Tag: Art. 2 Sec. 2

  • Presidential Government of Labor Regulations

    Presidential Government of Labor RegulationsThe most important segment of the home front regulated by what were in effect presidential edicts was the field of labor relations. Exactly six months before Pearl Harbor, on June 7, 1941, Mr. Roosevelt, citing his proclamation thirteen days earlier of an …

  • Presidential Power

    The Theory of Presidential PowerThe fullest expression of the presidential power proponents has been in defense of the course followed in Indochina. Thus, the Legal Adviser of the State Department, in a widely circulated document, contended: "Under the Constitution, the President, in addition t…

  • Presidential War Agencies

    Presidential War AgenciesWhile congressional compliance with the President's demand rendered unnecessary an effort on his part to amend the Price Control Act, there were other matters as to which he repeatedly took action within the normal field of congressional powers, not only during the war, …

  • Prize Cases

    The Prize CasesThe basis for a broader conception was laid in certain early acts of Congress authorizing the President to employ military force in the execution of the laws.1 In his famous message to Congress of July 4, 1861,<a name=t2 href=#f2 targe…

  • Prize Cases Impact

    Impact of the Prize Cases on World Wars I and IIIn brief, the powers that may be claimed for the President under the Commander-in-Chief Clause at a time of widespread insurrection were equated with his powers under the clause at a time when the United States is engaged in a formally declared foreign…

  • Recess Appointments

    Recess Appointments (Presidential Duties and Powers)The Recess Appointments Clause was adopted by the Constitutional Convention without dissent and without debate regarding the intent and scope of its terms. In Federalist No. 67, Alexander Hamilton refers to the recess appointment power as "not…

  • Reciprocal Trade Agreements

    Reciprocal Trade AgreementsThe most copious source of executive agreements has been legislation which provided authority for entering into reciprocal trade agreements with other nations. 1 Such agreements in the form of treaties providing for the rec…

  • Removal Power Rationalized

    The Removal Power Rationalized (Removal Power, Executive Establishment and Treaties)The tension that had long been noticed between Myers and Humphrey's Executor, at least in terms of the language used in those cases but also to some extent in their holdings, appears to have been ameliorated by t…

  • Sanctions Implementing Presidential Directives

    Sanctions Implementing Presidential DirectivesTo implement his directives as Commander-in-Chief in wartime, and especially those which he issued in governing labor disputes, President Roosevelt often resorted to "sanctions," which may be described as penalties lacking statutory authorizati…

  • Self-Executing Treaty

    When Is a Treaty Self-ExecutingSeveral references have been made above to a distinction between treaties as self-executing and as merely executory, in which case they are enforceable only after the enactment of "legislation to carry them into effect." <a name=t1 href=#f1 target="_self…

  • Senate Approval

    Senate Approval ( Executive Establishment and Treaties)The fact that the power of nomination belongs to the President alone prevents the Senate from attaching conditions to its approval of an appointment, such as it may do to its approval of a treaty. In the words of an early opinion of the Attorney…

  • Post-War Years

    Executive Agreements in the Post-War YearsPost-war diplomacy of the United States was greatly influenced by the executive agreements entered into at Cairo, Teheran, Yalta, and Potsdam.1 For a period, the formal treaty-the signing of the United Nation…

  • Postwar Period

    The Postwar Period and the PresidencyThe end of active hostilities did not terminate either the emergency or the Federal Government's response to it. President Truman proclaimed the termination of hostilities on December 31, 1946,1 and, in July 1…

  • Power of Congress to Control President

    The Power of Congress to Control the President's DiscretionOver the President's veto, Congress enacted the War Powers Resolution,1 designed to redistribute the war powers between the President and Congress. Although ambiguous in some respects…

  • President Treaty-Making Power

    President Treaty-Making Power and the SenateThe plan that the Committee of Detail reported to the Federal Convention on August 6, 1787 provided that "the Senate of the United States shall have power to make treaties, and to appoint Ambassadors, and Judges of the Supreme Court." <a name=t1 …