In this Dialogue, constitutional pundits Confident and Doubtful debate the Line Item Veto Act of 1996. They wrangle about the application of the Article I, 7 process to the Act, the relevance of the legislative bargaining process to its constitutionality, and the merits of formalism and functionalism. As Confident becomes No-Longer-So-Confident, Doubtful proposes a way to reconcile the seemingly irreconcilable formalist and functionalist Supreme Court decisions. Marshalling the constitutional text for support, Doubtful argues that the Court should take a checks and balances approach to congressional delegations of power to the executive, while maintaining a rigorous separation of powers review, of Article I powers. At the time of the wr...
This report discusses the Legislative Line Item Veto and its constitutional issues and the President...
Supreme Court Justices, in their role as interpreters of the Constitution, have often determined pub...
I am going to discuss only one case, the line item veto case. However, I thought I would use it as ...
In this Dialogue, constitutional pundits Confident and Doubtuful debate the Line Item Veto Act of 19...
The Supreme Court of the United States refused to rule on whether the Line Item Veto Act of 1996 vio...
For over a century, Presidents, regardless of their political affiliations, have sought the authorit...
This comment will explore the grounds upon which the line item veto might be constitutionally upheld...
The Supreme Court, in Chadha v. Immigration & Naturalization Service, characterized a legislative ve...
Contemporary debates about state constitutional law have concentrated on the role of state constitut...
I am delighted to have been given the opportunity to comment on Judge Breyer\u27s proposal for a fas...
This Article analyzes the scope of presidential veto power. The author reviews the history and debat...
Article I, Section 7 of the Constitution creates a structure that makes it difficult to enact federa...
Examining the Supreme Court's recent decisions in the legislative veto case, Professor Strauss stres...
Judicial rulemaking—the methods by which federal courts create federal procedural rules—represents a...
This Note recommends that the separate subject test employed by Washington courts in reviewing the c...
This report discusses the Legislative Line Item Veto and its constitutional issues and the President...
Supreme Court Justices, in their role as interpreters of the Constitution, have often determined pub...
I am going to discuss only one case, the line item veto case. However, I thought I would use it as ...
In this Dialogue, constitutional pundits Confident and Doubtuful debate the Line Item Veto Act of 19...
The Supreme Court of the United States refused to rule on whether the Line Item Veto Act of 1996 vio...
For over a century, Presidents, regardless of their political affiliations, have sought the authorit...
This comment will explore the grounds upon which the line item veto might be constitutionally upheld...
The Supreme Court, in Chadha v. Immigration & Naturalization Service, characterized a legislative ve...
Contemporary debates about state constitutional law have concentrated on the role of state constitut...
I am delighted to have been given the opportunity to comment on Judge Breyer\u27s proposal for a fas...
This Article analyzes the scope of presidential veto power. The author reviews the history and debat...
Article I, Section 7 of the Constitution creates a structure that makes it difficult to enact federa...
Examining the Supreme Court's recent decisions in the legislative veto case, Professor Strauss stres...
Judicial rulemaking—the methods by which federal courts create federal procedural rules—represents a...
This Note recommends that the separate subject test employed by Washington courts in reviewing the c...
This report discusses the Legislative Line Item Veto and its constitutional issues and the President...
Supreme Court Justices, in their role as interpreters of the Constitution, have often determined pub...
I am going to discuss only one case, the line item veto case. However, I thought I would use it as ...