declarations of emergency and land regulations under the Antiquities Act of 1906. Both are discussed further in this memorandum.
President Abraham Lincoln is credited with issuing the first directive called an "executive order" in 1862. Approximately 13,200 executive orders have been issued since then.44 Chart 1 shows that the number of executive orders issued by recent Presidents has not matched that of Presidents in the early and mid-20th century. This is true even if the figures are adjusted to reflect the length of service in office. President Franklin Roosevelt, who served for over three terms, still issued more executive orders per year than did any other President.
However, there is reason to be cautious in comparing the executive order output of Presidents from different eras, even in the same century. President Franklin Roosevelt was Commander in Chief during most of World War II. A wartime period will likely reflect many mobilization orders that are not applicable in other periods. In addition, the President's National Security Council was not created until 1947, and many of the specialized directives that it now drafts were not developed until recent Administrations.45 Thus, many of the executive orders issued by FDR might take some other form in a modern Administration. Many of these same considerations apply to other Presidents in the early and mid-20th century.
Although presidential executive order practices continue to evolve with each Administration, it is reasonable to make at least rough comparisons of the Presidents since 1960. Chart 2 shows that on an annualized basis, President Carter outpaced other recent Presidents in the sheer number of executive orders issued. On an annualized basis, President Clinton did not issue a significantly different number of executive orders than did Presidents Reagan or Bush.
But as the next section shows, the overwhelming majority of directives, including executive orders, are routine and few have significant policy implications beyond the executive branch. Thus, it would be a mistake to conclude that the number of executive orders or proclamations is a reliable indicator of whether a particular President has abused his executive order authority. In fact, a more careful review of executive orders suggests no correlation between the overall number of executive orders issued and the legitimacy of individual orders. The true measure of abuse of authority is not the overall number of directives, but whether any orders were illegal or abusive, and if so, how many and of what significance.
A SURVEY OF CLINTON PROCLAMATIONS AND EXECUTIVE ORDERS46
The vast majority of modern presidential directives are routine or have little direct effect on the lives of citizens outside government. This holds true even for executive orders and presidential proclamations, which tend on average to have a greater impact on the public than do other directives. A review of President Clinton's proclamations and executive orders (881 and 364, respectively)47 reveals some similarities and some important differences between Clinton's practices and those of his two predecessors.
Proclamations
President Clinton used his proclamation authority in many of the same ways as had previous Presidents. Many of his proclamations are hortatory and thus noncontroversial. For example, President Clinton issued an annual Thanksgiving Proclamation and proclaimed that certain days, weeks, and months would commemorate or recognize some cause (e.g., American Heart Month).
President Clinton's most significant departure from President Reagan and President George H. W. Bush was his use (and abuse) of his powers under the Antiquities Act of 1906 to designate millions of acres of federal land as protected national monuments. The most controversial was Proclamation 6920, which established the 1.7 million-acre Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in Utah, but other designations are equally outrageous. (See Table 2.) Since the law was passed, Presidents have established over 100 monuments, covering 70 million acres.
President Clinton's proclamations have been highly controversial particularly with respect to the monuments' size, the process used to establish them, and restrictions on the use of the land. The Antiquities Act requires that monuments be "the smallest area compatible with the proper care and management of the objects to be protected."48 With only a few exceptions, including the 10,950,000-acre Wrangell-St. Elias National Monument created by President Carter in 1978, most monuments are relatively small (less than 5,000 acres). All of President Clinton's proclamations, however, cover very large areas of land.
President Clinton also proclaimed the Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument with insufficient public participation and arguably without adequate due process. Although the Antiquities Act may appear to grant this authority at first blush, inconsistencies between the Act and other laws that establish various notice and hearings processes raise important questions about the appropriate processes for designating monuments.49 Legitimate questions also exist about the applicability of the environmental review and due process requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).50
While presidential proclamations creating national monuments do not usually result in the outright taking of private lands (they only change the form of control over lands already owned by the federal government), they can restrict activities on the land, such as mining, grazing, or timber harvesting, that is deemed to conflict with the intended purpose of the monument. The monuments created by President Clinton were intended to restrict significantly the use of natural resources. They prevent almost all future uses of the land and may work as a partial taking of mining, grazing, and timber leases owned by private individuals. This is one of the main reasons President Clinton was urged to grant monument status to certain parts of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge just before he left office.
Several organizations have mounted Legal challenges against President Clinton's proclamations. For example, the Utah Association of Counties, Utah Schools and Institutional Trust Lands Administration, and Mountain States Legal Foundation filed challenges against the designation of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.51 They have raised questions about violations of the Antiquities Act; the relative authority of the Congress, President, and Secretary of the Interior to withdraw lands from public use; the application of mining and mineral leasing laws; procedural and substantive issues under NEPA and the Federal Land Policy and Management Act (FLPMA); the lawful size of the monuments; and the nature of the resources being protected.
