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词条 The Imperial Presidency
释义

  1. Synopsis

      1793–1896    1900–1949    1950–1964   1965–1969   1969–1973    Problems and solutions  

  2. See also

  3. References

  4. Bibliography

  5. Further reading

{{About|the 1973 work|the arguments|Imperial Presidency}}{{multiple issues|{{cleanup rewrite|date=December 2012}}{{POV|date=December 2012}}{{primary sources|date=December 2012}}
}}{{Infobox book
| name = The Imperial Presidency
| image = File:The Imperial Presidency (Schlesinger book).jpg
| caption =
| author =Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.
| title_orig =
| translator =
| illustrator =
| cover_artist =
| country = United States
| language = English
| series =
| subject =
| genre =
| publisher = Houghton Mifflin
| publisher2 =
| pub_date = 1973
| english_pub_date =
| media_type =
| pages = 505 pp
| awards =
| isbn = 978-0-395-17713-6
| oclc = 704887
| dewey =
| congress =
| preceded_by =
| followed_by =
}}The Imperial Presidency, by Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., is a book published in 1973 by Houghton Mifflin. This book details the history of the Presidency of the United States from its conception by the Founding Fathers through the latter half of the 20th century. The author wrote the book out of two concerns: first, that the US Presidency was out of control and second, that the Presidency had exceeded its constitutional limits.[1]

A presidency becomes imperial when it relies on powers beyond those allowed by the Constitution of the United States. The Constitution established three separate branches of government, not for efficiency but to avoid the arbitrary exercise of power. The government outlined by the Constitution was to replace and improve upon the imperial executive government of King George III of Britain.[2] The book links the president’s accumulation of foreign powers during wartimes to the accretion of domestic powers.

The Constitution and its authors determined that the power to initiate a war belonged to the Congress. The president had the responsibilities to conduct ongoing wars and ongoing foreign relations, and to respond to sudden attacks if Congress were not in session.[3] As the United States became a great world power and then a superpower, the presidency acquired more war powers despite the Constitution. That reduced Congress' powers and the separation of powers, which is necessary to avoid the arbitrary use of power.[4]

Through various means, presidents subsequently acquired powers beyond the limits of the constitution. The daily accountability of the president to the Congress, the courts, the press, and the people has been replaced by an accountability of only once each four years, during an election. The changes have occurred slowly over the centuries so that what appears normal differs greatly from what was the original state of America.[5]

Synopsis

1793–1896

{{Infobox President
|name=George Washington
|image=Gilbert_Stuart_Williamstown_Portrait_of_George_Washington.jpg
|order=1st President of the United States
|term_start=April 30, 1789
|term_end=March 4, 1797
}}

In 1793, President George Washington unilaterally determined that the new American Republic was neutral in the war between Britain and France during the French Revolutionary Wars. Alexander Hamilton supported the action while Thomas Jefferson and James Madison objected. The proclamation prohibited American citizens from assisting either Britain or France. However, grand juries refused to enforce the proclamation.[6]

In 1846, to annex Texas, President James K. Polk sent troops between Texas and Mexico, which provoked a war. Polk then manipulated Congress into recognizing a state of war. Representative Abraham Lincoln stated if it was allowed, a president could arbitrarily make war just as monarchs do and that the Constitutional Convention recognized that declaring war must not be in the hands of one man.[7]

{{Infobox President
|name = Abraham Lincoln
|image = Abraham Lincoln head on shoulders photo portrait.jpg
|order = 16th President of the United States
|term_start = March 4, 1861
|term_end = April 15, 1865
}}

During the American Civil War, Lincoln assumed war powers as commander-in-chief of the military but made no claim that the constitution allowed him these powers. Without congressional authorization, Lincoln unilaterally expanded the military, suspended habeas corpus, arrested citizens, proclaimed martial law, seized property, censored newspapers, and emancipated slaves. Lincoln justified the actions as necessary to preserve the country rather than by the constitution.[8] However, he stated that the presidential war powers would cease to exist once the national emergency, the Civil War, ended.[9]

