In a few months, "We the People" will go to the polls and elect the electors who will elect (or, at least, have an opportunity to elect) the next President of the United States. Short of an act of God or an act of war, it is more likely than not that the next President will be a sitting United States Senator. The expectation is that a Senator/President-elect resigns his or her legislative seat some time prior taking the presidential oath of office. It is widely believed in large and influential academic circles and among the educated public generally that the Constitution requires this result by expressly precluding joint simultaneous Legislative-Executive Branch office holding. I respectfully dissent. I believe the conventional view is ...
The United States Constitution grants to the Senate the duty to provide its “advice and consent” to ...
The growth of federal executive power to a magnitude not foreseen at the Constitution\u27s adoption ...
One of the most significant structural elements of the United States Constitution divides the politi...
In a few months, "We the People" will go to the polls and elect the electors who will elect (or, at ...
In a few months, "We the People" will go to the polls and elect the electors who will elect (or, at ...
In a few months, We the People will go to the polls and elect the electors who will elect (or, at le...
In this Article, Mr. Seth Barrett Tillman challenges the traditional interpretation of the Incompati...
Professor Saikrishna Bangalore Prakash responds to Mr. Seth Barret Tillman\u27s Article and defends ...
This article is a response to Professor Josh Chafetz's Impeachment & Assassination, Minnesota Law Re...
I argue that as a simple straight forward textual matter the Senate majority can terminate a preside...
In an article in another journal, Professor Josh Chafetz wrote: “[I]mpeachment maintains the link be...
This article replies to Professor Kalt's response to my opening article, "Senate Termination of Pres...
This paper discusses the scope of the Constitution’s Disqualification Clause (Article I, Section 3, ...
There currently exists no uniform method for filling vacancies in the United States Senate, leaving ...
Since the November 1994 election, Speaker Newt Gingrich has sparked controversy with remarks on a br...
The United States Constitution grants to the Senate the duty to provide its “advice and consent” to ...
The growth of federal executive power to a magnitude not foreseen at the Constitution\u27s adoption ...
One of the most significant structural elements of the United States Constitution divides the politi...
In a few months, "We the People" will go to the polls and elect the electors who will elect (or, at ...
In a few months, "We the People" will go to the polls and elect the electors who will elect (or, at ...
In a few months, We the People will go to the polls and elect the electors who will elect (or, at le...
In this Article, Mr. Seth Barrett Tillman challenges the traditional interpretation of the Incompati...
Professor Saikrishna Bangalore Prakash responds to Mr. Seth Barret Tillman\u27s Article and defends ...
This article is a response to Professor Josh Chafetz's Impeachment & Assassination, Minnesota Law Re...
I argue that as a simple straight forward textual matter the Senate majority can terminate a preside...
In an article in another journal, Professor Josh Chafetz wrote: “[I]mpeachment maintains the link be...
This article replies to Professor Kalt's response to my opening article, "Senate Termination of Pres...
This paper discusses the scope of the Constitution’s Disqualification Clause (Article I, Section 3, ...
There currently exists no uniform method for filling vacancies in the United States Senate, leaving ...
Since the November 1994 election, Speaker Newt Gingrich has sparked controversy with remarks on a br...
The United States Constitution grants to the Senate the duty to provide its “advice and consent” to ...
The growth of federal executive power to a magnitude not foreseen at the Constitution\u27s adoption ...
One of the most significant structural elements of the United States Constitution divides the politi...