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IP: A word on "emergencies"
From: Dave Farber <farber () cis upenn edu>
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 1996 09:38:59 -0500
Date: Sat, 16 Nov 1996 23:30:45 -0500 (EST) From: "Michael Froomkin - U.Miami School of Law" <froomkin () law miami edu> I would like to dampen a little of the panic and FUD that seems to be breeding on the question of the "national emergency" declared to keep the bulk of the Export Administration Act regulations in effect after the statute itself lapsed by its own terms. [Note, by the way, that the EAA rules are the *mild* ones. The *tough* ones are still in force and are not going away ... kill the EAA rules, and they start reclassifying everything back to the Military List?] Whether you like it or not, Congress has delegated to the President sweeping authority to declare "national emergencies" due to foreign threats. In wartime the authority is very extensive; in peacetime almost as great. The authority is found in the "International Economic Emergency Powers Act" (IEEPA). While the President's determination that an "emergency" exists is not reviewable, actions taken under IEEPA authority *are* reviewable, indeed more reviewable than acts taken under the export control laws. Of course since the delegation of power is broad, it's often hard to win. There have been LOTS of Presidential declaration of "emergencies" under IEEPA and its predecessor statutes (e.g.the "trading with the enemy act", which still applies in wartime). Indeed, there are fewer today than before Congress attempted to reform the system and required most of the large number of emergencies in force to cease. For example, every time the President orders an embargo, e.g. against Iran, the statute requires that he first declare an "emergency". My point is not that Congress was wise to give the President this power. That's debatable; it's even more debatable that the intent was for it to be quite as broad as the courts have found it to be (see e.g. Harold Koh's book, The National Security Constitution, for more info). And, the point is not that Presidents are using this power in a wise or measured way. It's obvious that they are not. At any given time since WWI, many many (too many) "national emergencies" have been in force. And, the point is especially not that this President was wise to declare an emergency on these facts (although in his defense, several previous presidents did exactly the same thing when previous editions of the EAA lapsed; it seems to be something of a tradition...). Rather, my point is a simple one. The fact that the President has declared an emergency here is primarily a technical legal event. It is not a sign that martial law is about to be declared, that they are coming to take you or your [fill in blank] away, or that anything fundamental has changed. Multi-year emergencies in which the executive uses one statute to compensate for the Congressional decision/failure to pass another statute is not, I submit, a particularly telling sign of a mature and healthy democracy. But this goes to large and gradual processes, not to anything that suddenly happened. Again, for some background on all this, written before the Nov. 15 anouncements, see http://www.law.miami.edu/~froomkin/articles/planet_clipper.htm#POSTSCRIPT A. Michael Froomkin | +1 (305) 284-4285; +1 (305) 284-6506(fax) Associate Professor of Law | U. Miami School of Law | froomkin () law miami edu P.O. Box 248087 | http://www.law.miami.edu/~froomkin Coral Gables, FL 33124 USA | It's warm here.
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- IP: A word on "emergencies" Dave Farber (Nov 18)
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- IP: A word on "emergencies" Dave Farber (Nov 18)