Reprint from CNS - Obama at Goergetown



Georgetown Says It Covered Over Name Of Jesus To Comply With White House Request

Photo of Gaston Hall stage that shows symbol
(CNSNews.com) - GeorgetownUniversity says it covered over the monogram “IHS”--symbolizing the name of Jesus Christ—because it was inscribed on a pediment on the stage where President Obama spoke at the university on Tuesday and the White House had asked Georgetown to cover up all signs and symbols there.
As of Wednesday afternoon, the “IHS” monogram that had previously adorned the stage at Georgetown’s Gaston Hall was still covered up--when the pediment where it had appeared was photographed by CNSNews.com.
President Obama is greeted by Georgetown University President John J. DeGioia as he arrives to deliver remarks on the economy, April 14, 2009, at Georgetown University. Georgetown had covered the symbol
“In coordinating the logistical arrangements for yesterday’s event, Georgetown honored the White House staff’s request to cover all of the Georgetown University signage and symbols behind Gaston Hall stage,” Julie Green Bataille, associate vice president for communications at Georgetown, told CNSNews.com.
“The White House wanted a simple backdrop of flags and pipe and drapefor the speech, consistent with what they’ve done for other policy speeches,” she added. “Frankly, the pipe and drape wasn’t high enough by itself to fully cover the IHS and cross above the GU seal and it seemed most respectful to have them covered so as not to be seen out of context.”
Pediment in Gaston Hall with
On Wednesday, CNSNews.com inspected the pediment embedded in the wall at the back of the stage in Gaston Hall, where Obama delivered his speech. The letters “IHS” were not to be found. They appeared to be shrouded with a triangle of black-painted plywood.
Pictures of the wooden pediment prior to Obama’s speech show the letters “IHS" in gold. Many photos posted on the Internet of other events at Gaston Hall show the letters clearly.
The White House did not respond to a request from CNSNews.com to comment on the covering up of Jesus’ name at Gaston Hall.
President Obama speaking at Gaston Hall at Georgetown on April 14 with the
Georgetown, which is run by the Jesuit order, is one of the most prestigious Catholic institutions of higher education in the United States.
Roman Catholics traditionally use “IHS” as an abbreviation for Jesus’ name. According to theCatholic Encyclopedia, “St. Ignatius of Loyola adopted the monogram in his seal as general of the Society of Jesus (1541) and thus became the emblem of his institute.” The Society of Jesus is the formal name for the Jesuits.
Gaston Hall stage as it looked on the afternoon of April 15 with
Although the monogram was covered over on the wooden pediment at the back of the Gaston Hall stage where it would have been directly above and behind President Obama as he spoke, the letters “IHS” are posted elsewhere around the hall approximately 26 times on shields representing different parts of the United States and the world.
Obama did not mention the name of Jesus during his address. However, he did mention Christ’s Sermon on the Mount.
“There is a parable at the end of the Sermon on the Mount that tells a story of two men…‘the rain descended and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house…it fell not: for it was founded upon a rock,’” Obama said.
“We cannot rebuild this economy on the same pile of sand,” he added. “We must build our house upon a rock.”

Obama's rhetorical abilities among the poorest of all presidents.


BY THE NUMBERS
Obama's '8th grade reading level' SOTU address: By the numbers
Tuesday's State of the Union had one of the lowest reading comprehension levels in decades. Did the president dumb things down too much?
POSTED ON JANUARY 25, 2012, AT 3:39 PM

President Obama addressed the nation Tuesday night with a State of the Union speech that barely registered at the eighth grade reading level, ranking it among the most rudimentary such speeches in history. Photo: Win McNamee/Getty ImagesSEE ALL 98 PHOTOS
"My message is simple," President Obama said in his State of the Union address Tuesday night. He may have been speaking literally. Using the Flesh-Kincaid readability test, which employs a mathematical formula based on the number of words and syllables in a text's sentences to determine its reading level, the University of Minnesota's Smart Politics blogcalculated that Obama's speech was written at an "8th grade reading level" — the fourth-lowest of any State of the Union since 1934. Here, a look at how that breaks down, by the numbers:  

8.4 
Grade level of Obama's 2012 State of the Union address
8.8 
Grade level of Obama's 2010 address

8.1 
Grade level of Obama's 2011 address

10.7
Average grade level for the 70 presidential State of the Union addresses delivered orally since 1934

16.6
Average words per sentence in Obama's 2012 and 2010 addresses. His 2011 address averaged 16.8 words per sentence.

67
Rank of Obama's 2012 address, according to its grade level, out of the last 70 State of the Union speeches

13
Obama's rank among the last 13 presidents when it comes to the average grade level of their State of the Union addresses
 

7
State of the Union addresses since 1934 that were below a ninth grade reading level, including all three of President Obama's

6
State of the Union addresses since 1934 that averaged less than 17 words per sentence, including all three of President Obama's

12.0 
Average grade level of John F. Kennedy's State of the Union addresses, the highest of the 13 presidents measured. His speeches averaged 23.8 words per sentence.

