A state of war is not a blank check for the
president when it comes to the rights of the
nations citizens.
Those words from Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day
OConnor are music to the ears of every friend of
freedom. That line is a direct slap at President George
W. Bush, who has signaled by almost every word and deed
that his personal declaration of war on
terror is a blank check. He believes
that the courts have no legal authority to even review
his indefinite incarceration of American citizens and
others without charge if he brands them enemy
combatants. In this administrations view, one
may not even appeal that designation. Can one think of a
more fundamental attack on American legal tradition that
this? Thank goodness the Supreme Court recognized how
subversive the Bush administration has been.
It is regrettable that Justice OConnor did not
point out that, strictly speaking, no state of war ever
existed between the United States and Afghanistan, Iraq,
or al-Qaeda. President Bush did not ask for a formal
declaration of war from Congress, and that body did not
issue one. Both, then, were complicit in a reprehensible
violation of the Constitution, which vests the power to
declare war solely with the Senate and House of
Representatives. The Framers of the Constitution knew
what they were doing. As The Federalist Papers makes
clear, depriving the president of the power to declare
and appropriate the money for war was intended to keep
the executive weak relative to the legislative branch.
(Even Congress was restricted in its financing of
military matters: appropriations for the army can be for
a term no longer than two years.) The last thing most
Americans wanted in the late eighteenth century was a
home-grown king with anything approaching absolute power.
Im not sure we can say the same for early
21st-century Americans.
All of this shows why the Supreme Court rulings in the
Guatanamo and Hamdi cases are important, even if
ambiguous in their details. The modern advocates of the
fuehrer principle, of course, are beside themselves. How
dare the presidents authority be challenged! Who
the hell are the Supreme Court justices anyway? This
about sums up the response to the rulings by the
conservatives who saturate talk-radio. For
all their mock reverence for America, they are
surprisingly ignorant of the Constitution.
Weve got to do something about the Supreme
Court, radio host Laura Ingraham declared.
Shes endorsed Sen. Lindsay Grahams proposal
to restrict the Court from ruling in areas dear to their
hearts, such as the treatment of enemy
combatants. (We know what such treatment consists
of.) Its true that the Constitution (Article III,
Section 2) permits the Congress to restrict the Supreme
Courts jurisdiction, but that doesnt mean
its a good idea to do so.
Anyone who favors prohibiting the courts from reviewing
the presidents conduct with respect to detainees
displays a shocking antagonism to this countrys
founding ideals, which include the critical principle of
habeas corpus. No protection against tyranny, short of
the right of revolution, has been more important than the
legal ability to challenge ones detention before a
judge. The war party and its media parrots symbolically
spit on every great charter of liberty when they object
to court review of the presidents wartime policies.
In this regard, it is amusing that these self-styled
patriots love to designate who is and is not a
great American. By their standards, anyone
who faithfully defends every presidential whim couched in
national-security lingo is accorded that label, and
anyone who lifts an eyebrow at the usurpation were
witnessing is suspect. By objective standards, it ought
to be the other way around.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation, author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of The Freeman magazine. Send him email.
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