Originally posted by: daniel49
Text
Go Senator Feinggold. I'll support you and Obama on this one.:thumbsup:
Unfortunatly it seems many other Senators will not.
Originally posted by: Genx87
I dont necessarily have a problem with this. But didnt the supreme court smack down Bill Clinton over this issue?
Originally posted by: daniel49
Originally posted by: Genx87
I dont necessarily have a problem with this. But didnt the supreme court smack down Bill Clinton over this issue?
I don't remember that per say. I do remember it being proposed and asked for by Bush and being rejected by congress.
Line Item Veto Act of 1996
Presidents have repeatedly asked Congress to give them a line item veto power. According to Louis Fisher in The Politics of Shared Power, Ronald Reagan said to Congress in his 1986 State of the Union address, "Tonight I ask you to give me what forty-three governors have: Give me a line-item veto this year. Give me the authority to veto waste, and I'll take the responsibility, I'll make the cuts, I'll take the heat." Bill Clinton echoed the request in his State of the Union address in 1995.
The President was briefly granted this power by the Line Item Veto Act of 1996, passed by Congress in order to control "pork barrel spending" that favors a particular region rather than the nation as a whole. The line-item veto was used 11 times to strike 82 items from the federal budget by President Bill Clinton. [3][4]
However, U.S. District Court Judge Thomas F. Hogan ruled on February 12, 1998, that unilateral amendment or repeal of only parts of statutes violated the U.S. Constitution. This ruling was subsequently affirmed on June 25, 1998, by a 6-3 decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case Clinton v. City of New York. The case was brought by the then New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani.
A constitutional amendment to give the President line item veto power has been considered periodically since the Court ruled the 1996 act unconstitutional.
Originally posted by: Genx87
Originally posted by: daniel49
Originally posted by: Genx87
I dont necessarily have a problem with this. But didnt the supreme court smack down Bill Clinton over this issue?
I don't remember that per say. I do remember it being proposed and asked for by Bush and being rejected by congress.
I thought this was the case.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_item_veto
Line Item Veto Act of 1996
Presidents have repeatedly asked Congress to give them a line item veto power. According to Louis Fisher in The Politics of Shared Power, Ronald Reagan said to Congress in his 1986 State of the Union address, "Tonight I ask you to give me what forty-three governors have: Give me a line-item veto this year. Give me the authority to veto waste, and I'll take the responsibility, I'll make the cuts, I'll take the heat." Bill Clinton echoed the request in his State of the Union address in 1995.
The President was briefly granted this power by the Line Item Veto Act of 1996, passed by Congress in order to control "pork barrel spending" that favors a particular region rather than the nation as a whole. The line-item veto was used 11 times to strike 82 items from the federal budget by President Bill Clinton. [3][4]
However, U.S. District Court Judge Thomas F. Hogan ruled on February 12, 1998, that unilateral amendment or repeal of only parts of statutes violated the U.S. Constitution. This ruling was subsequently affirmed on June 25, 1998, by a 6-3 decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case Clinton v. City of New York. The case was brought by the then New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani.
A constitutional amendment to give the President line item veto power has been considered periodically since the Court ruled the 1996 act unconstitutional.
Originally posted by: Genx87
I dont necessarily have a problem with this. But didnt the supreme court smack down Bill Clinton over this issue?
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
I'm absolutely against a line item veto. You would turn pork into a club. What one party wants it gets if its President is in power, and the other party becomes the slave. You would effectively have revolving dictatorships, depending on who is in power at the moment.
A really really bad idea.
Originally posted by: daniel49
Court has 2 new members. perhaps worthy of being revisited?
Originally posted by: daniel49
Text
Go Senator Feinggold. I'll support you and Obama on this one.:thumbsup:
Unfortunatly it seems many other Senators will not.
Originally posted by: Fern
Originally posted by: daniel49
Text
Go Senator Feinggold. I'll support you and Obama on this one.:thumbsup:
Unfortunatly it seems many other Senators will not.
