The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Trump’s emergency powers worry some senators, legal experts

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WASHINGTON — The day he declared the COVID-19 pandemic a national emergency, President Donald Trump made a cryptic offhand remark.

“I have the right to do a lot of things that people don’t even know about,“he said at the White House.

Trump wasn’t just crowing. Dozens of statutory authoritie­s become available to any president when national emergencie­s are declared. They are rarely used, but Trump last month stunned legal experts and others when he claimed — mistakenly — that he has “total” authority over governors in easing COVID-19 guidelines.

That prompted 10 senators to look into how sweeping Trump believes his emergency powers are.

They have asked to see this administra­tion’s Presidenti­al Emergency Action Documents, or PEADs. The little-known, classified documents are essentiall­y planning papers.

The documents don’t give a president authority beyond what’s in the Constituti­on. But they outline what powers a president believes that the Constituti­on gives him to deal with national emergencie­s. The senators think the documents would provide them a window into how this White House interprets presidenti­al emergency powers.

“Somebody needs to look at these things,” Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, said in a telephone interview. “This is a case where the president can declare an emergency and then say, ‘Because there’s an emergency, I can do this, this and this.’“

King, seven Democrats and one Republican sent a letter late last month to acting national intelligen­ce director Richard Grenell asking to be briefed on any existing PEADs. Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., wrote a similar letter to Attorney General William Barr and White House counsel Pat Cipollone.

“The concern is that there could be actions taken that would violate individual rights under the Constituti­on,” such as limiting due process, unreasonab­le search and seizure and holding individual­s without cause, King said.

“I’m merely speculatin­g. It may be that we get these documents and there’s nothing untoward in their checks and balances and everything is above board and reasonable.”

Joshua Geltzer, visiting professor of law at Georgetown University, said there is a push to take a look at these documents because there is rising distrust for the Trump administra­tion’s legal interpreta­tions in a way he hasn’t seen in his lifetime.

The most publicized example was Trump’s decision last year to declare the security situation along the U.S.-MexVladeck, ico border a national emergency. That decision allowed him to take up to $3.6 billion from military constructi­on projects to finance wall constructi­on beyond the miles that lawmakers had been willing to fund. Trump’s move skirted the authority of Congress, which by law has the power to spend money in the nation’s wallet.

“I worry about other things he might call an emergency,” Geltzer said. “I think around the election itself in November — that’s where there seems to be a lot of potential for mischief with this president.”

The lawmakers made their request just days after Trump made his startling claim on April 13 that he had the authority to force states to reopen for business amid the pandemic.

“When somebody’s the president of the United States, the authority is total,” Trump said, causing a backlash from some governors and legal experts. Trump later tweeted that while some people say it’s the governors, not the president’s decision, “Let it be fully understood that this is incorrect.”

Trump later backtracke­d on his claim of “total“authority and agreed that states have the upper hand in deciding when to end their lockdowns. But it was just the latest from a president who has been stretching existing statutory authoritie­s “to, if not beyond, their breaking point,“said Stephen

President Donald Trump speaks about the coronaviru­s in the Rose Garden of the White House on May 15 in Washington.

a law professor at the University of Texas.

Questions about Trump’s PEADs went unanswered by the Justice Department, National Security Council and the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce.

Elizabeth Goitein, codirector of a national security program at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law, said PEADs have not been subject to congressio­nal oversight for decades. She estimates that there are 50 to 60 of these documents, which include draft proclamati­ons, executive orders and proposed legislatio­n that could be swiftly introduced to “assert broad presidenti­al authority” in national emergencie­s.

She said the Eisenhower administra­tion had PEADs outlining how it might respond to a possible Soviet nuclear attack. According to the Brennan Center, PEADs issued up through the 1970s included detention

of U.S. citizens suspected of being subversive­s, warrantles­s searches and seizures and the imposition of martial law.

“A Department of Justice memorandum from the Lyndon B. Johnson administra­tion discusses a presidenti­al emergency action document that would impose censorship on news sent abroad,” Goitein wrote in an op-ed with lawyer Andrew Boyle published last month in The New York Times.

“The memo notes that while no ‘express statutory authority’ exists for such a measure, ‘it can be argued that these actions would be legal in the aftermath of a devastatin­g nuclear attack based on the president’s constituti­onal powers to preserve the national security.’”

Goitein said she especially worries about any orders having to do with military deployment, including martial law.

“You can imagine a situation where he (Trump) engineers a crisis that leads to domestic

violence, which then becomes a pretext for martial law,” said Goitein, who insists she’s simply playing out worst-case scenarios. “What I worry about is the extreme interpreta­tion under which he asserts the authority to declare martial law and take over all the functions of government, including running the elections.“

She also wonders if there is a PEAD outlining steps the president could take to respond to a serious cyberattac­k. Would the president aggressive­ly interpret telecommun­ications law and flip an internet kill switch, or restrain domestic internet traffic? she asks.

Bobby Chesney, associate dean at the University of Texas School of Law, said some fears might be exaggerate­d because while Trump makes off-the-cuff assertions of authority far beyond past presidents, he doesn’t necessaril­y follow up with action.

Says Chesney: “His actions don’t match the rhetoric always — or even often.”

 ?? Alex Brandon / Associated Press ??
Alex Brandon / Associated Press

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