Supreme Court ruling should cap executive power
SOURCE:
THE ISSUE
The Supreme Court has ruled that military commissions created to
try alleged terrorists violate U.S. law and the Geneva
Conventions.
SINCE Congress authorized President Bush to use force in
combating global terrorism on Sept. 14, 2001, he has claimed
constitutional authority to ignore statutory restrictions on
executive power. The U.S. Supreme Court's rejection of the use
of military tribunals for terrorism suspects is a major
retribution that should force the president to seek
congressional permission to take such actions.
The court ruled two years ago that the congressional resolution
was no "blank check," but yesterday's ruling is the first to
assert legal rights for prisoners held at the Guantanamo Bay
prison camp in Cuba. Bush said he will ask Congress to authorize
"a tribunal to hold people to account."
He should not stop there. The National Security Agency continues
to use warrantless eavesdropping in violation of the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, and the administration
may be engaging in other unauthorized actions that we don't know
about. Congressional action is needed.
Bush is not the first president to overreach his authority
during wartime. Abraham Lincoln suspended the habeas corpus rule
allowing people to seek redress in court, Franklin D. Roosevelt
put Japanese Americans in internment camps, and Richard Nixon
authorized bugging domestic "subversives."
Vice President Richard Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld served in the Ford administration and have sought to
restore executive power reined in by the War Powers Act approved
by the post-Vietnam Congress. A Republican Congress has been
conciliatory.
In the Guantanamo case, the Supreme Court ruled that Bush lacked
authority to create military tribunals providing a lesser
standard of justice than federal or military courts. The
justices rejected the administration's argument that the
Detainee Treatment Act, passed by Congress last year, stripped
the court of jurisdiction to consider the case.
Justice John Paul Stevens, who wrote the court's majority
opinion, said that act "contains no language authorizing that
tribunal or any other at Guantanamo Bay," although it implicitly
recognizes the military commissions' existence. Neither it nor
the post-9/11 authorization "expands the president's authority
to convene military commissions," he added. The court ruled that
the commissions violated American military law and the
military's obligations under the four Geneva Conventions of
1949.
"The court's conclusion ultimately rests upon a single ground:
Congress has not issued the executive a 'blank check,'" Justice
Stephen G. Breyer concurred. "Indeed, Congress has denied the
president the legislative authority to create military
commissions of the kind at issue here. Nothing prevents the
president from returning to Congress to seek the authority he
believes necessary."
Presidents are reluctant to ask Congress for such permission,
fearing that the mere request implies that the executive branch
lacks such authority. A narrow interpretation of the high
court's ruling will lead to further breaches.
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Hamdan v. Rumsfeld
Argument Date: March 28, 2006
Decision Date: June 29, 2006
The Supreme Court held that Congress did not take away the
Court's authority to rule on the validity of military
commissions, and that President Bush did not have the authority
to set up the tribunals at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The Court also
ruled that military commissions are illegal under both military
justice law and the Geneva Convention. Chief Justice John G.
Roberts, Jr. recused himself from the case. He heard the case
while on the DC Court of Appeals and ruled in favor of the
government.
Justice Stevens delivered the opinion of the Court. He's joined
by Justices Kennedy, Souter, Ginsburg & Breyer. Dissents:
Justices Scalia, Thomas & Alito
http://www.c-span.org/special/scourt.asp
"The Law".... Did we win anything?
http://www.apfn.org/audio/thelaw.mp3