Judging Executive Power: Sixteen Supreme Court Cases that Have Shaped the American Presidency

Richard J. Ellis

Judging Executive Power: Sixteen Supreme Court Cases that Have Shaped the American Presidency
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield
Country
United States
Published
16 March 2009
Pages
244
ISBN
9780742565128

Judging Executive Power: Sixteen Supreme Court Cases that Have Shaped the American Presidency

Richard J. Ellis

George W. Bush’s presidency has helped accelerate a renewed interest in the legal or formal bases of presidential power. It is now abundantly clear that presidential power is more than the sum of bargaining, character, and rhetoric. Presidential power also inheres in the Constitution or at least assertions of constitutional powers. Judging Executive Power helps to bring the Constitution and the courts back into the study of the American presidency by introducing students to sixteen important Supreme Court cases that have shaped the power of the American presidency. The cases selected include the removal power, executive privilege, executive immunity, and the line-item veto, with particularly emphasis on a president’s wartime powers from the Civil War to the War on Terror. Through introductions and postscripts that accompany each case, landmark judicial opinions are placed in their political and historical contexts, enabling students to understand the political forces that frame and the political consequences that follow from legal arguments and judgments.

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