All Posts Tagged With: "unitary executive theory"

The Unitary Executive: Presidential Power from Washington to Bush

Steven G. Calabresi and Christopher S. Yoo count as founding fathers of the much-debated unitary executive theory (UET), which they named in 1992. In this large book they argue that every American president has subscribed to the theory, and that along with constitutional text and structure, this continuous presidential practice makes the law. Briefly, UET [...]

18Nov2009 | Joseph R. Stromberg | 0 comments | Continued

The Sovereign Presidency: Is This What the Framers Had in Mind?

American government under the Constitution was supposedly meant to work as follows: Congress, staying within delegated powers and the Bill of Rights, passes laws; the president executes the laws; and the courts sort out ensuing wrangles. This plan ran aground rather early—the 1798 Alien and Sedition Acts, for example—which raises at least two possibilities: 1) [...]

1Jan2007 | Joseph R. Stromberg | 9 comments | Continued

Nothing to Learn from the Antifederalists? It Just Ain’t So!

Joseph Stromberg is a historian and freelance writer. According to Paul Greenberg, writing in the Washington Times in late January, the dreaded Antifederalists and their Articles of Confederation are making a comeback. In particular, these miscreants dare to question executive power. He writes with patriotic horror—a horror that assumes as self-evident a partisan reading of [...]

1Jun2006 | Joseph R. Stromberg | 22 comments | Continued
  • © Copyright 2011 Freeman - Ideas on Liberty. All rights reserved.

    45 queries. 1.376 seconds