Our monarch, above the law
Boston Globe
by Scot Lehigh
05/02/06
Has George W. Bush come to believe he's king? That's the question that springs to mind upon reading Charlie Savage's front-page report in Sunday's Globe detailing the president's sotto voce assertion that he can disregard laws if he thinks they impinge on his constitutional powers. That novel claim resides in the 'signing statements' the administration issues outlining its legal interpretation of laws the president has signed -- interpretations that often run contrary to the statute's clear intent. As Savage reports, Bush has registered hundreds of those reservations, adding them to statutes on subjects ranging from military rules and regulations to affirmative action language to congressionally mandated reporting requirements to protections Congress has passed for whistle-blowers to legal assurances against political meddling in government-funded research...
http://tinyurl.com/fadco
Informant: Thomas L. Knapp
by Scot Lehigh
05/02/06
Has George W. Bush come to believe he's king? That's the question that springs to mind upon reading Charlie Savage's front-page report in Sunday's Globe detailing the president's sotto voce assertion that he can disregard laws if he thinks they impinge on his constitutional powers. That novel claim resides in the 'signing statements' the administration issues outlining its legal interpretation of laws the president has signed -- interpretations that often run contrary to the statute's clear intent. As Savage reports, Bush has registered hundreds of those reservations, adding them to statutes on subjects ranging from military rules and regulations to affirmative action language to congressionally mandated reporting requirements to protections Congress has passed for whistle-blowers to legal assurances against political meddling in government-funded research...
http://tinyurl.com/fadco
Informant: Thomas L. Knapp
rudkla - 3. Mai, 16:12