5
Presidents since 1934 who delivered at least one address at the 12th grade reading level: Harry S. Truman, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Richard Nixon, John F. Kennedy, and Dwight Eisenhower

7.5
Lowest grade level for any State of the Union address, delivered by George H. W. Bush in 1992. Obama's 2011 and 2012 speeches come in as the the second and third lowest, respectively.

10.4
Average grade level of George W. Bush's addresses

9.5
Average grade level of Bill Clinton's addresses

14
Grade level of Gov. Mitch Daniel's (R-Ind.) State of the Union rebuttal Tuesday night,
 notes Mollie Hemingway at Ricochet
7.0
Grade level at which the average American reads, according Robert Lehrman at Politico. Perhaps "Obama's simple language is in part a reflection of his audience," says Byron Tau at Politico.

91
Percent of Americans who approved of Obama's State of the Union address on Tuesday, according to
 CBS News

Sources: CBS NewsPolitico (2), RicochetSmart Politics

Obama's Assault on the Constitution


BY: 
President Barack Obama is running roughshod over the Constitution, legal scholars say, by disregarding it, changing laws outside the legislative process, and extending federal power in unprecedented ways.
The president has “profound disdain for the Constitution,” said David Rivkin, a lawyer at the BakerHostetler law firm in Washington, DC.
“Across a whole host of policy areas, President Obama and other high officials in his administration have pushed the envelope of anything attempted before,” said Ilya Shapiro, a constitutional expert at the Cato Institute.
Under the president’s judicial philosophy, legislation ideally “streamlines government action” so it can “grow and experiment,” all while overcoming barriers like the checks and balances built into the Constitution, said Charles Kesler, a professor of government and constitutional scholar at Claremont McKenna College.
A pending lawsuit against the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act exemplifies several aspects of the complaints legal scholars have against the president’s treatment of the Constitution.
The State National Bank of Big Springs, Texas launched a lawsuit against Dodd-Frank in June, joined by the Competitive Enterprise Institute and the 60 Plus Association.
The lawsuit argues that three parts of the bill—the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the Orderly Liquidation Authority, and the Financial Stability Oversight Counsel (FSOC)—all violate the Constitution, according to Adam White, a lawyer at Boyden Gray & Associates who is working on the lawsuit.
Three states—Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Michigan—joined the lawsuit in September, arguing that the Orderly Liquidation Authority is unconstitutional.
The CFPB and the FSOC, said White, both violate the separation of powers.
“Dodd-Frank authorizes the CFPB to define and prosecute unfair, deceptive, or abusive practices,” White said, and this ability to define constitutes legislation, which is forbidden under the separation of powers.
“Title X of the Dodd-Frank Act delegates effectively unbounded power to the CFPB, and couples that power with provisions insulating the CFPB against meaningful checks by the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Branches,” reads the lawsuit.
White said that the CFPB does not receive its money through congressional appropriations, but rather from the Federal Reserve, insulating it from congressional oversight.
He also emphasized that CFPB director, Richard Cordray, has a high level of job security, as the president cannot fire him at will as he can with Cabinet appointees.
The lawsuit says that the FSOC “has sweeping and unprecedented discretion to choose which nonbank financial companies to designate as ‘systemically important,’” that is, too big to fail. Yet this discretion is “not limited by any meaningful statutory directives,” giving the FSOC “virtually boundless discretion in making its highly consequential designations,” says the lawsuit.
White said that these independent institutions form “entrenched structures for preserving progressive priorities.”
“The Supreme Court has recognized that agencies can have limited independence in one form or another,” White said. “Our case does not challenge any of those precedents. Our case simply observes that the Dodd-Frank agencies have independence far greater than the Supreme Court has allowed for any other agency.”
“These agencies are so thoroughly insulated from the checks and balances of the other branches of government, that the arrangement violates the Constitution’s separation of powers,” he said.
Shapiro called these institutions a “dangerous precedent of technocratic rule unaccountable to the people.”
Neither the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau nor the Justice Department returned a request for comment.
According to Kesler, the president’s judicial philosophy requires taking a structurally inflexible document that views political power as potentially dangerous—and thus divides it between three coequal branches—and changing it to “concentrate political power.”
The goal? “Letting good people do good things,” Kesler said.
The lawsuit also objects to Obama’s recess appointment of Richard Cordray as director of the CFPB.
“There has never been a president who has appointed executive branch officials in a blatant disregard of the Senate’s advice and consent power,” Rivkin said.
White emphasized that the appointment of Cordray broke many years of precedent for such an action. The president has the power under the Constitution to appoint executive officials while Congress is in recess, but the Constitution never defines what “recess” is. Presidents have typically waited 10 days before appointing officials during a recess, but Obama disregarded that precedent, appointing Cordray while the Senate was in pro forma sessions.
The president initially justified the appointment on pragmatic grounds.
“When Congress refuses to act, and as a result hurts our economy and puts people at risk, I have an obligation as president to do what I can without them,” Obama said when announcing Cordray’s appointment.
Michael McConnell, a law professor at Stanford Law School and a former 10th Circuit Court of Appeals judge, said that it is “almost impossible to justify” the installation.
While Kesler pointed to the “living Constitution” judicial approach as giving rise to such executive activism, Jeremy Rabkin, a law professor at George Mason University, gave a slightly different perspective.
“I wonder if he has a philosophy,” Rabkin said.
Rabkin mused that Obama might be a “cynic” regarding the Constitution, not caring what it means at all. Rabkin accused the president of “reinterpreting the Constitution so it never constrains him.”
Rabkin said that Obama “seems to think that the federal government has limitless power… of domestic regulation.” He confessed that many legal scholars agree with this idea, but, Rabkin continued, the president has taken to himself a broad power to “disregard” or rewrite statutes.
Most legal scholars do not agree with this assertion of executive power, Rabkin said.
The nature and relevance of the Constitution is “not just a casual question for” Obama, Kesler said, as he emphasized Obama’s experience as a lecturer on the Constitution at the University of Chicago.
Multiple experts interviewed for this article cited the Obama administration’s willingness to disregard laws for the sake of his policy goals as evidence that the president is disregarding the Constitution.
Rivkin cited the changes in welfare work requirements, the changed No Child Left Behind Act requirements, and the president’s implementation of parts of the DREAM Act as examples of the president “blatantly ignoring the laws on the books.”
The president “just wanted to get it done,” Rivkin said.
Kesler said that simply by executive order, the president “changed the whole structure of American immigration law.” He also cited a great number of exemptions and waivers to laws that the administration has granted.
The president has been “extending the power of the federal government in its ability to enforce or not to enforce the law,” Kesler said.
McConnell noted a stark difference between the posture Obama took toward the Constitution while campaigning for president and how Obama has governed.
“He campaigned for office on a very different basis than the way he ended up governing,” McConnell said.
McConnell highlighted Obama’s shifting stances on signing statements, national security measures, and excessive executive power.
McConnell called the “gulf” between the pre- and post-election Obama “particularly striking.”
McConnell also highlighted the administration’s argument that churches do not have First Amendment rights in hiring and firing, infringing on religious liberty.
In that case, the Supreme Court ruled against the administration nine to zero.

