Executive Orders
excerpted from the book
Inside the Shadow Government
National Emergencies and
the Cult of Secrecy
by Harry Helms
Feral House, 2003, paper
p15
The Communications Act of 1934 created the Federal Communications
Commission and is the basic law governing electronic communications
in the United States. Here is section 606(c) of the Act: "Upon
proclamation by the President that there exists war or a threat
of war or a state of public peril or disaster or other national
emergency, or in order to preserve the neutrality of the United
States, the President may suspend or amend, for such time as he
may see fit, the rules and regulations applicable to any or all
stations within the jurisdiction of the United States as prescribed
by the Commission, and may cause the closing of any station for
radio communication and the removal therefrom of its apparatus
and equipment, or he may authorize the use or control of any such
station and/or its apparatus and equipment by any department of
the Government under such regulations as he may prescribe, upon
just compensation to the owners."
Over the years, presidents have accumulated
enormous powers to deal with national emergencies. Some of these
powers, like those authorized in Section 606(c) of the Communications
Act, have been granted ... by Congress. Others, like the detention
of Japanese-American citizens by Executive Order 9066, have been,
in effect, appropriated by various presidents through the issuance
of executive orders justified by a national emergency... Using
executive orders, presidents have suspended the constitutional
right to a writ of habeas corpus, spent money without Congressional
authorization, created entirely new federal agencies, forced banks
to close, demonetized gold, seized mines, and control wages and
prices.
Just what is a "national emergency"?
That term does not appear in the Constitution, nor does it have
a precise legal definition. In practice, a national emergency
is whatever the president deems to be a national emergency. The
result has been that the United States has been in an almost continual
state of national emergency since March 6, 1933, when President
Franklin Roosevelt declared a state of national emergency to deal
with the Great Depression. When President George W. Bush was inaugurated
in January, 2001, he inherited thirteen national emergencies declared
by his predecessors.
p16
... the National Security Act of 1947 ... contained sweeping ...
new powers for the president. Various continuing national emergencies
brought about the issuance of ever more expansive executive orders.
New systems of classification and official secrecy (many springing
directly from the National Security Act of 1947) resulted in increasing
government secrecy; eventually billions of dollars in annual federal
spending would be kept secret from all but a few members of Congress.
Secret plans were drafted for the U.S. military to take over most
of the functions of civilian government in case of a national
emergency. A huge secret infrastructure was built to protect and
shelter the president and other key government leaders in case
of a nuclear attack.
Many have never heard of these measures.
Rather than have a complete and open debate about the new perils
facing constitutional government after World War II, and the proposing
of constitutional amendments to deal with those dangers, the whole
matter was largely handled off the books. There were several reasons
for this, but the strongest seems to have been an obsessive concern
for a vaguely defined "national security."
p17
In the aftermath of World War II, national leaders-civilian and
military alike-seem to have developed a strong distrust of the
American people. Perhaps it was the paranoia over real and imagined
spies that culminated in the Rosenberg trials and McCarthy hearings
of the 1950s. Maybe it was a paternalistic belief that the will
and morale of the American people would collapse if they had to
ponder the horrific implications of a sudden nuclear attack. Or
perhaps, more sinisterly, national leaders began to view the constitutional
rights of Americans as placing the United States at a serious
disadvantage in case of any conflict with the Soviet Union and
its allies. Regardless of the reason(s), a consensus developed
that plans for handling future national emergencies were not only
necessary but also best kept secret from the public.
p18
The Shadow Government is nothing new and is strictly bipartisan.
Its roots stretch back to the presidencies of Abraham Lincoln,
Woodrow Wilson, and Franklin Roosevelt; its later architects include
John Kennedy, Jimmy Carter, and Ronald Reagan. The Shadow Government
includes secret facilities, presidential orders that create law
without Congressional approval, classified projects and budgets,
and numerous obscure provisions of various laws that give the
president awesome powers in case of national emergency. Many elements
of the Shadow Government might seem to violate the U.S. Constitution,
but several of those same elements-such as the detention for any
length of time of persons not charged with any crime-have been
upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. Much of the Shadow Government
is unknown and classified; each year, Congress approves money
for various projects whose very existence is unknown to all but
a handful of Congressional leaders (and even those Congressional
leaders know only the most cursory details of those projects and
exercise virtually no oversight).