After the Civil War, the Supreme Court, in 1866, asserted that the constitution was the law of the land in war and peace and that government powers can not exceed those granted by the constitution.[10] In 1867, the Supreme Court stated that the President must carry out the law and may not break the law. Presidential power was deflated following the Civil War.[11]

With the Spanish–American War in 1898, the United States became a great power, and presidential power expanded.[12] In 1900, President William McKinley sent 5,000 troops to China (see Boxer Rebellion) for political purposes without congressional approval.

1900–1949

{{Infobox President | name=Theodore Roosevelt
|image=President Theodore Roosevelt, 1904.jpg
|order=26th President of the United States
|term_start=September 14, 1901
|term_end=March 4, 1909
}}

President Theodore Roosevelt sent troops into many Caribbean countries and established new governments in several without congressional approval,[13] including actions in Colombia, Panama, Honduras, Dominican Republic, and Cuba. (See List of United States military history events.)

In 1927, President Calvin Coolidge sent 5,000 troops to Nicaragua without congressional approval. He was considered a strict constructionist in other matters.[14]

In 1939, after the start of World War II in Europe, President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared a limited national emergency. The concept of limited national emergency seems to rest on implied and assumed powers of the president and the assertion of it by him. On May 27, 1941, Roosevelt determined that the nation was in a state of unlimited national emergency.

Congress ended the national emergency in 1947, two years after the end of World War II. National emergency powers are defined as "the President may seize property, organize and control the means of production, seize commodities, assign military forces abroad, institute martial law, seize and control all transportation and communication, regulate the operation of private enterprise, restrict travel, and, in a variety of ways, control the lives of United States citizens."

In 1942, Roosevelt threatened Congress that if a provision of the Emergency Price Control Act was not repealed within three weeks, he would block its implementation. World War II was used to justify this threat. Like Lincoln, he added that when the war ended, the war powers would return to the people. Congress repealed the provision, and the threat was not acted upon.[15]

Throughout the history of the presidency, a pattern emerged that the president assumed greater powers during the emergency. After the emergency had passed, Congress would assert itself. That occurred after the Civil War and World War I, but after World War II, Congress did not assert itself as much because of the Cold War.

In 1946, Democratic President Harry S. Truman wanted the Republican Congress to approve aid to Greece and Turkey. He found that by turning a reasonable program into the Truman Doctrine and exaggerating the issue, he got the appropriation.[16]

1950–1964

{{Infobox President | name=Harry S. Truman
|image=Harry-truman.jpg
|order=33rd President of the United States
|term_start=April 12, 1945
|term_end=January 20, 1953
}}

In 1950, Truman had sent troops to the Korean War without Congressional approval.[17] In 1952, Truman feared a national strike by the steel industry would impair the military’s ability to fight the Korean War. He ordered the Secretary of Commerce to seize and operate the steel mills without Congressional approval.[18] The Supreme Court found the actions unconstitutional. The majority of justices stated that the Commander-in-Chief clause of the constitution did not apply to domestic matters and that the president must comply with existing laws on this matter.[19]

By 1952, Truman increased the Armed Services to 3.6 million, and that by itself resulted in an increase in presidential power. Before then, only Lincoln had increased the Army without Congressional approval. The addition of 50 treaties increased presidential responsibilities and power in the 1950s.[20] The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), under the direction of the president, overthrew the governments of Iran (1953) and Guatemala (1954). The CIA attempted but failed to overthrow the government of Indonesia. Schlesinger claims the CIA installed new governments in Egypt (1954) and Laos (1959). Also, the CIA helped organize Cuban refugees to overthrow the Cuban government (1960–1961).[21] The presidency's control of foreign policy vastly increased while constitutional separation of powers decreased.[22] In the decade after the Korean War, most liberal and conservative members of Congress agreed on presidential control of foreign policy.[23]