Obama and corruption: Say it isn't so, Joe.


President Barack Obama: President Obama makes Judicial Watch’s “Ten Most Wanted” list for a fifth consecutive year. (The former Illinois Senator was also a “Dishonorable Mention” in 2006.) And when it comes to Obama corruption, it may not get any bigger than Solyndra. Solyndra was once known as the poster child for the Obama administration’s massive “green energy” initiative, but it has become the poster child for the corruption that ensues when the government meddles in the private sector. Solyndra filed for bankruptcy in September 2011, leaving 1,100 workers without jobs and the American taxpayers on the hook for $535 million thanks to an Obama administration stimulus loan guarantee.
Despite the Obama administration’s reticence to release details regarding this scandal, much is known about this shady deal. White House officials warned the president that the Department of Energy’s loan guarantee program was “dangerously short on due diligence,” nonetheless the Obama administration rushed the Solyndra loan through the approval process so it could make a splash at a press event. The company’s main financial backer was a major Obama campaign donor named George Kaiser. While the White House said Kaiser never discussed the loan with White House officials, the evidence suggests this is a lie. And, further demonstrating the political nature of the Obama administration’s activities, the Energy Department pressured Solyndra to delay an announcement on layoffs until after the 2010 elections. Despite the public outrage at this scandalous waste of precious tax dollars, President Obama continues to defend the indefensible and has refused to sack anyone over the Solyndra mess.
President Obama continues to countenance actions by his appointees that undermine the rule of law and constitutional government:
  • Despite a ban on funding that Obama signed into law, his administration continues to fund the corrupt and allegedly defunct “community” organization ACORN. In July 2011 Judicial Watch uncovered a $79,819 grant to AHCOA (Affordable Housing Centers of America), the renamed ACORN Housing which has a long history of corrupt activity. In absolute violation of the funding ban, Judicial Watch has since confirmed that the Obama administration has funneled $730,000 to the ACORN network, a group that has a long personal history with President Obama.In 2011, JW released a special report entitled “The Rebranding of ACORN,” which details how the ACORN network is alive and well and well-placed to undermine the integrity of the 2012 elections – evidently with the assistance of the Obama administration.
  • Barack Obama apparently believes it is his “prerogative” to ignore the U.S. Constitution and the rule of law when it comes to appointing czars. According to Politico: “President Barack Obama is planning to ignore language in the 2011 spending package that would ban several top White House advisory posts. Obama said this ban on “czars” would undermine “the President’s ability to exercise his constitutional responsibilities and take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” In other words, Barack Obama believes he must ignore the U.S. Constitution to protect the U.S. Constitution. Many Obama administration czars have not been subject to confirmation by the U.S. Senate as required by the U.S. Constitution. In 2011, JW released a first-of-its-kind comprehensive report on the Obama czar scandal, entitled “President Obama’s Czars.”
  • In an historic victory for Judicial Watch and an embarrassing defeat for the Obama White House, a federal court ruled on August 17, 2011 that Secret Service White House visitor logs are agency records that are subject to disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell issued the decision in Judicial Watch v. Secret Service. The Obama administration now will have to release all records of all visitors to the White House – or explain why White House visits should be kept secret under the law. The Obama White House continues to fight full disclosure and has stalled the release of records by appealing the lower court decision.(Judicial Watch gave Obama a “failing grade” on transparency in testimony before Congress in 2011. (Readthe testimony in full as well as additional congressional testimony during a hearing entitled “White House Transparency, Visitor Logs and Lobbyists.”))
  • In 2011, the Obama National Labor Relations Board sought to prevent the Seattle-based Boeing Company from opening a $750 million non-union assembly line in North Charleston, South Carolina, to manufacture its Dreamliner plane. Judicial Watch obtained documents from the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) showing this lawsuit was politically motivated. Judicial Watch uncovered documents showing NLRB staff cheerleading for Big Labor, mouthing Marxist,anti-American slurs and showing contempt for Congress related to the agency’s lawsuit against Boeing, including email correspondence attacking members of Congress. And it starts at the top. Obama bypassed Congress and recess-appointed Craig Becker, who is connected to the AFL-CIO, the SEIU and ACORN, to the NRLB.
  • Obama’s corrupt Chicago dealings continued to haunt him in 2011.Obama’s real estate partner, campaign fundraiser and Obama pork recipient Antoin “Tony” Rezko was finally sentenced to jail this year as was former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich, who is now set to serve 14 years for attempting to sell Obama’s former Senate seat to the highest bidder. The FBI continues to withhold from Judicial Watch documents of its historic interview of then-Senator Obama about the Illinois corruption scandal. The FBI interview was conducted in December, 2008, about one month before Obama was sworn into the presidency.
Judicial Watch