The Shadow Government is not controlled
by any secret cabal- indeed, it is uncertain whether anyone or
anything controls it. Wrapped in secrecy, it has been able to
grow and mutate without scrutiny or accountability; perhaps even
the president is unaware of its scope.
p21
One of President George W. Bush's responses to the September 11
attacks was the creation on October 8, 2001 of the Office of Homeland
Security and the Homeland Security Council. The Office's mission
is "to develop and coordinate the implementation of a comprehensive
national strategy to secure the United States from terrorist threats
or attacks." Its functions include coordinating the collection
and analysis of terrorist threats against the United States, monitoring
the activities of terrorists and terrorist groups within the United
States, preparing responses to terrorist threats and attacks,
ensuring protection of critical national infrastructure, coordinating
recovery efforts, and planning Continuity of Government I (COG)
programs...
Article I, Section 1 of the United States
Constitution says, " Legislative Powers granted herein shall
be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist
of a Senate and House of Representatives." But no member
of Congress voted to create the Office of Homeland Security. So
how did it come into being?
Although not mentioned in the Constitution,
executive orders issued by the president have the same legal effect
as laws passed by Congress. In effect, then, they allow the president
to legislate independently of | Congress. For example, Lincoln's
Emancipation Proclamation was an executive order, as was his suspension
of habeas corpus during the Civil War. Franklin Roosevelt used
executive orders in 1933 to close all American banks and force
citizens to turn in their gold coins and, in 1942, to intern American
citizens of Japanese descent for the duration of World War II.
In 1951, Harry Truman used an executive order to seize strikethreatened
steel mills to prevent shortages that would endanger "national
security." Richard Nixon used executive orders to impose
wage and price controls in 1971. The Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) was created not by Congress, but by an executive
order of Jimmy Carter. George W. Bush's Executive Order 13228
created the Office of Homeland Security.
WHAT IS AN EXECUTIVE ORDER?
Article II of the United States Constitution
defines the powers of the president. Accustomed as we are today
to the impression that the president is the United States government,
the seemingly weak powers given to him by the Constitution may
come as a shock. Section 1 of Article II gives the president a
vaguely defined "executive authority"-the authority
to carry out the laws passed by Congress and as interpreted by
the courts-and Section 3 of Article II charges him to "take
Care that the Laws be faithfully executed." Section 2 of
Article II gives him command of the armed forces. Many historians
and constitutional scholars have argued that the intent of making
the president commander in chief was not to give him wide-ranging
powers but to ensure civilian control of the armed forces and
prevent military leaders opposing the civilian government, as
had happened in Europe.
In order to "take Care that the Law
be faithfully executed," the president must order members
of the executive branch to implement laws and act in ways that
conform to the law. While the Constitution is silent on the president's
authority to issue such orders, Supreme Court rulings have declared
the president has implied powers to issue those orders to the
executive branch necessary to discharge his constitutional responsibility
to execute the law faithfully.
p24
Thirty days after publication, executive orders become as binding
upon all affected parties as a law passed by Congress. Congress
can overturn an executive order in the same way it can repeal
a law, but by far the most common Congressional action is to approve
retroactively the actions taken under executive orders. Federal
courts also can overturn executive orders but rarely do.
p25
Congress has delegated so much authority to the president over
I the years that determining the exact scope of presidential discretion
is almost impossible. But it is clear that an astonishing amount
of authority has been transferred to the president, especially
in cases of "national `, emergency." ... the president
has the authority to seize any radio transmitting equipment, including
cell phones. Here again is the relevant text, section 606(c),
of the Communications Act of 1934:
Upon proclamation by the President that
there exists war or a threat of war or a state of public peril
or disaster or other national emergency, or in order to preserve
the neutrality of the United States, the President. . . may suspend
or amend, for such time as he sees fit, the rules and regulations
applicable to all stations. . . within the jurisdiction of the
United States as prescribed by the Commission, and may cause the
closing of any station for radio communication. . . and the removal
of its apparatus and equipment, or he may authorize the use or
control of any such station. . . and/or its apparatus and equipment
by any department of the Government under such regulations as
he may prescribe, upon just compensation to the owners.
