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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: combjelly who wrote (303263)9/15/2006 2:39:21 PM
From: TimF   of 1570975
 

Link?


I provided one from the Clinton administrations justice department defending such signing statements.

Also see
"A look at the Clinton record of the use of the presidential signing statement shows that Clinton used the constitutional signing statement less than his predecessor (105 to 146), but still more than the Reagan administration (105 to 71)."

"And like the Bush administration, President Clinton in at least three separate instances asked the OLC to issue opinions either buttressing the president’s authority to decline to enforce provisions of a statute or to direct inferior officers on how to implement the terms of a constitutional signing statement, and in two additional cases, the OLC wrote highly expansive and detailed memorandum on the legal significance of the constitutionally-based signing statement."

mpsa.indiana.edu

Link and commentary found at
floppingaces.net

The PDF also refrences a signing statement of that type by Carter, but as far as I can tell it took off under Reagan (before Reagan it happened but was rare).

--
Here is a link from someone who opposes the use of signing statements

"President Bush has expressed his own commitment to the unitary executive theory through his signing statements, restricting enforcement of more than 750 new statutes, in which he states which parts of new legislation he intends to enforce. These signing statements probably do violate separation of powers, as Democratic politicians contend, but so did Clinton's signing statements restricting enforcement of 140 statutes."

civilliberty.about.com

So maybe Bush is using them about 7 times as often as Clinton (750 compared to 140 and also Bush's 2nd term still has a couple of years)
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