January 15, 2006
Bush Has Crossed The Rubicon
By Paul Craig Roberts
Dictatorships seldom appear
full-fledged but emerge piecemeal. When Julius Caesar
crossed the Rubicon with one Roman legion he broke
the tradition that protected the civilian government
from victorious generals and launched the transformation
of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire. Fearing
that Caesar would become a king, the
Senate assassinated him. From the civil wars that
followed, Caesar’s grand nephew, Octavian, emerged as
the first Roman emperor,
Caesar Augustus.
Two thousand years later in
Germany, Adolf Hitler’s rise to dictator from his
appointment as chancellor was rapid. Hitler used the
Reichstag fire to create an atmosphere of crisis. Both
the judicial and legislative branches of government
collapsed, and Hitler’s decrees became law. The Decree
for the Protection of People and State (Feb. 28, 1933)
suspended guarantees of personal liberty and permitted
arrest and incarceration without trial. The Enabling Act
(March 23, 1933) transferred legislative power to
Hitler, permitting him to decree laws, laws moreover
that "may deviate from the Constitution."
The dictatorship of the Roman
emperors was not based on an ideology. The Nazis had an
ideology of sorts, but Hitler’s dictatorship was largely
personal and agenda-based. The dictatorship that emerged
from the Bolshevik Revolution was based in ideology.
Lenin
declared that the Communist Party’s dictatorship
over the Russian people rests "directly on force, not
limited by anything, not restricted by any laws, nor any
absolute rules." Stalin’s dictatorship over the
Communist Party was based on coercion alone,
unrestrained by any limitations or inhibitions.
In this first decade of the 21st
century the United States regards itself as a land of
democracy and civil liberty but, in fact, is an
incipient dictatorship. Ideology plays only a limited
role in the emerging dictatorship. The demise of
American democracy is largely the result of historical
developments.
Lincoln was the
first American tyrant. Lincoln justified his
tyranny in the name of preserving the Union. His
extra-legal, extra-constitutional methods were tolerated
in order to suppress Northern opposition to Lincoln’s
war against the Southern secession.
The first major lasting assault on
the US Constitution’s separation of powers, which is the
basis for our political system, came with the response
of the Roosevelt administration to the crisis of the
Great Depression. The New Deal resulted in Congress
delegating its legislative powers to the executive
branch. Today when Congress passes a statute it is
little more than an authorization for an executive
agency to make the law by writing the regulations that
implement it.
Prior to the New Deal, legislation
was tightly written to minimize any executive branch
interpretation. Only in this way can law be accountable
to the people. If the executive branch that enforces the
law also writes the law, "all legislative powers"
are no longer vested in elected representatives in
Congress. The Constitution is violated, and the
separation of powers is breached.
The principle that power delegated
to Congress by the people cannot be delegated by
Congress to the executive branch is the mainstay of our
political system. Until President Roosevelt overturned
this principle by threatening to pack the Supreme Court,
the executive branch had no role in interpreting the
law. As Justice John Marshall Harlan
wrote: "That congress cannot delegate legislative
power to the president is a principle universally
recognized as vital to the integrity and maintenance of
the system of government ordained by the Constitution."
Despite seven decades of an
imperial presidency that has risen from the New Deal’s
breach of the separation of powers, Republican
attorneys, who constitute the membership of the
quarter-century-old Federalist Society, the candidate
group for Republican nominees to federal judgeships,
write tracts about the Imperial Congress and the
Imperial Judiciary that are briefs for concentrating
more power in the executive. Federalist Society members
pretend that Congress and the Judiciary have stolen all
the power and run away with it.
The Republican interest in
strengthening executive power has its origin in agenda
frustration from the constraints placed on Republican
administrations by Democratic congresses. The thrust to
enlarge the President’s powers predates the Bush
administration but is being furthered to a dangerous
extent during Bush’s second term. The confirmation of
Bush’s nominee, Samuel Alito, a member of the Federalist
Society, to the Supreme Court will provide five votes in
favor of enlarged presidential powers.
President Bush has used "signing
statements" hundreds of times to vitiate the meaning
of statutes passed by Congress. In effect, Bush is
vetoing the bills he signs into law by asserting
unilateral authority as commander-in-chief to bypass or
set aside the laws he signs. For example, Bush has
asserted that he has the power to ignore the McCain
amendment against torture, to ignore the law that
requires a warrant to spy on Americans, to ignore the
prohibition against indefinite detention without charges
or trial, and to ignore the Geneva Conventions to which
the US is signatory.
In effect, Bush is asserting the
powers that accrued to Hitler in 1933. His Federalist
Society apologists and Department of Justice appointees
claim that President Bush has the same power to
interpret the Constitution as the Supreme Court. An
Alito Court is likely to agree with this false claim.
This is the great issue that is
before the country. But it is pushed into the background
by political battles over abortion and homosexual
rights. Many people fighting to strengthen the executive
think they are fighting against legitimizing sodomy and
murder in the womb. They are unaware that the real issue
is that America is on the verge of elevating its
president above the law.
Bush Justice Department official
and Berkeley law professor John Yoo argues that no law
can restrict the president in his role as
commander-in-chief. Thus, once the president is at
war--even a vague open-ended "war on terror"--Bush’s
Justice Department says the president is free to
undertake any action in pursuit of war, including the
torture of children and indefinite detention of American
citizens.
The commander-in-chief role is
probably sufficiently elastic to expand to any crisis,
whether real or fabricated. Thus has the US arrived at
the verge of dictatorship.
This development has little to do
with Bush, who is unlikely to be aware that the
Constitution is experiencing its final rending on his
watch. America’s descent into dictatorship is the result
of historical developments and of old political battles
dating back to President Nixon being driven from office
by a Democratic Congress.
There is today no constitutional
party. Both political parties, most constitutional
lawyers, and the bar associations are willing to set
aside the Constitution whenever it interferes with their
agendas. Americans have forgotten the prerequisites for
freedom, and those pursuing power have forgotten what it
means when it falls into other hands. Americans are very
close to losing their constitutional system and civil
liberties. It is paradoxical that American democracy is
the likely casualty of a "war on terror" that is
being justified in the name of the expansion of
democracy.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts is the author with Lawrence M.
Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice.
Click
here
for Peter Brimelow’s
Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the
recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.