That short section conveys breathtaking
authority to the president in the event of a national emergency,
authorizing him to take control of all radio and television stations
in the United States, satellite communications, hobby radio stations
such as ham radio and CB, and even pagers and cell phones-all
fall under the legal definition of "radio communication."
And there are similar "emergency" provisions, hidden
in a multitude of laws enacted by Congress over the past several
decades, which can be activated if the president declares a national
emergency.
A trend in executive orders after World
War II is to be as vague as possible in citing the legal basis
for the order. Before World War II, presidents commonly cited
a specific piece of legislation or section of the Constitution
as justification for an order. Today, such justifications as "the
authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the
laws of the United States" are common, making it difficult
or impossible to ascertain whether the order has a valid legal
basis.
p28
Lincoln's most controversial and wide-ranging action was his suspension
of the right to a writ of habeas corpus, which prevents a person
being arrested and held unless formally charged with a crime and
brought to trial. Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution reads,
"The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be
suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public
Safety may require it." The inclusion of this right in the
main body of the Constitution indicates its importance to the
framers when compared with others (such as the rights to freedom
of speech and freedom of religion) spelled out in the Bill of
Rights as afterthoughts. This reflects the colonists' long and
unhappy experience with English kings who suspended this right
whenever they wanted to keep opponents and dissenters behind bars
indefinitely.
Lincoln revoked the right to a writ of
habeas corpus on April 21, 1861, in the following order to Winfield
Scott, then General-in-Chief of the Army: "You are engaged
in suppressing an insurrection against the laws of the United
States. If at any point on or in the vicinity of the military
line which is now used between the city of Philadelphia via Perryville,
Annapolis City and Annapolis Junction you find resistance which
renders it necessary to suspend the writ of habeas corpus for
the public safety, you personally or through the officer in command
at the point where the resistance occurs are authorized to suspend
the writ." This order gave Lincoln and his military commanders
unlimited powers to arrest and detain anyone they wanted; persons
detained had, as a practical matter, no legal rights.
The immediate targets of Lincoln's order
were not, as the order implied, rebellious Southerners, but the
state legislature of Maryland. Several members were known Southern
sympathizers, and there was fear that Maryland might also vote
to secede. The fear was justified; the legislature had rejected
Lincoln's April 15 order for men from its state militia, calling
it unconstitutional. After Lincoln's order of April 27, the first
arrests included thirty-one of the legislators along with the
mayor of Baltimore and a congressman from the state. The governor
of Maryland resigned under threat of arrest, and the Army (presumably
with Lincoln's approval) installed a pro-union replacement for
him for the rest of the Civil War. Lincoln later extended the
order suspending the writ of habeas corpus to the entire United
States; its principal targets were not Confederate saboteurs or
spies but northerners who opposed the war or the draft (especially
newspaper editors and writers).
The most notorious target of Lincoln's
order was Clement Vallandigham, a congressman from Ohio who opposed
the war and called for a negotiated end to it. He was defeated
for re-election in 1862. On May 1, 1863, he made a speech in Mount
Vernon, Ohio against "the wicked, cruel, and unnecessary
war," charging that "the men in power are attempting
to establish a despotism in this country, more cruel and more
Oppressive than ever existed before." A few days later, soldiers
under the command of General Ambrose Burnside raided Vallandigham's
farm in the middle of the night, taking him prisoner and charging
him with declaring sympathies for the enemy." Instead of
being tried in a civilian court, Vallandigham was tried before
a military tribunal and sentenced to prison for the remainder
of the war. Lincoln commuted his sentence, and-in a move that
had no legal foundation or precedent in American jurisprudence-ordered
him banished to the Confederacy. Vallandigham managed to make
his way to Canada, and in 1864 received the Democratic nomination
for governor of Ohio and almost won. (He is said to be the inspiration
for Edward Everett Hale's story "The Man Without a Country.")
