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Doris Kearns Goodwin gets it wrong on War Powers

The popular NPR program On Point (with Tom Ashbrook) ran a lengthy segment yesterday on the War Powers Act and the bipartisan commission's (led by former Secretaries of State Warren Christopher and James Baker III) recommendations for changing it.  Parts of it made me very angry.

I got through the first half; what was striking was that historian Doris Kearns Goodwin essentially endorsed Baker/Christopher et al's points about Congress "consulting with the President" as a viable and useful 'fix' to the Act.  She also supported their suggestion that, paraphrased, "if they pass a resolution of approval, the President can go forward; if it doesn't pass, then they can try to pass a resolution of disapproval to stop him, but he could veto it."  She goes on to even ACKNOWLEDGE that this means they might need a veto-proof majority to override a President intent on going to war and then vaguely concludes that this is GOOD because "having broad bipartisan consensus" (paraphrased) on war is a good thing.

As Lou Fisher said in his guest blog post here:

First, if a resolution of approval were defeated in either House, that is the end of it.  Congress should not then have to vote for a resolution of disapproval.  If it is vetoed, lawmakers would need a majority of two-thirds in each house for the override.  That means the President could start a war and continue it if he maintained a margin of one-third plus one in a single House.
Note to Goodwin: one-third plus one of a single House is not a broad bipartisan consensus for war.

This is a big problem.  Big name pundits who are seen as "reasonable" and "moderate" like Doris Kearns Goodwin are getting this wrong and endorsing mechanisms that ignore the Constitution and make it easier for a President to send the country into war without congressional approval.

This is why we need to Recapture the Flag and make sure that we're actually upholding the Constitution and that Congress doesn't willfully give away its rightful powers.  A couple more useful points from Fisher to remember, in his response to Baker/Christopher:

They say "Our Constitution ambiguously divides war powers between the president (who is commander in chief) and Congress...."  There was never anything ambiguous about Congress being the only branch that could take the country from a state of peace to a state of war.  No one before President Truman ever argued that the title "commander in chief" empowered the President to commit offensive operations against another country.

They object that the WPR "empowers Congress to terminate an armed conflict by simply doing nothing."  I have never defended the WPR and don't intend to here, but there is nothing unconstitutional about Congress controlling a war power matter by doing nothing.  If the President submits a proposal to use military force abroad and Congress ignores his proposal, that is the end of it.  Congress isn't required to act.  If the President requests funds to continue a war and Congress provides nothing, that is the end of it.
We should not be watering down the Constitution under the guise of "reasonable compromises." (See also, FISA)

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Tags: doris kearns goodwin, npr, war powers act, abuse of power, international (all tags)

Diane Rehm show

In just a few minutes, at 10:00 a.m., Common Cause President Chellie Pingree will appear on the Diane Rehm show on NPR. Alongside John Samples of the libertarian Cato Institute, she'll discuss the presidential public financing system, which Ed blogged about yesterday.

If you miss it, you can download and listen to parts of the segment shortly after the show ends by visiting the Diane Rehm show website and following the links.

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Tags: public financing, clean elections, chellie pingree, npr (all tags)

Save Public Broadcasting

Last week, a House subcommittee voted along party lines to eliminate nearly one-quarter of public broadcasting's budget for next year. The cuts would completely eliminate public broadcasting's "Ready to Learn" program,  which produces beloved shows like Sesame Street, Clifford the Big Red Dog and Reading Rainbow that have educated and entertained generations of children.

In an age of consolidated, profit-driven media, public broadcasting remains one of the few outlets where you can find independent news and public affairs programming, as well as quality educational programming for children. In poll after poll, the American people have said that public broadcasting is a good investment of their public tax dollars.

The House Appropriations Committee can and should reverse course, and vote to restore full funding to public broadcasting. Lend your support to that cause today.  Tell us what you value about public broadcasting in the Comments section below.

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Tags: Media and Democracy, PBS, NPR, public broadcasting, Appropriations, CPB (all tags)


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