Why do you attribute this soley to a Dem, there two repubs along with Feingold? (it scares me when Feingold and McCain team up together on legislation)
Won't happen, as Genx has pointed. The line-item veto usurps Congressional Constitutional powers. (I thought Feingold was supposed to be a Constitutional lawyer, why would he pursue this knowing the SCOTUS has already ruled against it?)
I agree with eskimospy and others that this is a bad idea. I know it sounds good at first, but I think a bad idea still. If the President can do a line-item, then sign the bill Congress has zero input. It would be like they pre-approved whatever the President did; a blank check.
The proper way this should work is Congress and the WH working together before the bill goes to the President for signature. If Congress doesn't work with the Pres, or ignores his/her requests, the bill can be vetoed. IMO, the Constution had it right the 1st time.
We just need a Pres with the courage to use the veto more often when they see too much unnecessary spending etc.
Fern
Originally posted by: daniel49
Because a Dem is the main sponser.
As I understand it the vetoed item would go back to congress to stand or fail on its own legs.
Originally posted by: daniel49
Court has 2 new members. perhaps worthy of being revisited?
Originally posted by: eskimospy
Originally posted by: daniel49
Because a Dem is the main sponser.
As I understand it the vetoed item would go back to congress to stand or fail on its own legs.
Right, with the requirement of a 2/3rds majority. Again, it would give the president editorial control over laws written. Do you really want the president to have any more power than he already does?
Originally posted by: daniel49
Originally posted by: eskimospy
Originally posted by: daniel49
Because a Dem is the main sponser.
As I understand it the vetoed item would go back to congress to stand or fail on its own legs.
Right, with the requirement of a 2/3rds majority. Again, it would give the president editorial control over laws written. Do you really want the president to have any more power than he already does?
2/3 vote is not that much of a reach to control president. What controls congresses inability to add every lame pork item they can think of to each important bill?
Originally posted by: eskimospy
Originally posted by: daniel49
Originally posted by: eskimospy
Originally posted by: daniel49
Because a Dem is the main sponser.
As I understand it the vetoed item would go back to congress to stand or fail on its own legs.
Right, with the requirement of a 2/3rds majority. Again, it would give the president editorial control over laws written. Do you really want the president to have any more power than he already does?
2/3 vote is not that much of a reach to control president. What controls congresses inability to add every lame pork item they can think of to each important bill?
You realize that the Senate has been paralyzed by an inability to muster 60 votes on issues, but you think finding 67 isn't that much of a reach? I'm sorry, but that's not supported by reality.
Originally posted by: daniel49
Originally posted by: Fern
-snip-
Because a Dem is the main sponser.
I'm not sure of the significance of that. Wouldn't a Dem be the 'main sponsor' since they are in power?
As I understand it the vetoed item would go back to congress to stand or fail on its own legs.
Well, good luck with that. It would likely be dead unless it was a super popular earmark (in which case I doubt it would be vetoed).
The way it seems to me is if Congressperson gets a little of what they want they vote for the bill and other Congresspersons stuff.
There aint' no 'horse trading' like that for the poor bastard whose earmark was left out.
Kicking back the vetoed item for further consideration seem like a big 'nothing' to me.
Originally posted by: Fern
Originally posted by: daniel49
Originally posted by: Fern
-snip-
Because a Dem is the main sponser.
I'm not sure of the significance of that. Wouldn't a Dem be the 'main sponsor' since they are in power?
As I understand it the vetoed item would go back to congress to stand or fail on its own legs.
Well, good luck with that. It would likely be dead unless it was a super popular earmark (in which case I doubt it would be vetoed).
The way it seems to me is if Congressperson gets a little of what they want they vote for the bill and other Congresspersons stuff.
There aint' no 'horse trading' like that for the poor bastard whose earmark was left out.
Kicking back the vetoed item for further consideration seem like a big 'nothing' to me.
See bolded
Fern
Originally posted by: daniel49
-cut-
etc etc etc no I think 2/3 would work.
Originally posted by: eskimospy
Awful, awful idea. It's a sad statement about Congress when the USSC has to force them to stop giving away their power though. The line item veto is hugely unconstitutional as it basically allows the president editorial control over laws that are written. As others have written, it would help turn the president into a dictator.