Of particular importance is whether President Bush or any future President has the authority to reverse a proclamation establishing a national monument. Though he may be able to modify or narrow the boundaries of an existing national monument, the authority to rescind a proclamation is less clear. Past Presidents have modified national monuments, but none has reversed the designation of an existing monument. A recent Congressional Research Service report, "Authority of a President to Modify or Eliminate a National Monument," discusses this issue.52 Although the matter is not entirely free from doubt, I believe a President can at least rescind any prior designation under the Antiquities Act that was improper.
In addition, various legislative proposals for addressing the issues raised by President Clinton's proclamations were introduced in the last Congress.53 They focused principally on modifying the Antiquities Act and sought to ensure greater public consultation, environmental review, congressional approval, and other procedural protections.
With regard to his power under the Antiquities Act, President Bush should:
- Review existing presidential authority to reverse designations of federal lands as national monuments;
- Examine existing designations to determine whether modifications in the boundaries or the allowed uses are appropriate;
- Seek (if necessary) congressional action to clarify presidential, congressional, and other executive branch authority to reverse or modify previously designated monuments; and
- Seek congressional action to increase the public consultation, environmental review, and other procedures applicablADMINISTRATIVE ORDERS
Over half of President Clinton's executive orders (approximately 181) were routine administrative orders that can be broken down into the following groups or purposes:
Succession orders specify the hierarchy of authority within an agency and should be revised when Congress has modified or created new offices at the same level within the agency, such as the Assistant Secretary level. The typical order of succession lists the hierarchy by office rather than by office holder. In the Department of Justice, for example, the order of succession after the Attorney General is the Deputy Attorney General, the Associate Attorney General, the Solicitor General, then the Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel, and so forth. During Watergate, it was necessary for Solicitor General Robert Bork to become Acting Attorney General when the top two appointees stepped down during the so-called Saturday Night Massacre. The order of succession is invoked far more often for temporary assignments of responsibility when senior officials are on vacation or otherwise are unavailable due to vacancy in office, travel, illness, etc. President Bush is free to modify these succession orders but need not do so unless Congress modifies the principal offices within a particular agency. Once again, this is not a priority area.
Many designations of officials, such as those in the White House, and some delegations of authority will expire with the normal change in personnel at the beginning of a new Administration. The remaining designations of officials and delegations of authority will eventually come to the attention of officials in the Office of Presidential personnel or the new Cabinet Secretaries. President Bush should review previous designations and delegations, but this should be done in an orderly fashion. In addition to those with responsibility for such matters within the White House, the President and his assistants should call upon the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel for Legal advice on keeping agencies running smoothly during the first few months of the new Administration.54
Many of President Clinton's personnel executive orders were also routine. These include executive orders that establish pay scales, annual salary increases, and conditions for civil service or appointed positions.
SUBSTANTIVE ORDERS
Most of the remaining executive orders issued by President Clinton can be divided into five substantive categories: foreign and defense policy, environmental policy and natural resources, regulatory review, Labor policy, and civil rights issues. These executive orders show the greatest break from past Administrations and include most of the controversial orders. Two other categories, government procurement and "emergency" orders, frequently overlap with and frequently include these five substantive categories.55
President Clinton repealed a number of important executive orders issued by Presidents Reagan and Bush, who both had issued a variety of cross-cutting executive orders calling on executive branch agencies to take important constitutional or institutional principles into account when they take regulatory action. The constitutional and institutional principles elevated by Presidents Reagan and George H. W. Bush were varied but fundamental. They included paying special attention to the cost and benefit tradeoffs of government regulation (Executive Order 12291, 1981); the constitutional structure of federalism with an instruction not to carelessly preempt state authority and law (Executive Order 12612, 1987); avoiding interference with the traditional family (Executive Order 12606, 1987); the constitutional guarantee against uncompensated takings of private property (Executive Order 12630, 1988); and the clarity of drafting regulations and whether any unclear rules would lead to costly and unnecessary law suits (Executive Order 12778, 1991).
President Clinton repealed all of these crosscutting executive orders. In some cases, he replaced them with weaker executive orders that purported to address the same goals. For example, his regulatory review executive order (Executive Order 12866, 1993) weakened the cost-benefit analysis that agencies are required to prepare for review by the Office of Management and Budget. President Clinton signed his initial federalism executive order (Executive Order 13083, 1998) in Birmingham, England, but it created such an outcry that he eventually suspended it and replaced it (Executive Order 13132, 1999).