Lincoln's suspension of the writ of habeas
corpus eventually resulted in his issuing an arrest order for
the chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. In May 1861 John
Merryman was arrested by U.S. troops at his farm near Cockeysville,
Maryland. A Southern sympathizer, Merryman was implicated in a
plot to burn railroad bridges in Maryland. He was taken to Fort
McHenry and held without charge. Roger B. Taney, Chief Justice
of the U.S. Supreme Court, was also the sitting federal circuit
court judge for the district that included Maryland. He issued
a writ of habeas corpus to General George Cadwalader directing
that Merryman be either formally charged or released. Using President
Lincoln's order as his authority, Cadwalader refused. Taney then
found Cadwalader in contempt of court. In his ruling, ex parte
Merryman, Taney made the telling argument that the power to suspend
habeas corpus is part of Article I of the Constitution, which
enumerates the powers and responsibilities of Congress. Article
II, which defines the powers and duties of the president, makes
no mention of it. As Taney wrote, "A state of rebellion is
the only time when Congress could declare the writ removed. .
. This Article is devoted to the legislative department of the
United States, and has not the slightest reference to the executive
branch."
Lincoln, enraged by Taney's ruling, ordered
General Cadwalader and other military leaders to ignore it. Taney
briefly considered organizing a posse of federal marshals to arrest
Cadwalader, but decided against this to avoid massive bloodshed.
But Lincoln, suspecting that Taney harbored sympathies for the
Confederacy, ordered Federal Marshal Ward Hill Lamon to arrest
him. Lamon had misgivings about trying to arrest the nation's
top judge, and conveyed those doubts to Lincoln. In his diary,
Lamon wrote that Lincoln told him to use his own discretion about
making the arrest until he received orders to the contrary. Lamon
decided not to arrest Taney until ordered to do so, and Lincoln
did not pursue the matter.
Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus
drew international attention. A British publication, Macmillan
Magazine, editorialized in 1862 that "there is no Parliamentary
(congressional) authority whatever for what has been done. It
has simply been done on Mr. Lincoln's fiat. At his simple bidding,
acting by no authority but his own pleasure, in plain defiance
of the provisions of the Constitution, the Habeas Corpus Act has
been suspended, the press muzzled, and judges prevented by armed
men from enforcing on the citizens' behalf the laws to which they
and the President alike have sworn."
Lincoln was not rebuked for his actions
until after his death. In 1866, the Supreme Court ruled in ex
parte Milligan that it was unconstitutional to suspend the right
to a writ of habeas corpus or to establish a system of military
detentions and trials anywhere civil courts were still functioning.
This Court undermined this decision, however, when it upheld President
Franklin Roosevelt's Executive Order 9066 authorizing internment
of Japanese Americans during World War II.
Lincoln's best known executive order is
the Emancipation Proclamation, issued on January 1, 1863...
p34
THE EXECUTIVE ORDERS OF FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT
The Democratic Party had a majority of
334 to 89 in the House of Representatives and 75 to 17 in the
Senate when Franklin Roosevelt was inaugurated, and the margin
of his victory indicated widespread public support for far-reaching
measures to fight the Great Depression. But the new president
made it clear in his March 4, 1933 inaugural address that he wanted
more power:
It is to be hoped that the normal balance
of executive and legislative authority may be wholly adequate
to meet the unprecedented task before us. But it may be that an
unprecedented demand and need for action may call for temporary
departure from that normal balance of public procedure. I am prepared
under my constitutional duty to recommend the measures that a
stricken nation in the midst of a stricken world may require.
