|
Bush grants presidency extraordinary powers
World Net Daily | May 23, 2007
President Bush has
signed a directive granting extraordinary powers to the office of
the president in the event of a declared national emergency,
apparently without congressional approval or oversight.
The "National
Security and Homeland Security Presidential Directive"
was signed May 9, notes Jerome R. Corsi in a
WND column.
It was issued with
the dual designation of NSPD-51, as a National Security Presidential
Directive, and HSPD-20, as a Homeland Security Presidential
Directive.
The directive
establishes under the office of the president a new national
continuity coordinator whose job is to make plans for "National
Essential Functions" of all federal, state, local, territorial and
tribal governments, as well as private sector organizations to
continue functioning under the president's directives in the event
of a national emergency.
"Catastrophic
emergency" is loosely defined as "any incident, regardless of
location, that results in extraordinary levels of mass casualties,
damage, or disruption severely affecting the U.S. population,
infrastructure, environment, economy, or government functions."
(Story continues
below)
Corsi says the
president can assume the power to direct any and all government and
business activities until the emergency is declared over.
The directive
says the assistant to the president for Homeland Security and
Counterterrorism, currently
Frances Fragos Townsend,
would be designated as the national continuity coordinator.
Corsi says
the directive makes no attempt to reconcile the powers created for
the national continuity coordinator with the
National Emergency Act,
which requires that such proclamation "shall
immediately be transmitted to the Congress and published in the
Federal Register."
A Congressional
Research Service study notes the National Emergency Act sets up
Congress as a balance empowered to "modify, rescind, or render
dormant" such emergency authority if Congress believes the president
has acted inappropriately.
But the new
directive appears to supersede the National Emergency Act by
creating the new position of national continuity coordinator without
any specific act of Congress authorizing the position, Corsi says.
The directive also
makes no reference to Congress and its language appears to negate
any requirement that the president submit to Congress a
determination that a national emergency exists.
It suggests instead
that the powers of the directive can be implemented without any
congressional approval or oversight.
Homeland Security
spokesman Russ Knocke affirmed to Corsi the Homeland Security
Department would implement the requirements of the order under
Townsend's direction.
The White House
declined to comment on the directive.
|