When does a statute grant powers to the President as opposed to other officials? Prominent theories of presidential power argue or assume that any statute granting authority to an executive officer also implicitly confers that authority upon the President. This Article challenges that statutory construction. It argues that the President has statutory authority to direct the administration of the laws only under statutes which grant to the President in name. Congress\u27s enduring practice of granting power to executive officers subject to express conditions of presidential control supports a strong negative inference that the President has no directive authority when a statute grants authority to an executive officer without any mention of ...
Proponents of the “unitary executive” theory hold that “all federal officers exercising executive po...
This Essay introduces the President’s approval power as it was originally understood in the United S...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87089/1/j.1741-5705.2011.03920.x.pd
Congress has granted the President enormous power. This is well known, but how we are to assess the...
This Article argues that longstanding doctrines that exclude judicial review of the determinations o...
American public law has no answer to the question of how a court should evaluate the president's ass...
In this short symposium contribution, I attempt first to add some further evidence on the interpreti...
Some constitutional theorists defend unbounded executive power to respond to emergencies or expansiv...
As with Congress and the judiciary, presidents have access to powers expressly stated in the Constit...
Justice Jackson’s concurring opinion in The Steel Seizure Case has taken on iconic status among lega...
This Article argues that longstanding doctrines that exclude judicial review of the determinations o...
The continuing debate over the President’s directive authority is but one of the many separation-of-...
Direct presidential control of executive agencies is a contentious issue in administrative law. This...
It is the purpose of this paper to discuss, with some effort at systematic classification the power...
The executive branch is often called upon to assess how a particular statute it is charged to admini...
Proponents of the “unitary executive” theory hold that “all federal officers exercising executive po...
This Essay introduces the President’s approval power as it was originally understood in the United S...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87089/1/j.1741-5705.2011.03920.x.pd
Congress has granted the President enormous power. This is well known, but how we are to assess the...
This Article argues that longstanding doctrines that exclude judicial review of the determinations o...
American public law has no answer to the question of how a court should evaluate the president's ass...
In this short symposium contribution, I attempt first to add some further evidence on the interpreti...
Some constitutional theorists defend unbounded executive power to respond to emergencies or expansiv...
As with Congress and the judiciary, presidents have access to powers expressly stated in the Constit...
Justice Jackson’s concurring opinion in The Steel Seizure Case has taken on iconic status among lega...
This Article argues that longstanding doctrines that exclude judicial review of the determinations o...
The continuing debate over the President’s directive authority is but one of the many separation-of-...
Direct presidential control of executive agencies is a contentious issue in administrative law. This...
It is the purpose of this paper to discuss, with some effort at systematic classification the power...
The executive branch is often called upon to assess how a particular statute it is charged to admini...
Proponents of the “unitary executive” theory hold that “all federal officers exercising executive po...
This Essay introduces the President’s approval power as it was originally understood in the United S...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87089/1/j.1741-5705.2011.03920.x.pd