FEINGOLD,
WHITEHOUSE INTRODUCE BILL TO HELP CURB “SECRET LAW”
Executive Order Integrity Act Would Require Public Notice When the
President Makes Changes to Published Executive Orders
August 1, 2008
Washington, D.C. –
U.S. Senators Russ Feingold (D-WI) and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) have
introduced legislation to prohibit the President from relying on one
form of “secret law.” The Feingold-Whitehouse bill would
require public notice when the President modifies, revokes, waives,
or suspends a published executive order or similar Presidential directive
that carries the force of law and binds the Executive Branch. The legislation
responds to a legal opinion of the Department of Justice’s Office
of Legal Counsel which concludes that a President can modify or waive
an executive order without public notice, simply by not following it.
This legal conclusion by OLC was made public in December 2007 through
the efforts of Whitehouse and examined at an April 30th hearing of the
Senate Judiciary Committee Constitution Subcommittee on the subject
of “Secret Law” chaired by Feingold.
“No one disputes a
President’s ability to withdraw or revise an Executive Order,”
Feingold said. “But modifying or even throwing out a published
Executive Order without any public notice is a way of secretly changing
the law. And since the Executive Order stays on the books, Congress
and the public are misled about what the real law is. This bill is an
important step toward stemming the growth of secret law in the executive
branch.”
“The Bush Administration’s
relentless efforts to conduct government in secret have undermined the
rule of law and too often betrayed the trust of the American people,”
said Whitehouse, a former Rhode Island U.S. Attorney and Attorney General
who first made OLC’s conclusion public. “This measure will
help restore the rule of law, disciplined by the balance of power established
under the Constitution.”
The bill, called the Executive
Order Integrity Act, would require notice to be published in the Federal
Register 30 days after the President revokes, modifies, waives, or suspends
a published Executive Order. The notice would identify the Executive
Order or portions thereof that were affected; whether the change that
occurred was a revocation, modification, waiver, or suspension; and
the nature and circumstances of the change.
More information on the April
30th hearing on “secret law” can be found at: http://feingold.senate.gov/~feingold/statements/08/04/20080430.htm.
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