The overarching themes of President Clinton's executive orders were:
More than half of Clinton's substantive orders were in the area of foreign affairs or national defense policy. Presidential directives in the foreign and national security arena should focus on aligning American policy with the President's priorities to ensure the effective defense of the United States and its allies. To this end, one of the Bush Administration's first priorities should be to issue new directives that provide for the protection of American territory from the increasing threat of ballistic missile attack. An equally important priority is mandating a comprehensive review of the Clinton Administration's Presidential Decision Directives, with specific attention focused on areas that affect the strategic posture and peacekeeping commitments.
Environmental Policy.
During his tenure, President Clinton issued approximately 40 executive orders related to the environment and natural resources, and made extensive use of executive orders to achieve his environmental policy and political objectives. Prior Presidents used executive orders, proclamations, or other administrative means to further environmental goals (the most notable recent example being President Nixon's creation of the Environmental Protection Agency), but few reached the level achieved during the Clinton Administration.
Although most of President Clinton's orders were drafted to appear as if they focus primarily on operations of the federal government, their clear intent was to affect the private marketplace, public behavior, and government policy at the state, local, and international levels. They ranged from actions that address comparatively straightforward matters of agency management to establishing environmental civil rights, linking environmental and trade policy, and using proclamations to establish national monuments or other protected areas.
Each executive order should be carefully reviewed to determine whether the current Administration should (1) allow it to continue; (2) revoke it or replace it with a new directive; (3) revise, supplement, or otherwise amend it; or (4) redirect agency implementation through a presidential memorandum or other action. Initially, the Bush Administration should reorient federal agency implementation of the existing orders. Certain orders, for example, have established interagency committees, comprised of Cabinet-level officers, that could be used to begin redirecting agency activity.
Regulatory Review.
In 1993, President Clinton revoked several major executive orders, including Executive Order 12291, which had governed important oversight aspects of federal regulatory and policymaking processes since 1981. He replaced them with two orders that maintain many of the same underlying principles but contain important procedural and substantive flaws. Clinton's Executive Order 12866 on "Regulatory Planning and Review" currently governs the process for developing federal regulations. The Bush Administration may wish to replace the Clinton order with a stronger management tool that builds on Executive Order 12291 and incorporates other procedures to strengthen the President's ability to exercise authority over the rulemaking process. In the meantime, the requirements of E.O. 12866 (or any similar order) should be scrupulously enforced as part of an effort to see that the President can exercise his constitutional authority effectively.
Clinton's second Executive Order 13132 on "Federalism" (which replaced his failed Executive Order 13083) attempts to clarify the relative roles of the states and the federal government in a variety of regulatory and policy actions. Although President Reagan's federalism Executive Order 12612 (which President Clinton repealed) is still superior to either of Clinton's statements on federalism, action by Congress, the states, and the Supreme Court in the intervening years suggests there may be grounds to revisit the issue anew. With proper input from state and local officials, President Bush is in a good position to begin the process of ensuring that the national government does not unconstitutionally encroach on powers reserved to the states or interfere with individual rights of citizens.
Labor Policy.
The Clinton Administration used labor-related executive orders and directives primarily to advance the political objectives and interests of its supporters in organized labor.56 It also used these orders to create task forces to study a variety of workplace issues, to improve employment opportunities for disabled Americans, and to expand the number of groups covered by employment nondiscrimination executive orders.
The highest priority labor-related executive orders for the Bush Administration to review include (1) the financial reports that unions are required to furnish under the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act of 1959 (LMRDA) so that workers can more easily exercise their decision rights under Communications Workersv. Beck;57 (2) the Birth and Adoption Unemployment Compensation regulation, which undermines the original intent of the Unemployment Insurance program;58 and (3) all executive branch policies requiring federal contractors to enter into agreements with unions on construction projects.
Civil Rights.
Approximately 18 executive orders contain a significant civil rights component. Of these, several are plainly unconstitutional because they attempt to impose preferential governmental treatment on the basis of race and ethnicity with no remedial justification. These unconstitutional orders should be revoked as soon as practicable and replaced with orders that ensure equal treatment and equal opportunity for all Americans. Another order should be issued to implement the Supreme Court's landmark decision in Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Peña(1995), which held that all federal preference programs are presumptively unconstitutional. Despite the Clinton Administration's efforts to resist these and other court rulings, the Bush Administration should undertake a careful review of all federal preference programs, whether created by statute or regulation, and take action consistent with the Adarandruling.
