The framers of the U.S. Constitution divided the federal
government's powers among three branches: the executive, the
legislative, and the judiciary. Their goal was to prevent tyranny
by ensuring that none of the branches could govern alone. While
numerous presidents have sought to escape these constitutional
constraints, the administration of George W. Bush went farther than
most. It denied the writ of habeas corpus to individuals deemed to
be enemy combatants. It suspended the Geneva Convention and allowed
or encouraged the use of harsh interrogation methods amounting to
torture. It ordered the surveillance of Americans without obtaining
warrants as required by law. And it issued signing statements
declaring that the president does not have the duty to faithfully
execute hundreds of provisions in the laws he has signed.
"Power Play" analyzes the Bush presidency's efforts to expand
executive power in these four domains and puts them into
constitutional and historical perspective. Pfiffner explores the
evolution of Anglo-American thinking about executive power and
individual rights. He highlights the lessons the Constitution's
framers drew from such philosophers as Locke and Montesquieu, as
well as English constitutional history. He documents the ways in
which the Bush administration's policies have undermined the
separation of powers, and he shows how these practices have
imperiled the rule of law.
Following 9/11, the Bush presidency engaged in a two-front
offensive. In Afghanistan and Iraq, the administration aggressively
prosecuted the "war on terror." At home, it targeted constraints on
the power of the executive. "Power Play" lays bare the extent of
this second campaign and explains why it will continue to threaten
the future of republican government if the other two branches do
not assert their own constitutional prerogatives.
General
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