Executive Orders and Memoranda
President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation
Proclamation shifted the focus of the Civil War and set the stage for the passage
of the 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution which abolished
slavery. The Emancipation Proclamation is not just a memorable speech; it is also
the most well-known executive order in history. It provided that all
slaves in the rebellious states “shall be
then, thenceforward, and forever free” almost two years prior to Congress’s
ratification of the 13th amendment.[1]
Executive actions play an extremely
important role in the President’s ability to enforce the laws of the United
States, but have also become more controversial as Presidents continue to use
the device more frequently and in unprecedented ways. This presentation discusses
the sources of authority that the President can rely on to issue executive orders,
the types of executive orders, and differentiates executive orders from executive
memoranda.
Sources of Authority
for Executive Actions
The President can draw on three
sources to issue an executive action (an executive action is an executive order
or memorandum). The first is the Constitution itself. Article II vests the
executive power in the President, which gives him the power to oversee and
direct the various aspects of the executive branch. The Constitution goes on to
charge the President with responsibility to faithfully execute the laws of the
United States. This prevents the President from acting in opposition to the law,
and an executive order that conflicts with an existing law can be invalidated.
The second source of authority is from
the legislative branch. Congress may grant the President or an executive agency
the limited power to make rules on certain topics. For example, Congress may
vest the Transportation Safety Administration (the TSA) with the power to
decide what people can bring onto airplanes. When Congress does this, it is
presumed that the President is authorized to issue executive orders to carry
out Congress’ goals in passing federal legislation.
The third source for executive actions is
the President’s inherent authority, which is defined in Black’s Law Dictionary
as “a power that necessarily derives from an office, position, or status.”[2]
A President’s inherent authority can fluctuate in scope and acts incidental to
both Congress’s and the President’s explicit powers. In the early 1890s, President
Grover Cleveland issued an executive order to send US soldiers to end a
railroad labor strike that disrupted rail traffic in the Midwest. President
Cleveland claimed inherent authority as his justification. When his actions
were challenged in court, the Supreme Court agreed with President Cleveland,
finding what he did constitutional because he did so under his inherent
authority and “incidental powers” to assist Congress in regulating interstate
commerce.[3]
The Court reasoned that the railroad strike disrupted commercial activity,
which limited Congress’s ability to achieve one of its objectives: regulating
interstate commerce. President Cleveland was thus helping Congress by ending interference
with Congress’ ability to regulate interstate commerce.
Executive Actions and
What They Do
The
two most common executive actions are an executive order and the executive
memorandum.
An executive order is a written
statement that the President issues to “direct or instruct the actions of
executive agencies or government officials, or to set policies for the
executive branch to follow.” It is signed by the President, approved by the Office
of Management and Budget and the Attorney General and is recorded in the
federal register.[4] An
executive order has the full force and effect of a law enacted by the
legislature, except where it is contradicted by other duly passed federal law.[5]
Therefore, a President can issue an executive order to bypass Congress’
bureaucracy and advance policy objectives without having to go through the
legislative process.
An executive memorandum is like an executive
order, but it does not have the same procedural requirements. Unlike an executive
order that must be signed and published, there is no formal process for issuing
an executive memorandum.[6]
Furthermore, it does not have to be approved by the Office of Management and
Budget and the Attorney General, nor must it be recorded in the federal
register.
