Durbin Seeks Justice Memos on Domestic Military Deployment
Source: Bloomberg Law
Jan. 7, 2025, 5:55 PM EST
The Senate Judiciary Committees top Democrat is asking the Justice Department to rescind five opinions regarding presidential war powers issued by the Office of Legal Counsel and make public other documents regarding the presidents ability to deploy the military domestically.
Unfortunately, a number of OLC opinions dating to prior presidential administrations which remain on the books contain conclusions that are inconsistent with Congresss prerogatives with respect to war, Congresss role in treaty-making, and/or the Presidents duty under the Take Care Clause, Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) wrote in a letter on Tuesday to Attorney General Merrick Garland that was obtained by Bloomberg Law.
The OLC opinions include ones regarding the FBIs authority to apprehend suspects overseas, congressional authorization of military force, and whether the president is obligated to give Congress advance notice before withdrawing from a treaty.
Durbin said a 2020 OLC opinion concluding a statutory provision requiring such notice before a treaty withdrawal was unconstitutional is inconsistent with a statute requiring congressional action before the US withdraws from NATO. Durbin also requested that the Justice Department release 290 letters, opinions, and manuals pertaining to the domestic use of the US military.
Read more: https://news.bloomberglaw.com/us-law-week/durbin-seeks-justice-memos-on-domestic-military-deployment
bucolic_frolic
(47,899 posts)How will Canada close it's borders? No wonder Trudeau wants out.
Drum
(9,965 posts)Thats heads-up politics there, Senator Durbin.
NotHardly
(1,446 posts)Baitball Blogger
(48,663 posts)SeattleVet
(5,609 posts)You know he'll ignore it, try to do whatever he wants, and then eventually run it through his rubber-stamp MAGA SCOTUS for final approval.
IOW, we're fucked!
BumRushDaShow
(145,066 posts)and it eventually gets to the D.C. Appeals Court, "we" are majority there and it might at least introduce some delay with a favorable ruling before the SCOTUS reaches in to interfere (or maybe even surprises and bats away a 45 appeal).