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The President's Control Of Foreign Relations (1917) (Paperback)
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The President's Control Of Foreign Relations (1917) (Paperback)
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book:
PART TWO: TOPICS AND PRECEDENTS CHAPTER II Diplomatic Intercourse,
Its Incidents And Agents?Recognition 1?The President is the organ
of diplomatic intercourse of the Government of the United States,
first, because of his powers in connection with the reception and
dispatch of diplomatic agents and with treaty making; secondly,
because of the tradition of executive power adherent to his office.
A dependable British authority points out that the making of
treaties and all matters affecting the foreign relations of Great
Britain fall to the royal prerogative, that until late years
treaties were not brought before Parliament until after
ratification, and that the initiation of the foreign policy of the
Kingdom belongs to the executive exclusively.1 The view which was
held of executive power at the time of the adoption of the
Constitution is also to be found exemplified in the early State
Constitutions. On this point President Goodnow remarks as follows:
The American conception of the executive power prevailing at the
time of the adoption of the United States Constitution corresponded
with that part of the executive 1 Todd, Parliamentary Government,
I, pp. 307-9. power which has been called political. The great
exception to this statement is to be found in the fact that the
carrying on of the foreign relations was not included within the
powers of the state governor. This exception does not, however,
prove that the diplomatic power was not considered a part of the
executive power. The omission of the diplomatic power from among
the powers of the governor was due entirely to the peculiar
position of the colonies and later of the states. The care of the
foreign relations was not in the governor's hands, simply because
during the colonial period the mother country...
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