Obama at Georgetown - a confirmation story.


It seems to me that a committed “Christian,” as the president claims to be, though not always having to be in “spread the word” mode, certainly wouldn’t hide a symbol of the faith they profess to embrace with all their heart and soul.
This wasn’t the case at Georgetown University:
(CNSNews.com) – Georgetown University says it covered over the monogram âہ“IHSâ€Â–symbolizing the name of Jesus Christâۉ€because it was inscribed on a pediment on the stage where President Obama spoke at the university on Tuesday and the White House had asked Georgetown to cover up all signs and symbols there.
As of Wednesday afternoon, the âہ“IHSâ€Â monogram that had previously adorned the stage at Georgetownâۉ„¢s Gaston Hall was still covered up — when the pediment where it had appeared was photographed by CNSNews.com.
NBC News is also reporting the same thing.
It’s explained that this was done to create a generic setting for a “policy speech.” Because who wants any reference to Jesus to get in the way of wealth transfer?
Here are three pictures — the top one is from a photo of the pediment in Gaston Hall that I Googled that was taken long before Obama’s speech, the next picture is the photo of the same pediment that CNS News snapped after Obama’s speech while it was still covered up, and the third is of Obama speaking in front of the covered-up pediment:
null

null
Okay, you’re a Christian but want to deliver a “generic” speech, so instead of just finding a secular setting free of any religious symbols at all, you give the speech in religious surroundings and cover up any symbols of Jesus Christ that happen to be in the way? This speaks volumes on the nature of the egos that are in charge, and speaks even larger volumes about this “deeply Christian” president who hasn’t managed to find a church in DC yet and somehow thinks that a Christian symbol impedes on the impact of his policy speeches. Maybe he just didn’t want people to be confused about exactly which lord to follow. Who knows?

Signing statements



"While it is legitimate for a president to issue a signing statement to clarify his understanding of ambiguous provisions of statutes and to explain his view of how he intends to faithfully execute the law, it is a clear abuse of power to use such statements as a license to evade laws that the president does not like or as an end-run around provisions designed to foster accountability. I will not use signing statements to nullify or undermine congressional instructions as enacted into law."



Signing statements still controversial

Updated: Wednesday, July 27th, 2011 | By David G. Taylor
When we last updated this issue in July 2009, President Barack Obama had issued seven signing statements. That number now stands at 18. In the intervening period, one statement in particular  -- his most recent from April 2011 -- made us wonder if it were a possible violation of his campaign pledge.

Before we get into the analysis of President Obama"s recent statement, we should provide some background on the signing statement controversy. Signing statements are memos that presidents sometimes attach to bills when they are signed into law. Traditionally presidents used signing statements to innocuously comment on pieces of legislation. The practice has long historical roots, with some scholars claiming that President James Monroe was the first practitioner.

