The Denver Post

Perspectiv­e: There’s nothing nefarious about executive orders

- By Cass R. Sunstein Cass R. Sunstein is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist.

Here are three popular myths about executive orders: They are a way to bypass Congress. They are an insult to the Constituti­on. They are new and a product of the imperial presidency.

Even among serious and experience­d observers, there is widespread belief in these falsehoods. That’s a big problem because President- elect Joe Biden is about to issue a bunch of executive orders. Citizens need to understand what they are and what they do.

Executive orders often take the form of directives from the president to his subordinat­es. For example, Biden might tell the secretary of homeland security to adopt new immigratio­n policies. Or he might direct his secretary of education to reverse President Donald Trump’s civil rights policies.

Executive orders do not bypass Congress. Typically, they rely on statutes that Congress has already enacted.

If Biden directs the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to issue new regulation­s to reduce greenhouse- gas emissions, he will be relying on the Clean Air Act, which is already the law. In domains including education, occupation­al safety, COVID- 19, clean water and civil rights, Congress has given plenty of power to executive agencies. Executive orders from the Biden administra­tion would rely on the power that agencies already have.

For that reason, they are hardly an insult to the Constituti­on. So long as what they order is within the bounds set by congressio­nal enactments, they are a perfectly legitimate exercise of executive power — which is, after all, the power to execute the law.

Nor are executive orders new. They go all the way back to George Washington. Abraham Lincoln issued them, too. Herbert Hoover issued 995; Franklin Roosevelt issued a whopping 3,728; Harry Truman issued 896; Dwight Eisenhower issued 496; Lyndon Johnson issued 324; Richard Nixon issued 346; Ronald Reagan issued 381; Barack Obama issued 296. To date, Trump has issued 205.

If a president- elect, like Biden, is expected to issue a host of new executive orders, the proper response is not outrage. It is closer to a yawn.

In the first month of a new administra­tion, any president will mark out new directions by telling his staff what to do. And if the new president is from a different political party from that of his predecesso­r, new directions are inevitable. On

COVID- 19, climate change, immigratio­n, health care and more, no one should be surprised, or cry “abuse of power,” if Biden calls for fresh starts.

None of this is meant to deny that an executive order might raise legitimate concerns. Such an order cannot mandate action that Congress has not authorized, and some presidents have acted unlawfully or pushed legal boundaries. For example,

Trump’s original “Muslim ban,” issued in January, 2017, was a bit of a mess, and it ran into serious legal trouble. Particular actions by the Biden administra­tion will be carefully scrutinize­d by federal courts, including by numerous judges appointed by Trump.

In early 2021, the Biden administra­tion will also have to make hard decisions about how and when to approach Congress. Even if an executive order reasonably relies on power that Congress conferred in, say, 1990, members of Congress might strenuousl­y object, in 2021, that their powers have been usurped.

Strictly as a matter of law, the objection might be baseless. But to the extent that members have strong views on ( for example) student- loan forgivenes­s and immigratio­n, they might feel ignored or dismissed if the president decides to act on his own, and if he does not give them a chance to enact new legislatio­n.

For that reason, Biden and his team will have to make a series of political judgments: Even when they have the legal authority to act, ought they delay, on the ground that it’s better to work with Congress, and in order to avoid some kind of breakdown in relations?

It is hard to answer that question in the abstract. Instead of trying, let’s get clear about executive orders.

As directives from a new president, they are hardly an insult to the Constituti­on. On the contrary, they an essential part of the U. S. constituti­onal order.

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