CONSTITUTIONAL TIPPING POINT

It’s now emperors act. They change laws or pass executive orders whenever they feel like it. They order drone strikes, and threaten foreign leaders and sovereign nations at will. They spy on everyone, censor information, and control the media. It’s all happening here folks, and the Congress is finally getting around to doing something about it. Under normal circumstances, such a leader would be impeached, but not our first (half) black president. If his actions stand, this country is no longer a democracy, and no longer a representative government, it is a dictatorship.

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‘The Imperial Presidency’

House holds hearing on executive overreach

BY: Elizabeth Harrington

http://freebeacon.com/the-imperial-presidency/
February 26, 2014 5:42 pm

Members of Congress and constitutional law experts testified before the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, warning that the legislative branch is in danger of ceding its power in the face of an “imperial presidency.”

The hearing, “Enforcing the President’s Constitutional Duty to Faithfully Execute the Laws,” focused on the multiple areas President Barack Obama has bypassed Congress, ranging from healthcare and immigration to marriage and welfare rules.

Jonathan Turley, Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University, testified that the expansion of executive power is happening so fast that America is at a “constitutional tipping point.”

My view [is] that the president, has in fact, exceeded his authority in a way that is creating a destabilizing influence in a three branch system,” he said. “I want to emphasize, of course, this problem didn’t begin with President Obama, I was critical of his predecessor President Bush as well, but the rate at which executive power has been concentrated in our system is accelerating. And frankly, I am very alarmed by the implications of that aggregation of power.”

What also alarms me, however, is that the two other branches appear not just simply passive, but inert in the face of this concentration of authority,” Turley said.

While Turley agrees with many of Obama’s policy positions, he steadfastly opposes the method he goes about enforcing them.

“The fact that I happen to think the president is right on many of these policies does not alter the fact that I believe the means he is doing [it] is wrong, and that this can be a dangerous change in our system,” he said. “And our system is changing in a very fundamental way. And it’s changing without a whimper of regret or opposition.”

Elizabeth Price Foley, a law professor at Florida International University College of Law, agreed, warning that Congress is in danger of becoming “superfluous.”

“Situations like this, these benevolent suspensions as they get more and more frequent and more and more aggressive, they’re eroding our citizens’ respect for the rule of law,” she said. “We are a country of law and not men. It’s going to render Congress superfluous.”

Foley said Congress is not able to tackle meaningful legislation out of fear that Obama would “simply benevolently suspend portions of the law he doesn’t like.”

If you want to stay relevant as an institution, I would suggest that you not stand idly by and let the president take your power away,” she said.

Panelists and members of Congress dismissed the idea of impeachment, and instead focused on lawsuits to challenge the constitutionality of the president’s unilateral moves.

Four House members testified on the first panel during the hearing to highlight legislation they have sponsored to thwart the administration’s executive overreach.

Impeachment would “surely be extremely divisive within the Congress and the nation generally, and would divert the attention of Congress from other important issues of the day,” said Rep. Jim Gerlach (R., Pa.).

Gerlach, who testified before the committee, introduced H.R. 3857, the “Enforce the Take Care Clause Act,” which would expedite the review and injunction process for federal courts to challenge executive actions. Such a challenge would have to pass a supermajority in both chambers in order to be fast-tracked.

Given the growing number of examples where this President has clearly failed to faithfully execute all laws, I believe it is time for Congress to put in place a procedure for a fast-track, independent review of those executive actions,” he said.

Gerlach said he proposed the bill due to Obama’s repeated alterations to his signature law, the Affordable Care Act.

The ACA has been revised, altered and effectively rewritten by the president and his administration 23 times since July,” he said.

“When we have these constant changes at the president’s whim think about what that does to businesses’ planning capabilities and hiring capabilities and their expansion capabilities,” Rep. Tom Rice (R., S.C.) said. “We shouldn’t wonder why our economy is struggling.”

Rice has proposed the “Stop This Overreaching Presidency (STOP) Resolution” as a remedy. The resolution, which has 114 cosponsors, would direct the House to file lawsuits against four of the president’s unilateral actions, including the employer mandate delay in Obamacare and deferred action program for illegal immigrants.

Turley said Congress must take action to regain their power as the “thumping heart of our system.”

“The fact is, we’re stuck with each other,” Turley said. “Whether we like it or not in a system of shared powers. For better or worse we may deadlock, we maybe despise each other. The framers foresaw such periods, they lived in such a period.”