The current turmoil surrounding signing statements stems from how President George W. Bush used them. Critics, including a bipartisan American Bar Association panel, excoriated President Bush for using signing statements to re-interpret or ignore, rather than veto, portions of laws he did not agree with.

Barack Obama criticized President Bush for signing statements. In a 2007 interview in the Boston Globe, Obama pledged to refrain continuing this practice. Although he did not advocate banning signing statements, Obama said, "I will not use signing statements to nullify or undermine congressional instructions as enacted into law ... No one doubts that it is appropriate to use signing statements to protect a president's constitutional prerogatives; unfortunately, the Bush Administration has gone much further than that.”

"During the campaign, Obama said he would not stop using the signing statement but  would use them in a way that was different from President Bush -- which basically took aim at Bush's signing of the Detainee Treatment Act, where he explicitly made a promise to Congress not to authorize the use of torture and then issued a signing statement that seemingly negated that agreement,” said Christopher Kelley, Professor in the Department of Political Science at Miami University in Ohio.

On March 9, 2009 the White House issued a memorandum from President Obama that outlined his view on signing statements and when he would issue them. "I will issue signing statements to address constitutional concerns only when it is appropriate to do so as a means of discharging my constitutional responsibilities,” read the memorandum.

Last April Obama attached a signing statement to the Fiscal Year 2011 budget bill. The statement, in part, addressed a policy rider in the bill that stripped funding of four presidential "czars." The term "czars” is a sobriquet used to describe special presidential advisers who are often not subject to congressional approval. Former administration official Van Jones, for example, was President Obama"s "green jobs czar.” This prohibition is in response to the large number of czars that President Obama has appointed and the controversy surrounding them. PolitiFact has previously analyzed statements about this issue. Ironically, the four "czar" positions in question either no longer exist or are empty --  climate change, health care, automobiles, and urban affairs.

In his April 2011 signing statement President Obama wrote:
 
Section 2262 of the Act would prohibit the use of funds for several positions that involve providing advice directly to the President. The President has well-established authority to supervise and oversee the executive branch, and to obtain advice in furtherance of this supervisory authority. The President also has the prerogative to obtain advice that will assist him in carrying out his constitutional responsibilities, and do so not only from executive branch officials and employees outside the White House, but also from advisers within it.
     
Legislative efforts that significantly impede the President's ability to exercise his supervisory and coordinating authorities or to obtain the views of the appropriate senior advisers violate the separation of powers by undermining the President's ability to exercise his constitutional responsibilities and take care that the laws be faithfully executed. Therefore, the executive branch will construe section 2262 not to abrogate these Presidential prerogatives.

In other words, President Obama is arguing that he has the constitutional authority to appoint advisers to help him carry out his presidential duties and that it is unconstitutional for Congress to try to inhibit this ability. This rationale, on its face, would seem to line up with his previous memorandum about signing statements.

Nevertheless critics contend that Obama chose to ignore Congress"s decree and violated his previous pledge. White House Press Secretary Jay Carney defended President Obama"s position in response to a reporter"s question on the statement, when he said on April 18, 2011:

"He [President Obama] never said he was opposed entirely to signing statements.  I can point you to numerous statements from the campaign where he made clear that every president should retain the right, of course must retain the right, to have signing statements, to raise constitutional concerns and objections with a law passed by Congress that he signed into law. His concern was with what he saw as an abuse of the signing statement by the previous administration. So the positions he took in the signing statements on the budget bill are entirely consistent with that position. You need to retain the right to, as president, to be able to issue those signing statements, but obviously they should not be abused.”

We reached out to two experts on signing statements for their views:

"President Obama used a signing statement to rail against the limitations in the law, but not to say he would not obey it -- nor, as his predecessor almost certainly would have done, did he say he would obey it only to the extent it was compatible with his powers as commander in chief and/or as head of the unitary executive branch,” said Andrew Rudalevige, professor in the Department of Political Science at Dickinson College. "Frankly, the use of title-specific posts in the legislation seems designed to be largely symbolic. Why couldn't an ‘Assistant to the President" advise the President on the same things that the ‘Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change" could?”

"I think his objections to the ‘czar" provisions of recent legislation are both consistent to his campaign pledge and his memorandum on the use of the signing statement, and it is clearly consistent with previous presidents -- dating at least to the Reagan administration -- about Congress meddling in executive branch affairs,” said Miami University's Kelley. " In addition, you have to ask what is being violated? There are no persons in any of these positions at present, and probably in most, there never will be.”

It is apparent that President Obama"s most recent signing statement did not involve refusing to obey a congressional mandate so much as it asserted what Obama felt was a constitutionally right guaranteed to the executive branch. This follows the stance outlined in his memo about signing statements as well as the Boston Globe interview. We do not find the controversy surrounding this April 2011 statement persuasive enough to change our stance. That being said, the information collected from the previous update and the conclusion it led to still stands. Therefore we continue to rate this promise as Compromise.
Sources:
The American Presidency Project at the University of California - Santa Barbara: Presidential Signing Statements

The Boston Globe, "Barack Obama"s Q&A,” December 20, 2007.


