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Can the President Rewrite Federal Law?
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently
by Andrew P. Napolitano: Squealing
Versus Killing
Here we go
again. Is the Constitution merely a guideline to be consulted by
those it purports to regulate, or is it really the supreme law of
the land? If it is just a guideline, then it is meaningless, as
it only will be followed by those in government when it is not an
obstacle to their purposes. If it is the supreme law of the land,
what do we do when one branch of government seizes power from another
and the branch that had its power stolen does nothing about it?
Late last week,
President Obama, fresh from a series of revelations that he kills
whomever he pleases in foreign lands, that the U.S. military is
actually fighting undeclared wars in Somalia and Yemen, and that
the CIA is using cyber warfare – computers – to destabilize innocents
in Iran, announced that he has rewritten a small portion of federal
immigration law so as to accommodate the needs of young immigrants
who came to the U.S. as children and remained here. By establishing
new rules governing deportation, rules that Congress declined to
enact, the president has usurped the power to write federal law
from Congress and commandeered it for himself.
Immigrants
should not be used as political pawns by the government. When government
does that, it violates the natural law. Our rights come from our
humanity, and our humanity comes from God. Our rights are natural
and integral to us, and they do not vary by virtue of, and cannot
be conditioned upon, the place where our mothers were physically
located at the time of our births. Federal law violates the natural
law when it interferes with whom you invite to your home or employ
in your business or to whom you rent your property or with whom
you walk the public sidewalks.
When the government
restricts freedom of association based on an immutable characteristic
of birth – like race, gender or the place of birth – it is engaging
in the same type of decision-making that brought us slavery, Jim
Crow and other invidious government discrimination. Regrettably,
the feds think they can limit human freedom by quota and by geography.
And they have done this for base political reasons.
Along comes
the president, and he has decided that he can fix some of our immigration
woes by rewriting the laws to his liking. Never mind that the Constitution
provides that his job is "to take care that the laws be faithfully
executed," and that "all legislative power" in the federal government
has been granted to Congress. He has chosen to bypass Congress and
disregard the Constitution. Can he do this?
There is a
valid and constitutional argument to be made that the president
may refrain from defending and enforcing laws that he believes are
palpably and demonstrably unconstitutional. These arguments go back
to Thomas Jefferson, who refused to defend or enforce the Alien
and Sedition Acts because, by punishing speech, they directly contradicted
the First Amendment. Jefferson argued that when a law contradicts
the Constitution, the law must give way because the Constitution
is the supreme law of the land and all other laws are inferior and
must conform to it. This argument is itself now universally accepted
jurisprudence – except by President Obama, who recently and inexplicably
questioned the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to invalidate the
Affordable Health Care Act on the basis that it is unconstitutional.
Nevertheless,
there is no intellectually honest argument to be made that the president
can pick and choose which laws to enforce based on his personal
preferences. And it is a profound violation of the Constitution
for the president to engage in rewriting the laws. That's what he
has done here. He has rewritten federal law.
Only Congress
can lay down specifics such as in order to avoid deportation and
qualify for a two-year work visa, one must have entered the U.S.
prior to age 16 and possess a valid American high school diploma
or be a military veteran, as the president now requires. By altering
the law in this manner – by constructing the requirements the government
will impose – the president has violated his oath to enforce the
laws as they are written. His second responsibility in the Constitution
(the first is to defend the Constitution) is to enforce federal
laws as Congress has written them – hence the employment of the
word "faithfully" in the Constitution – not as he wishes them to
be.
Congress should
have enacted years ago what the president is now doing on his own,
because it is unjust to punish children for the behavior of their
parents, and it is unjust to restrict freedom based on the place
of birth. But this can be remedied only by Congress. If the president
can rewrite federal laws that he doesn't like, there is no limit
to his power. Then, he will not be a president. He will be a king.
Reprinted
with the author's permission.
June 21, 2012
Andrew P.
Napolitano [send
him mail], a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey,
is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano
has written six books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent
is It
Is Dangerous To Be Right When the Government Is Wrong: The Case
for Personal Freedom. To find out more about Judge Napolitano
and to read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit creators.com.
Copyright
© 2012 Andrew P. Napolitano
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