One example of a forum particularly
susceptible to the executive order is military operations. The President, as Commander-in-Chief
of the military, is tasked with running the military and may use executive
action to set military policy. For example, in 1948, President Harry Truman
issued an executive order that desegregated the military. He relied on his
authority as Commander-in-Chief to act. President Ronald Reagan relied on the
National Security Act of 1947 to issue an executive order which authorized
surveillance of certain people and this law also formed the basis for the NSA’s
justification to collect data in the early 2000s during the “War on Terror.”[7]
Executive orders can also be used to
outline strategy, such as when President Barack Obama issued an executive
order, pursuant to his authority under the Clean Water Act, detailing the
federal government’s strategy to restore the Chesapeake Bay.[8]
Even more recently, President Donald Trump issued an executive memorandum,
which directs his Administration to develop a plan to defeat ISIS.[9]
How an Executive Order
or Memorandum Can Be Terminated
An executive order or memorandum can
be terminated in several ways. The sitting President can rescind an order
issued by himself or a previous President or can override the old order by issuing
a new order contradicting it. This frequently occurs when a new president takes
office and wants to establish new policy goals. For example, when President
Obama took office, he issued an executive order that counteracted an executive
order signed by President George W. Bush which limited funding for stem cell research.[10]
Similarly, when President Trump took office he issued an executive memorandum contradicting
President Obama’s previous memorandum concerning the Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals (or “DACA”) initiative.[11]
Congress can override an executive
order or memorandum expressly or by eliminating the funding necessary to carry
it out. Recall that while an executive order has the force of federal law, it
is subordinate to federal law that contradicts it. Overriding an executive
action is rare, however, because legislation to overrule an executive action by
a sitting president will almost certainly be vetoed by that president, and, in
today’s hyper-partisan environment, gathering a two-thirds majority necessary
to override a presidential veto is difficult.[12]
Finally, a court can overturn an
executive order if the President acted outside of his authority when he issued it.
This can be a difficult determination because, when the President issues an
order, he usually gives multiple sources for his authority, such as the
Constitution, his power as Commander-in-Chief, and a specific statute, to which
courts tend to defer.[13]
When courts do overturn executive action, it’s usually on the basis that the
order violates the civil rights of individuals or groups.
The most famous example of a court
overturning an executive action was in in 1952, in Youngstown Sheet & Tube
Co. v. Sawyer.[14] There,
during the Korean War, President Truman ordered steel mills seized to break up
a strike of steel mill workers. The Court held that Truman did not have the
authority to issue an executive order seizing steel mills because no specific
statute authorized him to do so. His power as Commander-in-Chief did not
authorize him to unilaterally take private property. Moreover, Congress had
specifically rejected the idea of granting the President the power to seize
factories for military production.[15]
In recent years, Congress’s gridlock and
increased polarization have pushed presidents to turn to executive actions more
and more as substitutes for legislation.[16]
This trend will likely continue as our nation’s Commander-in-Chief looks for
alternative paths to set and enforce policy.
[2] Louis Fisher, “Invoking Inherent
Powers: A Primer,” https://www.loc.gov/law/help/usconlaw/pdf/Inherent-March07.pdf, (2007).
[3] John C. Duncan, “A CRITICAL CONSIDERATION OF EXECUTIVE ORDERS: GLIMMERINGS OF
AUTOPOIESIS IN THE EXECUTIVE ROLE,” 35 Vt. L. Rev. 333, 372-374 (2010) at
372-374; In re Debs, 158 U.S. 564, 15 S. Ct. 900, 39 L.Ed. 1092 (1895)
[5] John C. Duncan, “A CRITICAL
CONSIDERATION OF EXECUTIVE ORDERS: GLIMMERINGS OF AUTOPOIESIS IN THE EXECUTIVE
ROLE,” 35 Vt. L. Rev. 333 (2010).
[7] Erica Newland, “Executive Orders in
Court,” 124 Yale L.J. 2026 (2015).
[10] “Obama overturns Bush policy on stem
cells” CNN Politics available at
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/03/09/obama.stem.cells/
[12] Alissa Wetzel, “BEYOND THE ZONE OF
TWILIGHT: HOW CONGRESS AND THE COURT CAN MINIMIZE THE DANGERS AND MAXIMIZE THE
BENEFITS OF EXECUTIVE ORDERS,” 42 Val. U.L. Rev. 385 (2007).
[13] Erica Newland, “Executive Orders in
Court,” 124 Yale L.J. 2026 (2015).
[14]
343 U.S. 579 (1952)
[15] John C. Duncan, “A CRITICAL
CONSIDERATION OF EXECUTIVE ORDERS: GLIMMERINGS OF AUTOPOIESIS IN THE EXECUTIVE
ROLE,” 35 Vt. L. Rev. 333 (2010).