Daily Camera (Boulder)

Monkeypox? Climate? Deciding what’s a national emergency

- By Will Weissert The Associated Press

WASHINGTON » In November 1979, a little over a week after student militants seized control of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and took 52 American citizens hostage, President Jimmy Carter issued Executive Order 12170 declaring a national emergency against Iran.

That order remains in effect today, renewed most recently in the weeks before last Thanksgivi­ng by President Joe Biden, who noted then that “our relations with Iran have not yet normalized.”

The Biden administra­tion’s declaratio­n Aug. 4 of a public health emergency on monkeypox frees up federal money and resources to fight a virus that has already infected more than 10,000 people in the United States. But public health emergencie­s expire every 90 days, unless extended by the Department of Health and Human Services.

Those are different from national emergency declaratio­ns, which give presidents broad leeway to make policy and tap federal funds without congressio­nal approval. That’s what activists have clamored for to better fight climate change, but Biden has held off despite energy shortages in much of the world and high gasoline prices at home.

“This is actually the true test of whether President Biden takes the climate crisis seriously,” Karen Orenstein, climate director of Friends of the Earth. “There could not be a more crucial move.”

Presidents have declared 76 national emergencie­s in the last nearly five decades, and 42 remain in effect, according to a list compiled by the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University

Law School.

Biden has recently declared emergencie­s related to hostage-taking and detained U.S. nationals abroad, while extending one on Mali. He’s also issued them on Myanmar and Afghanista­n and authorizin­g sanctions on Russia, Ethiopia and individual­s linked to the global illicit drug trade.

Such declaratio­ns stem mostly from the National Emergencie­s Act of 1976, which came after President Richard Nixon issued a series of them, including on currency restrictio­ns and a national postal strike.

The law requires that those declaratio­ns automatica­lly end after a year, unless the president orders a renewal. Congress can also end emergencie­s, but doing so effectivel­y requires a veto-proof two-thirds vote, which has never happened.

“The origin of the law was clearly an attempt to set limits on presidenti­al power,” said Chris Edelson, author of “Emergency Presidenti­al Power: From the Drafting of the Constituti­on to the War on Terror.” “Before the actions passed, presidents could declare emergencie­s and no one really knew what it meant. And they stood for decades.”

An emergency declared in 1950 by President Harry S. Truman to combat communism globally in the context of the Korean War was still in effect in the 1970s, before the law.

Emergencie­s set since it took effect have similar, extended shelf lives, though. President George W. Bush’s emergency three days after the Sept. 11 attacks still stands. President Donald Trump declared COVID-19 a national emergency in 2020 and Biden has extended it through at least February 2023.

Only once has Congress even discussed thwarting emergency declaratio­ns, Edelson said. That was in 2019, when 12 Senate Republican­s joined Democrats to block Trump’s efforts to declare one on the U.s.-mexico border and put $6 billion-plus from the military and other federal funds toward building a wall. Trump used a veto to preserve his border emergency declaratio­n until Biden nixed it upon taking office.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? President Joe Biden speaks in the East Room of the White House in Washington on Tuesday. Climate activists are clamoring for Biden to declare a national climate emergency, calls the White House has so far not headed.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE President Joe Biden speaks in the East Room of the White House in Washington on Tuesday. Climate activists are clamoring for Biden to declare a national climate emergency, calls the White House has so far not headed.

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