The Cuban Missile Crisis showed that independent and unilateral presidential action in extreme circumstances is, at times, required. However, it was a unique situation of threat and secrecy in the nuclear age and should not have been used to justify the imperial presidency.[24]

1965–1969

{{Infobox President|name=Lyndon Baines Johnson
|image=Lbj2.jpg
|order=36th President of the United States
|term_start=November 22, 1963
|term_end=January 20, 1969
}}

In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson sent 22,000 troops to the Dominican Republic without congressional approval. The same year, he sent combat troops for the first time into Vietnam. The war lasted the longest in US history and resulted in the fourth largest number of US casualties after the Civil War and the two world wars. The Tonkin Gulf resolution authorized the president to use the military, as he required. That was transfer of war powers from Congress to the president.[25] Lincoln believed that if the president could bring the country to war, he held the power of a king. In 1970, President Richard Nixon ordered an intervention into Cambodia without Congressional approval. By 1971, the Tonkin Gulf resolution was revoked by Congress. However, the Vietnam War continued, solely from Nixon's authority.[26] Nixon claimed war powers as Commander-in-Chief of the military. Before Lincoln, that title indicated only the topmost officer of the armed forces. Lincoln used it for greater authority and so could future presidents in the event of a civil war. Nixon justified his authority to order the invasion of Cambodia only by his title of Commander-in-Chief.[27]

1969–1973

{{Infobox President|name=Richard Milhous Nixon
|image=Nixon 30-0316a.jpg
|order=37th President of the United States
|term_start=January 20, 1969
|term_end=August 9, 1974
}}Cambodia and Laos were both purportedly neutral countries, but were being used as a base of operations by the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong.[28] Laos was bombed from 1964 to 1973. This was kept secret from Congress.[29] In 1971, Congress passed an amendment to the defense-spending bill to terminate all military operations in Indochina (Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Vietnam) and Nixon signed it but he continued to fight in Vietnam.[30] Under Nixon Congress had no war powers.[31] By 1971, Congress discovered seven secret bases, and 32,000 troops in Thailand. Nixon had made defense agreements with Thailand and the federal government was secretly funding the Ethiopian Army, all without Congress’ knowledge or approval. The Constitution requires 2/3 Senate approval of treaties before they become law.[32]

The imperial Presidency was created in response to foreign policy issues. This resulted in the exclusion of the Congress, the press, the public and the Constitution in foreign policy decisions. Once established, the imperial Presidency then expanded into domestic issues.[33] Starting in 1947, Presidential power over the federal budget with slight modifications by Congress gave the President important controls over the economy and social priorities.[34] Strong Presidents should have strong-minded advisors.[35]

Schlesinger claims Nixon dismissed the opinions of the public, the press, and foreign nations and used price controls, tax relief, and subsidies, tariffs, import quotas and fiscal policy to manage the economy. These economic powers were used to reward economic sectors that supported his actions and punish those sectors that opposed his actions. Rather than veto Congressional legislation that he opposed, he would impound the funds.[36] The only option the Constitution allows if President opposes a law is the veto. The Constitution empowers the Congress to determine the level of spending, not the President. The President is not allowed to selectively enforce laws, which Nixon did.[37]

Nixon's Presidential model resembled the plebiscitary Presidency. Plebiscitary democracy is defined as where a leader is elected but once elected has almost all of the power. Another explanation of the Nixon model would be a personal dictatorship or an elective kingship under the Constitution

where the President represents the democratic majority and any opposition is considered antidemocratic. Public responses are limited to voting during elections.[38]

In 1970, Nixon authorized investigating peaceful protesters but found nothing. Agents of the Treasury Department went to public libraries to examine the book borrowing records of citizens. Breaking and entering was authorized by Nixon to investigate suspects. The National Security Agency was authorized to monitor conversations of citizens making international phone calls. Citizens’ letters were opened and copied.[39] Nixon authorized his own private outfit, which burglarized, wiretapped, bugged, and used secret agents and political blackmail contrary to the laws and Constitution.[40] The Watergate scandal was the most public part of these activities.[41]

