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What are the inherent powers of the president?

inherent powers president
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What are the inherent powers of the president?

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by Michael C. Dorf Link to Article Two recent episodes in our political life have exposed a deep rift between the Bush Administration and Congress over the proper scope of Presidential power. First, as 2005 drew to a close, President Bush signed a defense appropriation bill that contained a categorical prohibition on torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of detainees by all U.S. personnel, anywhere in the world. But Bush simultaneously released a signing statement that purported to reserve the right to order the use of those interrogation techniques that were within his prerogatives as head of the “unitary executive branch” and as Commander in Chief. Second, in their public defense of the President’s approval of electronic eavesdropping within the United States in apparent violation of Acts of Congress, Administration officials and others have argued, among other things, that Congress lacked the authority to constrain the President in wartime espionage. On this view, even i

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by Michael C. Dorf Link to Article Two recent episodes in our political life have exposed a deep rift between the Bush Administration and Congress over the proper scope of Presidential power. First, as 2005 drew to a close, President Bush signed a defense appropriation bill that contained a categorical prohibition on torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of detainees by all U.S. personnel, anywhere in the world. But Bush simultaneously released a signing statement that purported to reserve the right to order the use of those interrogation techniques that were within his prerogatives as head of the “unitary executive branch” and as Commander in Chief. Second, in their public defense of the President’s approval of electronic eavesdropping within the United States in apparent violation of Acts of Congress, Administration officials and others have argued, among other things, that Congress lacked the authority to constrain the President in wartime espionage. On this view, even i

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