THE EFFECT OF PRESIDENTIAL DIRECTIVES ON PRIVATE CITIZENS
As the preceding section explains, many administrative directives either have no direct effect or have a trivial effect on the rights exercised by the general public. For example, a particular reporting structure or order of succession within the executive branch has no direct effect on the rights of private citizens even if it sometimes results in a different decision's being made.59 Other directives may affect the general public but may be difficult or impossible to challenge, depending on a variety of factors.60
Political Questions and Matters Squarely Committed to Presidential Discretion
Presidential decisions that present "political questions," as that term has been defined in the law, or actions that are squarely committed to the President's discretion do not present justiciable issues for a court to resolve. There are some unresolved questions regarding a President's commitment of troops in an undeclared war, but they often present political questions that only Congress and the President can resolve. Whether the overall military action is authorized or not, however, a President's tactical military commands are committed to his sole discretion. Such tactical military commands simply are not subject to challenge, regardless of their effect on numerous people's lives.
A presidential pardon is another example of a decision squarely within the President's discretion.61 President Thomas Jefferson believed that the Sedition Act of 1798 was unconstitutional, although the courts had upheld over 10 convictions under it. President Jefferson could not overturn the convictions, but he did drop the remaining prosecutions when he assumed office and pardoned the two individuals still in prison. Jefferson's pardons were not subject to challenge. Likewise, President Clinton's pardons of 16 Puerto Rican terrorists (FALN pardons) on August 11, 1999, and his many questionable pardons on January 20, 2001, are not subject to challenge in court--regardless of Clinton's alleged political or other improper motives in granting the pardons. The fact that the Sedition Act truly was unconstitutional62 and Clinton's pardons were arguably corrupt still does not make one more or less subject to challenge. The congressional probe into President Clinton's FALN pardons was questionable unless Congress was willing to consider impeachment proceedings for an improper motive.63 Even then, nothing can change the effect of a duly issued pardon.64
Delegations of presidential authority, in themselves, rarely alter public rights. Regardless of their effect on the public, most delegations of authority are squarely within the President's discretion and are thus immune from challenge. The Constitution provides for both principal and inferior officers to assist the President, and the President's authority to delegate portions of his executive power within the executive branch has been broadly construed. For example, Executive Orders 2877 (1918) and 12146 (1979) delegate to the Attorney General the responsibility to resolve Legal disputes within the executive branch. Because the President possesses the power to interpret the law within the executive branch,65 he may entrust some of that power to the Attorney General and order other federal officers and employees to abide by the Attorney General's opinion.66Directives with Indirect Effects on the Public
Some directives may not be subject to judicial review if the effect on private citizens is indirect or if the directive is implemented through agency regulations or other agency action. Both President Reagan's and President Clinton's regulatory review executive orders (Executive Orders 12291 and 12866, respectively) are examples of orders with indirect effects on private citizens. The orders required regulatory agencies to prepare certain analyses of proposed rules and to take various factors into account in their regulatory decisions, and they allowed the Office of Management and Budget to oversee the rulemaking process. However, neither order altered the statutory obligations of the regulatory agencies to issue particular substantive rules. A citizen adversely affected by a regulation (or lack thereof) has the same judicial recourse regardless of the type of executive branch review the rule underwent. Thus, the citizen may challenge the resulting substantive rule but may not challenge the type of executive branch review it received.
The lack of judicial review to challenge a regulatory review executive order does not mean that such orders have no impact on the regulations issued. Presidents Reagan and Clinton would not have altered the type of review if they did not think it mattered. But it would be highly speculative to predict ex ante (assuming it can be discerned at all) what effect OMB review will have on a particular rule in the future. More important, the type of executive branch review, in itself, does not alter the rights of the private citizens who are regulated to challenge the regulation directly in court.
Some executive orders explicitly instruct an agency head to issue particular regulations. In such situations, the regulations clearly result from the executive order. But it is usually easier for someone adversely affected by the regulation or other agency action to challenge the agency action itself rather than the presidential order. In litigation or other administrative challenges to the regulation, the fact that the President ordered that the regulation be issued is irrelevant unless the President possesses some constitutional or statutory power that augments the agency's authority. Whether the authority is cited or not, the underlying constitutional or statutory authority either exists to support the regulation or does not. (See Chart 3.) The fact that the agency was instructed by the President to issue the regulation can only help, but it may add nothing to the Legal analysis of the regulation.