White House Office of the Press Secretary, "Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies SUBJECT: Presidential Signing Statements,” March 9, 2009.

White House Office of the Press Secretary, "Statement by the President on H.R. 1473,” April 15, 2011

White House Office of the Press Secretary, "Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney,” April 18, 2011.

The New York Times, "Obama Takes on Congress Over Policy Czar Positions,” April 16, 2011.

POLITICO, "President Obama to ignore ‘czar" ban,” April 17, 2011.

E-mail interview with Professor Andrew Rudalevige, Professor in the Department of Political Science at Dickinson College.

E-mail interview with Professor Christopher Kelley, Professor in the Department of Political Science at Miami University.

Exercising his power or venturing into congressional turf?

Updated: Friday, July 24th, 2009 | By Louis Jacobson
When he was a candidate, Barack Obama used signing statements as a convenient point of contrast with his predecessor. President George W. Bush issued more than 100 such statements, signaling that his administration would not carry out congressionally approved provisions on a range of issues, from barring the use of torture to requirements that the executive branch report certain information to Congress. A bipartisan panel of the American Bar Association decried Bush"s use of signing statements as a "serious threat to the rule of law," saying it ran contrary to the system of presidential vetoes and congressional overrides created by the U.S. Constitution.

We aren't taking a position on whether signing statements are good or bad for the country (or, perhaps, somewhere in between). And it's important to understand that they have long been part of the routine tug-of-war between the executive and legislative branches. But we do intend to gauge whether Obama kept his promise.

The issue rose to some prominence on July 21, 2009, when four senior House Democrats wrote Obama a letter complaining about a signing statement the president issued on June 26, in which he argued that he need not abide by conditions set by lawmakers addressing aid for the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. The president had contended that the language in the bill unduly hampered his authority to conduct foreign policy.

"During the previous administration, all of us were critical of (Bush's) assertion that he could pick and choose which aspects of congressional statutes he was required to enforce," the Democrats' letter read. "We were therefore chagrined to see you appear to express a similar attitude." The letter was signed by House Appropriations Chairman David Obey, D-Wis., House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., well as Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., who chairs the Appropriations Subcommittee on State and Foreign Operations, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., who chairs the the Financial Services Subcommittee on International Monetary Policy and Trade.

The sentiment appears to be bipartisan. The House on July 9 approved, by a 429-2 vote, an amendment restating that the administration should pressure the World Bank to tighten standards on labor and the environment and require the Treasury Department to submit a report on World Bank and International Monetary Fund activities. The amendment was proposed by Rep. Mark Kirk, R-Ill.

Before we explore whether Obama has broken his promise, let's look at what he said he'd do, and not do.

The promise comes from a 2007 interview with the Boston Globe' s Charlie Savage. Obama said, "While it is legitimate for a president to issue a signing statement to clarify his understanding of ambiguous provisions of statutes and to explain his view of how he intends to faithfully execute the law, it is a clear abuse of power to use such statements as a license to evade laws that the president does not like or as an end-run around provisions designed to foster accountability. I will not use signing statements to nullify or undermine congressional instructions as enacted into law."

He continued, "The problem with (the Bush) administration is that it has attached signing statements to legislation in an effort to change the meaning of the legislation, to avoid enforcing certain provisions of the legislation that the president does not like, and to raise implausible or dubious constitutional objections to the legislation. The fact that President Bush has issued signing statements to challenge over 1,100 laws — more than any president in history — is a clear abuse of this prerogative. No one doubts that it is appropriate to use signing statements to protect a president's constitutional prerogatives; unfortunately, the Bush administration has gone much further than that."

Obama continued in a similar vein when he issued an official memorandum on March 9 outlining how he would use signing statements.

"I will issue signing statements to address constitutional concerns only when it is appropriate to do so as a means of discharging my constitutional responsibilities," the memo reads, adding later, "I will strive to avoid the conclusion that any part of an enrolled bill is unconstitutional. In exercising my responsibility to determine whether a provision of an enrolled bill is unconstitutional, I will act with caution and restraint, based only on interpretations of the Constitution that are well-founded."

It"s important to note that Obama makes clear in both his campaign assertion and his official memo that he does not consider signing statements to be problematic in and of themselves. Rather, he argues, their use should be limited in scope and reach, clearly stating that President Bush went overboard.

"The president has also already made it clear that he will ... reserve signing statements for legislation that raises clearly identified constitutional concerns," White House spokesman Ben LaBolt said in a statement after the Democratic letter was released.

Thus, the fact that Obama has so far issued five substantive signing statements during his presidency does not mean he has broken his promise. (A few other presidential signing statements appear to be innocuous. For instance, a statement issued June 24, accompanying a supplemental spending bill, merely expresses thanks for congressional cooperation.)

Here is a rundown of Obama's five substantive signing statements.

