The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday concerns the powers of the three branches of the federal government. The Founding Fathers created a three-headed government: the executive branch with a strong President, the legislative branch with a two-chamber Congress, and the judicial branch with nine separate judges.
Separation of Powers
The
President is the leader of the United States of America, but the Constitution
does not give the POTUS power over the legislative or judicial branches.
Likewise, Congress does not have power over the executive branch or the
judicial branch, and the judicial branch does not have power over the executive
branch or the legislative branch. However, this separation of power did not
stop the Democrat-led January 6 Select Committee from seeking power. This site describes and explains the separation of powers in the federal government.
A well-known concept derived
from the text and structure of the Constitution is the doctrine of what is
commonly called separation of powers. The Framers’ experience with the British
monarchy informed their belief that concentrating distinct governmental powers
in a single entity would subject the nation’s people to arbitrary and
oppressive government action. Thus, in order to preserve individual
liberty, the Framers sought to ensure that a separate and independent branch of
the Federal Government would exercise each of government’s three basic
functions: legislative, executive, and judicial. While the text of the
Constitution does not expressly refer to the doctrine of separation of powers,
the
Nation’s Founding document divides governmental power among three branches by
vesting the Legislative Power of the Federal Government in Congress; the
Executive Power in the President; and the Judicial Power in the Supreme
Court and any lower courts created by Congress.
Although the Framers of the Constitution allocated each of these core functions to a distinct branch of government, the design of the Constitution contemplates some overlap in the branches’ performance of government functions. In particular, the Framers favored an approach that seeks to maintain some independence for each branch while promoting a workable government through the interdependence and sharing of power among the branches. Moreover, to address concerns that one branch would aggrandize its power by attempting to exercise powers assigned to another branch, the Framers incorporated various checks that each branch could exercise against the actions of the other two branches to resist such encroachments. For example, the President has the power to veto legislation passed by Congress, but Congress may overrule such vetoes by a supermajority vote of both houses. And Congress has the power to impeach and remove the President, Vice President, and civil officers of the United States.
Over the course of our
history, the Supreme Court has elaborated on the separation-of-powers doctrine
in several cases addressing the three branches of government. At times, the
Court has determined that one branch’s actions have infringed upon the core
functions of another. For instance, the Court has held that Congress may not
encroach upon the President’s power by exercising an effective veto power over
the President’s removal of an Executive officer. Furthermore, the President
may not, by issuing an executive order, usurp the lawmaking powers of Congress. The
Supreme Court has also raised concerns about the judiciary encroaching on the
legislative or executive spheres where a litigant asks the courts to recognize
an implied cause of action, or to vindicate the rights of the public at
large rather than those of a specific individual in a case properly before the
court. When ruling on whether one branch has usurped the authority of
another in separation-of-powers cases, the Court has sometimes adopted formalist approach
to constitutional interpretation, which closely adheres to the structural
divisions in the Constitution and, at other times, has embraced a functionalist approach,
which examines the core functions of each of the branches and asks whether an
overlap in these functions upsets the equilibrium that the Framers sought to
maintain.
Subpoena
of Former President Donald Trump
Separation
of powers was denied in October when the Select Committee subpoenaed former
President Donald Trump and ordered him to testify and to hand over documents. Trump
recognized that the committee was overreaching its authority and blocked the
subpoena with a lawsuit. The lawsuit called the probe an “illegal, unfounded,
and overbroad records request.”
Last
Wednesday the January 6 committee dropped its subpoena of former President Donald
Trump. According to Diana Glebova at the Daily Signal, Representative
Bennie Thompson (D-Mississippi) sent a letter to Trump’s attorney containing
the following:
In light of the imminent end of our
investigation, the Select Committee can no longer pursue the specific
information covered by the subpoena.
Therefore, through this letter, I hereby formally withdraw the subpoena issued to former President Trump, and notify you that he is no longer obligated to comply or produce records in response to said subpoena.
Trump’s
Response
Trump
responded as only Trump does and said via Truth Social: “They knew I did
nothing wrong.” He wrote:
Was just advised that the Unselect
Committee of political Thugs has withdrawn the Subpoena of me concerning the
January 6th Protest of the CROOKED 2020 Presidential Election. They
probably did so because they knew I did nothing wrong, or they were about to
lose in Court. Perhaps the FBI’s involvement in RIGGING the Election played
into their decision. In any event, the Subpoena is DEAD!
Glebova
wrote that Trump claimed that the “committee omitted evidence, made false
statements, and ‘did not produce a single shred of evidence’ that he ‘intended’
for violence to occur at the Capitol.”
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