Nixon claimed that the President was not required to obey certain laws. He nearly succeeded but for the actions of hardline opponents.[42] The courts, the press, executive agencies, and Congress cannot take credit for blocking the imperial presidency however they benefited from less powerful Presidency.[43] Blocking the imperial presidency did not change the conditions that made it possible.[44]

Problems and solutions

Foreign policy challenges the separation of powers. The presidency reigns supreme in foreign policy.[45] That one person should neither commit the nation to war nor continue a war is valid and constitutional.[46] However, those raising constitutional questions do so for usually political reasons.[47]

Schlesinger writes:

{{quote|The weight of messianic globalism was indeed proving too much for the American Constitution. If this policy were vital to American survival, then a way would have to be found to make it constitutional; perhaps the Constitution itself would have to be revised. In fact, the policy of indiscriminate global intervention, far from strengthening American security, seemed rather to weaken it by involving the United States in remote, costly and mysterious wars, fought in ways that shamed the nation before the world and, even when thus fought, demonstrating only the inability of the most powerful nation on earth to subdue bands of guerrillas in black pajamas. When the grandiose policy did not promote national security and could not succeed in its own terms, would it not be better to pursue policies that did not deform and disable the Constitution?[48]}}

Congress and the president should reduce US interests abroad and lower military spending, which would lower the pressure on the national government and allow Congress to act.[49] Only two requirements would be needed to resolve the situation:

First, the president must both report to Congress immediately, with all information and justification, when troops were sent into battle and continue to report during the conflict.

Second, a joint declaration by Congress at any time can terminate the conflict.[50] Another option during peacetimes is allowing Congress to control troops overseas.[51] The history of U.S. war-making in the 20th century suggested that it was a shared power between the president and the Congress.[52]

The CIA is exempt from Congressional oversight and spending rules and regulations.[53] If Congress wished to bring the CIA under control, it could prohibit covert operations except during wartime.[54]

National emergency powers allow the president unilaterally to control any business activity or person within the country. Once a national emergency is proclaimed, it should get Congressional approval within 30 days if it is to remain in effect. A joint resolution of Congress should be able to cancel a national emergency.[55] The national emergency power should be used only when the nation is at risk of being lost. Only the Civil War, World War II, and possibly the Cuban missile crisis qualify as true national emergencies. The national emergencies claimed by Jefferson, Truman, and Nixon do not meet this standard.[56]

Foreign policy conducted by the President only is self-defeating if the people do not support it. If the Congress does not understand the foreign policy, the people will not either.[57]

Presidential secrecy can be justified with either claims of national security or executive privilege. The claims do not rely on statues but depend on unchecked executive judgment. National security claims were developed from the classification of documents. Executive privilege claims were originally used by the president to protect personal communications from Congress.[58]

As early as 1795, the following pattern recurred. The president kept some facts secret when he faced difficult foreign policy decisions. A citizen discovered these facts and felt it was a duty to make these facts public. A member of the free press would disclose then the facts.[59]

By the 1950s, Congress was at odds with the military over secrecy. Reports on bows and arrows, shark repellent, and monkeys in outer space were classified secrets.[60] In 1966, a secret CIA memo complained that the publication of classified secrets could be successfully defended with the "public had a right to know" argument.[61] By 1972 some newspaper clippings were deemed to be secret.[62]