We addressed his March 11 signing statement — which accompanied the Omnibus Appropriations Act, a leftover spending bill from the prior year — when we rated this promise Stalled last month. Obama objected to five aspects of the bill, including a whistleblower provision and several items on foreign policy. We concluded that the signing statement "seems to undermine clear congressional instructions," but we rated it Stalled pending further examples of signing statements from the administration.

Another, from March 31, accompanied the president"s signing of the Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009. While his statement lauded most aspects of the bill, the president balked at one provision limiting how the Interior secretary can fill some slots on the Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor Commission.

"Because it would be an impermissible restriction on the appointment power to condition the Secretary's appointments on the recommendations of members of the House, I will construe these provisions to require the Secretary to consider such congressional recommendations, but not to be bound by them in making appointments to the Commission."

This statement, like the others, is about the president asserting his power. He argued that his power to appoint members of this commission (as exercised through the Interior secretary) is his alone, and that the House cannot establish any binding — as opposed to advisory — authority over such an act.

A third signing statement, from May 20, accompanied the signing of the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009. In the statement, the president again praised aspects of the bill he was signing, but he asserted that he reserves the right to prevent an administration official from testifying before the Financial Crisis Commission — which is congressionally appointed but is not an arm of Congress itself — on matters the Obama administration considers privileged.

A fourth, from June 2, accompanied a bill to create a Ronald Reagan Centennial Commission. In the statement, Obama clarifies the role of the commission under the separation of powers doctrine. He invokes comments by Reagan himself on the role that Congress can play in this type of commission.

The last — the June 26 signing statement that irked House Democratic leaders — accompanied a supplemental spending bill. The president wrote that provisions of this bill "would interfere with my constitutional authority to conduct foreign relations by directing the Executive to take certain positions in negotiations or discussions with international organizations and foreign governments, or by requiring consultation with the Congress prior to such negotiations or discussions. I will not treat these provisions as limiting my ability to engage in foreign diplomacy or negotiations."

By making this assertion, the president was essentially saying that the administration — not Congress — has the right to conduct foreign policy and doesn't want Congress to meddle in negotiations with international financial institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

In rating this promise, we have to judge whether Obama has been consistent with his vow to use the statements "to clarify his understanding of ambiguous provisions of statutes and to explain his view of how he intends to faithfully execute the law" and to avoid using them "to nullify or undermine congressional instructions as enacted into law."

The least contentious example is the one on the Reagan centennial, since there is no indication of any disagreement between his administration and Congress. The other ones are more challenging for us to rate.

In the case of the the Erie Canal commission, the president said that when choosing its members, he disagreed that they need to be approved by lawmakers. That sounds like a reasonable constitutional interpretation, but some in Congress could see it as "undermin(ing) congressional instructions as enacted into law," and maybe even nullifying them.

In case of the financial commission, the president sought to prevent administration officials from having to provide "any information related to any Commission inquiry," as Congress had written into the law. Here, too, it seems like the president is balking at Congress and seeking to undermine, if not nullify, the instructions that Congress wrote into the law.

Finally, in the IMF case that drew the House Democratic ire, the president refused to be bound by language that mandated his administration to take certain positions as dictated by Congress, or requiring advance consultation with Congress. That also sounds like a bid to undermine or nullify congressional instructions. But as the experts say below, he's also raising reasonable constitutional questions.

It's worth noting that Obama has not used signing statements in the bold and sweeping way that President Bush did. Bush, for instance, said that his role as commander in chief meant that he could ignore the wishes of Congress — expressed in several bills that passed both chambers and were signed by the president — that U.S. troops be kept out of combat against Marxist rebels in Colombia funded by the drug trade.

So after his initial signing statements in his first six months in office, Obama has a mixed record.
 
Obama "has violated his pledge, on paper," said Andrew Rudalevige, a Dickinson College political scientist who has studied the issue. But, Rudalevige added, Obama "has not used signing statements in the same policy-oriented manner as his predecessor."

Unlike Bush, Obama has not picked his battles on major issues such as the use of torture. Rather, he"s quibbled over the seating requirements for a commission that virtually no one's heard of (and stipulated to an advisory role rather than a binding role for Congress). He's laid down limits on what his subordinates will tell a panel that lacks any binding legislative power. And he's refused to let Congress dictate specific negotiating positions in foreign policy.

Indeed, Obama's statements were "conventional assertions of executive autonomy," rather than his own policy agenda, said John Woolley, a University of California-Santa Barbara political scientist who has studied presidential powers.

Obama's actions are "routine as far as how the signing statement had been used prior to the Bush II administration," added Christopher Kelley, a political scientist at Miami University of Ohio and a specialist in signing statements. "From this standpoint I have seen nothing that Obama has done that is out of the main, nor in violation of his promise."

Woolley agrees. "In terms of the things he objects to about legislation, Obama's statements are not really all that different from those of his predecessors" other than Bush. ... These statements are all precise examples of 'using signing statements to protect a president's constitutional prerogatives' — exactly as he promised."

