Using the COTUS like a Sear’s catalogue in an Outhouse
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Using the COTUS like a Sear’s catalogue in an Outhouse
The Bitter Fruit of an Unconstitutional Bailout
But history will be angry at them and their colleagues for betraying the Constitution. Their attitude underscores the reasons that the Constitution does not repose in the Congress the power to bail out individuals or private industry: Bailouts violate the Equal Protection doctrine because the Congress can’t fairly pick and choose who to bail out and who to let expire; they violate the General Welfare Clause because they benefit only a small group and not the general public; they violate the Due Process Clause because they interfere with contracts already entered into; and they turn the public treasury into a public trough. Worse still, Congress lacks the power to let someone else decide how to spend the peoples’ money.
In effect, the Congress delegated to the Secretary of the Treasury some of the power the Constitution has delegated to the Congress: The power to decide when, how, for whose benefit, and in what amounts taxpayer dollars should be spent.
This delegation of power to the secretary directly violates a basic principle of constitutional law: Delegated powers cannot be delegated away. The Constitution delegates to the Congress the power to write all federal laws specifically related to spending, to the president the power to enforce those laws (and he must spend as the Congress ordains), and to the courts the power to interpret the laws (and they usually stay away from issues of spending). The Congress can no more delegate to the secretary of the treasury the power to decide how to spend billions than the president could delegate to the Congress his power to appoint the secretary.
Congress can’t cede power to the executive branch because Congress and the president are powerless to change the delicate balance among the three branches of government which the Constitution created. Such an unconstitutional delegation of power — such a role reversal — is tantamount to a constitutional amendment which only two thirds of the Congress and three quarters of the states can enact.
The secretary of the treasury can spend all the peoples’ money he can get his hands on. He can buy all the stock he wants in all the solvent banks that don’t need it and don’t want government investments and the strings that come with them. He can bail out and try to manage all the corporations his advisers recommend whose executives made millions but lost billions. But he is exercising power unconstitutionally given to him by the Congress, procured with only ten hours of debate and hearings, and the very premise of which he unilaterally rejected afterwards.
http://foxforum.blogs.foxnews.com/2008/11/25/napolitano_1125_bailout/
SamCogar- Number of posts : 6238
Location : Burnsville, WV
Registration date : 2007-12-28
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