In September, a great deal of the debate over the potential for U.S. intervention in Syria centered on President Barack Obama’s ability to take action without consulting Congress. While many argued that this consultation was necessary, modern presidencies have been characterised by a lack of constraints where national security is concerned. Richard Moe traces the President’s current war powers back to the re-election of President Franklin D. Roosevelt for a third term in 1940. He writes that FDR’s leadership at the onset of World War II led to an expansion of the President’s war powers that continued for the following seven decades
Before the United States Constitution was ratified there was much debate about what war powers the e...
The decade after 2001 saw US military interventions in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya, with the relativ...
With the recent government shutdown and his expansion of the program of drone strikes in the Middle ...
With the arrival of a new American president in 2009, the power and constitutional authority of the ...
During President Barack Obama’s first term in office, the United States expanded its military presen...
The struggle between the President and the Congress over the power to control the use of military fo...
The U.S. Constitution vests the president with “executive power” and provides that “The President sh...
How powerful is the President of the United States in the arena of foreign policy? This question has...
Occasionally, a candidate for the White House will deliver a penetrating critique of presidential as...
During the 2008 presidential campaign, the main criticism against Barack Obama was that he was too g...
President Barack Obama has made it clear that FDR is one of his key role models. The appeal is under...
Even before the framing of the Constitution, the Framers feared an executive power that would grow t...
Jason MycoffPresident Obama???s use of unilateral executive power during his presidency has evoked ...
In late August 2013, after Syrian civilians were horrifically attacked with sarin gas, President Bar...
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.'s Imperial Presidency (1973) and Richard Neustadt's Presidential Powers (196...
Before the United States Constitution was ratified there was much debate about what war powers the e...
The decade after 2001 saw US military interventions in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya, with the relativ...
With the recent government shutdown and his expansion of the program of drone strikes in the Middle ...
With the arrival of a new American president in 2009, the power and constitutional authority of the ...
During President Barack Obama’s first term in office, the United States expanded its military presen...
The struggle between the President and the Congress over the power to control the use of military fo...
The U.S. Constitution vests the president with “executive power” and provides that “The President sh...
How powerful is the President of the United States in the arena of foreign policy? This question has...
Occasionally, a candidate for the White House will deliver a penetrating critique of presidential as...
During the 2008 presidential campaign, the main criticism against Barack Obama was that he was too g...
President Barack Obama has made it clear that FDR is one of his key role models. The appeal is under...
Even before the framing of the Constitution, the Framers feared an executive power that would grow t...
Jason MycoffPresident Obama???s use of unilateral executive power during his presidency has evoked ...
In late August 2013, after Syrian civilians were horrifically attacked with sarin gas, President Bar...
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.'s Imperial Presidency (1973) and Richard Neustadt's Presidential Powers (196...
Before the United States Constitution was ratified there was much debate about what war powers the e...
The decade after 2001 saw US military interventions in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya, with the relativ...
With the recent government shutdown and his expansion of the program of drone strikes in the Middle ...