So for now, we find evidence on both sides. There have been the instances where Obama does seem to be exercising more presidential power than Congress would like and, in at least a couple of cases, crossing the line from his promise. But these are issues of power, over which the legislative and executive branch have long tussled. So for now, we're going to rate this one Compromise. But we'll be watching future signing statements to see if we should move the Obameter one way or the other.
Sources:
Boston Globe, Barack Obama Q and A , Dec. 20, 2007
The American Presidency Project, Web site of presidential resources edited by John Woolley and Gerhard Peters

American Bar Association, Report of the ABA Task Force on Presidential Signing Statements and the Separation of Powers Doctrine, August 2006
Associated Press, Democrats irked by Obama signing statement, July 21, 2009
Clerk of the House: Final vote results for roll call vote 521, 111th Congress, First Session

E-mail interviews with John T. Woolley, political scientist, University of California-Santa Barbara, July 20-21, 2009

E-mail interview with Andrew Rudalevige, political scientist, Dickinson College, July 20, 2009

E-mail interviews with Christopher Kelley, political scientist, Miami University, July 20-21, 2009

First Obama signing statement questions whistleblower clause

Updated: Tuesday, June 9th, 2009 | By Angie Drobnic Holan
A sharp-eyed reader e-mailed us and asked us to consider adding a promise about signing statements to our Obameter database.

Signing statements are memoranda presidents issue when signing legislation. President George W. Bush used them to indicate when he disagreed with aspects of a new law and explained how he would carry out the law. Bush used signing statements on topics from torture to the the qualifications that the nation's top disaster official should have.

During the campaign, Barack Obama discussed his philosophy on signing statements with theBoston Globe , which won a Pulitzer Prize for investigating the practice. While Obama said he would continue the use of signing statements, he also said he would not use them to "nullify or undermine congressional instructions as enacted into law." He said it was "a clear abuse of power to use such statements as a license to evade laws that the president does not like or as an end-run around provisions designed to foster accountability."

After taking office, President Obama issued a memo outlining the principles he would consider when issuing signing statements. Among other things, he said he would alert Congress to constitutional issues early enough so that legislation could be crafted to avoid a signing statement and that he would strive to find laws constitutional unless he has a "well-founded" reason for believing otherwise.

Two days later, Obama issued a signing statement for the Omnibus Appropriations Act, 2009, a spending bill left over from the previous year. Obama objected to five aspects of the bill, including several that had to do with the execution of foreign policy.

But one of his exceptions drew the ire of Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa. A clause in the act said that Congress would not pay the salary of any federal worker who "attempts or threatens to prohibit or prevent, any other officer or employee of the federal government from having any direct oral or written communication or contact with any member, committee, or subcommittee of the Congress."

Grassley said the section is intended to protect whistleblowers. "This rider was first included in appropriations bills in 1997 and has been included in appropriations bills since," Grassley said in a statement on the Senate floor. "It is a strong signal to all agencies that efforts to block federal employees from coming to Congress won't be tolerated."

Obama's signing statement said, "I do not interpret this provision to detract from my authority to direct the heads of executive departments to supervise, control, and correct employees' communications with the Congress in cases where such communications would be unlawful or would reveal information that is properly privileged or otherwise confidential."

Grassley said other presidents had objected to the clause, but Grassley was particularly displeased with Obama's saying that his concerns were with communication that would be "otherwise confidential."

"By failing to define 'confidential,' President Obama has given a blank check to executive branch agencies to block communications with Congress related to an undefined, broad category of information," Grassley said.

In one sense, this seems like a classic argument over the separation of powers. Congress wants people to give it information, while the president wants to control the release of information from its administration.

But the dispute also raises questions about whether Obama has broken his promise. Obama said he would not use signing statements to "nullify or undermine congressional instructions as enacted into law." The "otherwise confidential" language seems like a loophole, and his signing statement seems to undermine clear congressional instructions.

It's still early in Obama's presidency, so we're not quite ready to rate this one Broken. He didn't say he would never use a signing statement, he specified that he would not use them to nullify or undermine what Congress wanted. But we view his action on the omnibus bill as contrary to the spirit of his promise and it raises questions about whether he will follow through with his pledge from the campaign. We're going to rate this Stalled for now. We will be watching closely to see what other signing statements Obama issues, and we leave the door open to changing our ruling.
Sources:
The Boston Globe, Bush could bypass new torture ban , Jan. 4, 2006

PolitiFact.com, Indeed, Bush did it his way,

The Boston Globe, Barack Obama Q and A , Dec. 20, 2007

YouTube.com, Obama on presidential signing statements 

The Boston Globe, 2007 Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of signing statements by Charlie Savage 

The White House, Memorandum on signing statements , March 9, 2009

The White House, signing statement on HR 1105, the Omnibus Appropriations Act, 2009 , March 11, 2009

The Omnibus Appropriations Act, 2009, Sec. 714 (whistleblower clause)

Sen. Charles Grassley, Whistleblower Protections and Signing Statements and the Obama Administration , March 23, 2009