Secrecy appeals to leaders of nation that value openness and accountability. The power to withhold, leak, and lie about information seems fleeting when the information is publicly revealed. "If you only know what we know" remarks are tempting for officials.[63] The power to withhold and leak leads to the power to lie. Examples of this were found in President Eisenhower's CIA actions, President Kennedy’s Bay of Pigs and Vietnam actions, President Johnson’s Vietnam operations, and President Nixon’s Cambodia bombing.[64] Between 1965 and 1975, the number of US citizens who believed their government was lying had greatly increased because of the government’s secrecy system.[65] Perhaps the United States would have benefited from leaks about the CIA in the 1950s, the Bay of Pigs operation, war crimes in Vietnam, and wars in Laos and Cambodia by avoiding those disasters.[66]

Congressional members often prefer to be poorly informed to avoid responsibility and accountability for foreign policies.[67] Although many are shocked when secret foreign policy documents are revealed, the information was often previously published. Congress could be better informed if it wished.[68]

The revolutionary transformation to the plebiscitary presidency is a presidency accountable only during elections or impeachment rather than daily to the Congress, the press and the public. Plebiscitary democracy is defined as a leader, once elected, having almost all power. (See Bush's Plebiscitary Presidency.) The plebiscitary president would govern by decrees such as executive orders.[69]

The Nixon administration was unique in the extent of probable criminal offenses it committed,: burglary, forgery, illegal wiretapping and electronic surveillance, perjury, obstruction of justice, destruction of evidence, tampering with witnesses, giving and taking bribes, and conspiracy to involve government agencies in illegal actions. Nixon denied knowledge about the actions. Nevertheless, he was found officially responsible for them.[70]

In an effort to rein in the imperial presidency, North Carolina Senator Sam Ervin proposed for Congress to have the ability to veto executive agreements within 60 days. Executive agreements are used by presidents to make international arrangements without involving Congress. If enacted, the proposal would change the balance of power between the presidency and the Congress and affect foreign policy decisions.[71]

A balance of power can be achieved when all great decisions are shared decisions. Although shared decisions may often be wise, they are always democratic.[72] Great presidents understood that their rule required the consent of the Congress, the press, and the public.[73]

President Nixon's errors resulted in the expansion and abuse of presidential power. If future presidents govern by decree, impeachment will be necessary to rein in the presidency and support the constitution. With a constitutional presidency, any illegal or unconstitutional actions by a president’s administration must be exposed and punished: "A constitutional Presidency, as the great Presidents had shown, could be very strong Presidency indeed. But what kept a strong President constitutional, in addition to checks and balances incorporated within his own breast, was the vigilance of the nation. Neither impeachment nor repentance would make much difference if the people themselves had come to an unconscious acceptance of the imperial Presidency. The Constitution could not hold the nation to ideals it was determined to betray."[74]

See also

  • Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.
  • Commander-in-Chief
  • Executive branch
  • Fourth branch of government
  • Imperial Presidency
  • Signing statement
  • Separation of powers under the United States Constitution
  • Unitary executive theory
  • War Powers Clause