 

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10 Comments
Donna
Donna
February 27, 2014 6:20 am

The door is slowly shutting for moving out of the country.The Dems are making it increasingly harder- punitive to move your money out as well.My husband and I have discussed it.It always ends the same, where would one go?If things got real bad-civil war.We have discussed walking away from everything or stay and stand up for this country. Several people I know bring up Hitler like resemblance in his actions to Obama.Before the Jews were rounded up for concentration camps,there were some that saw the writing on the wall- sewed their gold to the hems of their cloths and left Germany.Of course we know how it ended for the ones that said it would blow over

boondoggle
boondoggle
February 27, 2014 6:22 am

reminds me of the story of why dogs sniff each others assholes

there was a great gathering of dogs
to reduce the smell in polite company the dogs each hung their asshole at the door
someone pulls the fire alarm
in a mad rush, each dog just grabs any old asshole on the way out of the building
so now all dogs are in a permanent hunt for their own asshole

congress is full of assholes
and they have checked their balls at the door

TC
TC
February 27, 2014 7:56 am

Horseshit! Those fucking pantywaists in Congress aren’t going to do JACK SHIT about Emperor O. They are totally complicit in the scam, so why would they?

Persnickety
Persnickety
February 27, 2014 9:21 am

Sounds like a gathering of catty eunuchs to me.

Any congressman who had balls and/or a spine would be filing articles of impeachment.

Stucky
Stucky
February 27, 2014 9:59 am

“House holds hearing on executive overreach” ———– from the article

SELF SERVING BULLSHIT !!!

This is why I post pictures. Here’s EVERYTHING you need to know about that.

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Econman
Econman
February 27, 2014 10:42 am

The NSA probably has evidence on the criminals, so if they make a fuss, the evidence becomes public.

Look at Justice Roberts on Obombercare, his decision all of a sudden changed.

Billy
Billy
February 27, 2014 11:17 am

“Impeachment would “surely be extremely divisive within the Congress and the nation generally, and would divert the attention of Congress from other important issues of the day,” said Rep. Jim Gerlach (R., Pa.).”

Well NO SHIT Jim!

Couple things –

I find it darkly hilarious that Congress, which usurped power from the States, the Commonwealths and the people themselves, are now BAWWing and crying about having their usurped power usurped by the Executive… boo fuckin’ hoo, ya bastards. What did you THINK was gonna fucking happen? Karma, fate, whatever you want to call her – she’s a cold hearted bitch, and I’m loving every fucking MINUTE of this! BAHHH-HAHAHAHAHAH!!!

Second thing is what old Jimmy Boy touched on – Impeachment being “extremely divisive”..

Where’s Captain Obvious when you need him?

[img]https://sp2.yimg.com/ib/th?id=HN.608012363802740042&pid=15.1[/img]

Those eunuchs in Congress won’t do SHIT because the first thing that the negroes will say is “DAT BEEZ RAYCISS AN SHEEIT!!”…. doesn’t matter if Obongo is guilty as hell.. the negroes will side with him because they view him as a fellow negroe, and Congress is still afraid of their Word of Power – “Rayciss” – which will stick, true or not. Which means they’re out of a job, come election time…

IF impeachment actually moves forward, there will be nationwide riots.. mass arson, looting, shootings, murder, probably another march on the Mall (where 13 negroes will miss work. The rest have nothing better to do…), etc, etc… and instead of getting out the fucking bat and issuing a SMACKDOWN, Congress will grovel and snivel and apologize all over itself in an orgy of self-flagulation in order to appease the fucking negroes…

Feh… and they think some shitty “lawsuit” is gonna do anything? Pfft… lawsuits take YEARS to resolve… what we need is ACTION, and right the fuck NOW!

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
February 27, 2014 5:47 pm

Isn’t Turley the guy who said Snowden should be shot because he’s a traitor? If he doesn’t get the unconstitutionality of the NSA spying and why Snowden called the bastards out, why should we listen to him about anything else? And for the record, Snowden is a patriot and hero.
Obama should have been impeached early on when he said “we’re looking forward, not backward” in regards to trying “W”, Cheney, Rumsfeld, et al for war crimes. He should definitely be impeached and convicted now.

Persnickety
Persnickety
February 28, 2014 10:21 am

@westie: The professor Jonathan Turley quoted here is NOT the guy who said Snowden should be shot (or whatever). I vaguely remember some politician with the name Turley or something similar, but it’s not the same guy.