But in the event that Congress shall fail to take one of these
two courses, and in the event that the national emergency is still
critical, I shall not evade the clear course of duty that will
then confront me. I shall ask the Congress for the one remaining
instrument to meet the crisis-broad executive power to wage a
war against the emergency, as great as the power that would be
given to me if we were in fact invaded by a foreign foe.
That passage neatly summarizes the attitude
toward presidential power and its exercise through executive orders
that Franklin Roosevelt repeatedly displayed throughout his presidency.
Not even Lincoln legislated (some would say "dictated")
through executive orders as Franklin Roosevelt did. Much of the
potential for presidential abuse of executive orders arises directly
from precedents set by Roosevelt during I his twelve years in
the White House.
p37
But none of Roosevelt's other executive orders equaled the impact
of Executive Order 9066. No other better illustrates the awesome
power of executive orders, their potential for abuse, and how
seemingly innocuous text can have fearsome applications.
EXECUTIVE ORDER 9066
Appendix A reproduces Executive Order
9066, issued on February 19, 1942. Its language gives little reason
to suspect that it would entail the internment of over 110,000
persons of Japanese descent, including 77,000 American citizens,
for the duration of World War II. That is no accident; Executive
Order 9066 was expressed vaguely to avoid provoking organized
resistance. And, in the now traditional pattern of executive orders,
Congress later passed legislation validating it.
Executive Order 9066 originated in the
rabid anti-Japanese hysteria that followed the bombing of Pearl
Harbor. In the first few days following the attack, General John
L. DeWitt, commander of the Western Defense Command, sent a report
to President Roosevelt accusing Japanese Americans of engaging
in espionage and disloyal conduct. His suspicion of Japanese Americans
was purely racist, and his report the work of a bewildered mind;
he took the total lack of evidence of such JapaneseAmerican disloyalty
or sabotage as proof of their guilt. In DeWitt's convoluted words:
"[t]he Japanese race is an enemy race and while many second
and third generation Japanese born on United States soil, possessed
of United States citizenship, have become 'Americanized,' the
racial strains are undiluted. . . The very fact that no sabotage
has taken place to date is a disturbing and confirming indication
that such action will be taken." Newspapers also did their
part to feed mass racist hysteria. The Los Angeles Times editorialized,
"[a] viper is nonetheless a viper wherever the egg is hatched,
so a Japanese American-born of Japanese parents- grows up to be
a Japanese, not an American."
The implementation of Executive Order
9066 was draconian. Posters headlined "INSTRUCTIONS TO ALL
PERSONS OF JAPANESE ANCESTRY" appeared in Los Angeles, San
Francisco, and other cities with large Japanese-American populations,
ordering Japanese Americans to report to "control stations."
They were forbidden more than two suitcases per person, and permitted
only such necessities as clothing, toiletries, and food. Those
who reported to the control centers were then relocated to various
internment camps. The most famous of these was Manzanar, located
on Highway 395 along the eastern slopes of California's Sierra
Nevada Mountains. Nine other camps were scattered through the
western United States. Most Japanese Americans interned at the
various camps did not have time to close their businesses, store
their property, or otherwise settle their affairs. As a result,
most internees incurred significant financial losses.
The sole criterion for internment under
Executive Order 9066 was race. Most affected Japanese Americans
were born in the United States and had never been to Japan. Even
Japanese Americans who had been adopted and raised by white families-and
who could not speak or write a word of Japanese-were swept up
by Roosevelt's order.
While it did not single out Japanese Americans
explicitly, in practice it applied only to them. German and Italian
nationals were interned during World War II, but never any German-American
or Italian-American citizens. If President Roosevelt and General
DeWitt had any reason for their apparent belief that German Americans
and Italian Americans were less prone to disloyalty than Japanese
Americans, it must have been simple racism.
p39
Franklin Roosevelt was president for a little over twelve years.
that time, he issued 3,723 executive orders, a figure greater
than the total issued by all succeeding presidents through the
end of the Clinton administration.
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