Since the mid-1970s American presidents have, with growing
frequency, claimed that they have the power to ignore any law they
believe is unconstitutional. Beginning with a review of the English
constitutional backdrop against which the U.S. Constitution was
framed, this book demonstrates that the Founders did not intend to
confer on the president a power equivalent to the royal prerogative
of suspending the laws, which was stripped from the English Crown
in 1689. The author examines each of the nearly 150 instances in
which presidents from George Washington to Jimmy Carter have
objected to the validity of a law, in order to determine whether or
not the president then ignored the law in question. This
examination of the historical record reveals that prior to the
mid-1970s the White House only rarely failed to honor a law that it
believed to be unconstitutional.
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