Standing Requirements
President Clinton's American Heritage Rivers Initiative (AHRI), established by Executive Order 13061, is an example of a presidential directive that appears to be illegal but has not yet been judicially invalidated because of a "technical" standing problem. The scope of the initiative is somewhat unclear, and a thorough discussion of it is not possible here, but the program grants power to "river navigators" to supervise and control development along designated rivers for a variety of purposes, including environmental, social, educational, and economic concerns. A river navigator's control purports to extend over the entire watershed of the river.67
In 1998, Representatives Helen Chenoweth (R-ID), Bob Schaffer (R-CO), Don Young (R-AK), and Richard Pombo (R-CA) sought an injunction in federal district court against implementation of the AHRI. These Members of Congress alleged that the AHRI violated various laws, including several appropriations laws and other acts under the oversight of committees or subcommittees they chaired. They attempted to invoke a "congressional standing" doctrine, alleging an injury to their right to vote as Members of Congress. Both the district court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia dismissed the suit without reaching the merits. The judges rejected the argument that plaintiffs suffered an injury unique to Members of Congress and concluded instead that any injuries from AHRI were "wholly abstract and widely dispersed."68
REFORM PROPOSALS
During the 106th Congress, several measures were introduced to address Congress's concern over President Clinton's broad assertion of power to govern by decree. At least two measures were the subject of hearings held by the House Judiciary and Rules Committees. House Concurrent Resolution 30 (HCR 30), introduced by Representative Jack Metcalf (R-WA) with 75 other cosponsors, would have expressed the sense of Congress that any executive order that "infringes on the powers and duties of Congress under article I, section 8 of the Constitution, or that would require the expenditure of Federal funds not specifically appropriated for the purpose of the Executive order, is advisory only and has no force and effect unless enacted by law." HCR 30 itself would have been "advisory only." But statutory language modeled after the resolution would have serious constitutional and other problems because of its ambiguous reach and its potential to interfere with or "infringe" the President's shared or exclusive powers.
The Separation of Powers Restoration Act (H.R. 2655), introduced by Representative Ron Paul (R-TX) in 1999, has several provisions that are worthy of further consideration and others that are problematic. H.R. 2655 would have terminated all existing national emergencies declared by Presidents under various statutes. The number of ongoing, declared emergencies is surprising.69 There clearly is a need for Congress or the President to review and terminate those that do not still present exigent circumstances.
H.R. 2655 also would have taken away the President's power to declare any future national emergency. A convincing case can be made that the emergency powers Congress has granted the President in various statutes (most notably, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA) are too broad. Yet narrowing the President's range of discretion by further defining an appropriate emergency or limiting the President's range of action for various emergencies might be wiser than simply eliminating all such power. Moreover, the President may have some inherent authority as Commander in Chief to take certain actions during a war or military crisis.
H.R. 2655 also would have attempted to define a presidential directive. It addition, it would have required that all presidential directives specify the constitutional and statutory basis for any action incorporated in the directive or be void as to parties outside the executive branch. With few exceptions, most recent Presidents before Clinton did cite the font of their authority in their executive directives. President Clinton cited some authority in a majority of his directives, but others were vague or had no citation of authority at all. A faithful executive should not have a problem citing the authority for his actions, and this requirement would help citizens, lawyers, and the courts evaluate new directives. Although there may be some constitutional problems with the application of this requirement in some cases, it is worth further consideration and possible refinement.
Finally, H.R. 2655 would have attempted to expand the number of parties with standing to challenge an arguably unlawful directive, including Members of Congress, state and local officials, and any aggrieved person. Because part of the standing doctrine is constitutional, a statute could not automatically confer standing on someone without a "particularized" injury in fact. Nevertheless, the provision would potentially expand the range and number of persons who could bring suit to challenge a questionable directive by removing any statutory impediments to suit.
The President is free to take up such internal reforms as he deems appropriate, including any that are designed to address past congressional concerns. Such institutional reforms tend to have a more lasting effect than many statutory reforms, perhaps in part because executive branch officials are directly answerable to the President and perhaps also because they are instituted with more flexibility or sensitivity to the needs of future Presidents. Whatever the reason, it makes sense for a new President to follow tradition but also to consider, in time, proposals to improve the process by which executive directives are issued.
CONCLUSION
A proper understanding of a President's power to issue executive orders, proclamations, and other directives will enable President Bush to use this power confidently in the exercise of his constitutional responsibilities and to implement important Administration policies. An aggressive use of this power is necessary for a modern President to project strength as leader of the free world and to manage the largest bureaucracy in the world.
The Bush Administration will have to weigh its Legal options, political concerns, and policy objectives to find the right solution for each opportunity or problem. A substantive review of President Clinton's executive directives, however, suggests that President Bush has many opportunities to make a significant impact with a carefully orchestrated program of executive orders and presidential proclamations. Such a program may be even more important in light of the narrow margins in the 107th Congress.
Todd F. Gaziano is Senior Fellow in Legal Studies and Director of the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation.
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