References

1. ^Schlesinger, p. x
2. ^Schlesinger, p. vii
3. ^Schlesinger, p. 35
4. ^Schlesinger, p. vii
5. ^Schlesinger, Book dust jacket
6. ^Schlesinger, p. 18
7. ^Schlesinger, pp. 42–43
8. ^Schlesinger, pp. 58–60
9. ^Schlesinger, p. 66
10. ^Schlesinger, p. 69
11. ^Schlesinger, p. 70
12. ^Schlesinger, p. 82
13. ^Schlesinger, pp. 88–89
14. ^Schlesinger, p. 94
15. ^Schlesinger, pp. 115–116
16. ^Schlesinger, pp. 127–128
17. ^Schlesinger, pp. 131–132
18. ^Schlesinger, p. 141
19. ^Schlesinger, pp. 143–144, 147
20. ^Schlesinger, p. 165
21. ^Schlesinger, p. 167
22. ^Schlesinger, p. 168
23. ^Schlesinger, p. 169
24. ^Schlesinger, p. 176
25. ^Schlesinger, pp. 178–181
26. ^Schlesinger, p. 187
27. ^Schlesinger, pp. 188–189
28. ^Cf. Ho Chi Minh trail
29. ^Schlesinger, pp. 192–3
30. ^Schlesinger, p. 194
31. ^Schlesinger, p. 198
32. ^Schlesinger, p. 203
33. ^Schlesinger, p. 208
34. ^Schlesinger, p. 211
35. ^Schlesinger, p. 219
36. ^Schlesinger, pp. 232–235
37. ^Schlesinger, pp. 240–241
38. ^Schlesinger, pp. 254–255
39. ^Schlesinger, pp. 258–259
40. ^Schlesinger, p. 265
41. ^Schlesinger, p. 266
42. ^Schlesinger, p. 275
43. ^Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr., The Imperial Presidency, page 277, Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1973. {{ISBN|0-395-17713-8}}
44. ^Schlesinger, p. 278
45. ^Schlesinger, p. 279
46. ^Schlesinger, p. 284
47. ^Schlesinger, p. 287
48. ^Schlesinger, p. 299
49. ^Schlesinger, p. 300
50. ^Schlesinger, p. 306
51. ^Schlesinger, p. 307
52. ^Schlesinger, p. 309
53. ^Schlesinger, p. 316
54. ^Schlesinger, p. 319
55. ^Schlesinger, pp. 320–321
56. ^Schlesinger, pp. 323–324
57. ^Schlesinger, p. 325
58. ^Schlesinger, p. 331
59. ^Schlesinger, p. 333
60. ^Schlesinger, p. 342
61. ^Schlesinger, p. 347
62. ^Schlesinger, p. 344
63. ^Schlesinger, p. 354
64. ^Schlesinger, pp. 356–357
65. ^Schlesinger, pp. 358–359
66. ^Schlesinger, p. 362
67. ^Schlesinger, p. 373
68. ^Schlesinger, pp. 374–375
69. ^Schlesinger, p. 377
70. ^Schlesinger, p. 379
71. ^Schlesinger, p. 393
72. ^Schlesinger, pp. 406–407
73. ^Schlesinger, p. 410
74. ^Schlesinger, pp. 417–418

Bibliography

  • {{cite book|author=Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr.|title=The Imperial Presidency|location= Boston|publisher=Houghton Mifflin Company|date= 1973|isbn= 0-395-17713-8}}

Further reading

  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20101103083540/http://judiciary.house.gov/hearings/printers/110th/IPres090113.pdf Reining in the Imperial Presidency: Lessons and Recommendations Relating to the Presidency of George W. Bush] House Committee on the Judiciary January 13, 2009{{Dead link|date=January 2017}}
  • [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00375LOLO Takeover: The Return of the Imperial Presidency and the Subversion of American Democracy by Charlie Savage] Amazon Books
  • [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0618420010 The Imperial Presidency by Arthur Meier Schlesinger] Amazon Books
  • [https://books.google.com/books?id=zbLO9aNL6ncC&dq=presidential+agreements+on+investigations&source=gbs_navlinks_s The Imperial Presidency by Arthur Meier Schlesinger] Google Books
  • The Imperial Presidency By Senator Gary Hart January 18, 2010, Huffington Post
  • [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0472031929 The New Imperial Presidency: Renewing Presidential Power after Watergate by Andrew Rudalevige] Amazon Books
  • [https://books.google.com/books?id=szGbG-qo04cC&printsec=frontcover&dq=andrew+rudalevige+the+new+imperial+presidency&source=bl&ots=O5mvB82maC&sig=WAJVb5YFZSJrk3y9gdpSd-3_mAM&hl=en&ei=DZsLTdCANoGusAPh7LWlCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CBsQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q&f=false The New Imperial Presidency: Renewing Presidential Power after Watergate by Andrew Rudalevige] Google Books
{{DEFAULTSORT:Imperial Presidency}}

4 : 1973 books|American political books|Books about Presidents of the United States|Books by Arthur Schlesinger Jr.

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