[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 29 (Tuesday, March 1, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H1400-H1401]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE IMPERIAL PRESIDENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oklahoma (Mr. Lankford) for 5 minutes.
Mr. LANKFORD. Mr. Speaker, I rise to challenge this body, and I hope
that my message is well received. This Nation was founded on the rules
of the Constitution, not the opinions of Republicans and Democrats. Our
decisions are judged in the light of the traditions of the past and the
precedent that it sets for the future and the future generation.
Mr. Speaker, according to our Constitution, a President cannot pick
and choose which parts of the law he prefers. The executive branch does
not write the law nor choose the law. It enforces the law. The basic
function of every President is to enforce the law. Every executive
branch agency has its foundation in a short and clear statement from
the Constitution stating this: He--that means the President--shall take
care that the law be faithfully executed.
A President can petition for laws to be changed. He can complain
about a law. He can encourage passage of new law. But he cannot just
ignore the law or write new law. Only the courts can throw out a law,
and only Congress can write a law. The President and the Department of
Justice cannot unilaterally decide not to enforce the Defense of
Marriage Act.
For decades, the Congress has been donating their constitutional
powers to the executive branch by giving increased rulemaking authority
to the different agencies. Our agencies now write rules that look more
like legislation than regulation. We have allowed people to serve in
``Cabinet lite'' level positions without Senate approval. We have
exponentially increased the budget for White House staff. And now the
President wants to set a new precedent that he alone can determine
which
[[Page H1401]]
laws he likes and he does not like. With this action, the President has
invented a retroactive veto on all previous Presidents and all previous
congressional acts.
It is ultimately ironic that the executive branch states that several
lower courts have rejected the Defense of Marriage Act as
unconstitutional, so they are accepting the lower court rulings over a
higher court. In the past year, the health care law was ruled
unconstitutional, but the Federal Government is pressing forward. The
administration was instructed by the courts to lift the drilling
moratorium in the gulf, but they stalled.
{time} 1110
It is apparent that this administration is bent on placing its
political preferences ahead of the courts, ahead of the legislative
branch, and the majority of the American people.
Both parties need to understand the precedent that's being set by the
President's choosing to not enforce the Defense of Marriage Act. My
Democrat friends should imagine for a moment, what if when a Republican
President takes the oath and he instructs HHS and all other agencies
not to enforce ObamaCare, though it's the law of the land, because some
lower court rejected it? They would be outraged, rightfully so, because
currently it is the law of the land. A President cannot just
unilaterally throw it aside.
Before this conversation is spun as a partisan issue, let me remind
everyone, though, that the Defense of Marriage Act passed the House and
the Senate by a wide bipartisan majority and was signed into law by a
Democrat President. This is not only a slap in the face to our
constitutional system; it is a slap to Republicans and Democrats who
expressed the will of their districts and States on an issue that has
been settled in law.
The people spoke through Congress, and one person, even a President,
cannot undermine the will of the people. At least not in the America
that I grew up in.
I do not think we will fully understand the implications of this
action if we allow it to stand. We must not act partisan now and regret
it later. This is not the way to deal with the gay marriage debate, for
the President to just sweep it aside and say, ``I will not enforce the
law.''
Many in this Chamber are well aware of my traditional view of
marriage and my Biblical world view. I am unashamed of my personal
faith in Jesus Christ. I believe that words have meaning, though, and
that the meaning of marriage is the union of a man and a woman. The
Defense of Marriage Act codified that definition in law, representing
the belief of a majority of Americans.
This issue is well beyond faith, though, or a social issue or even a
political issue. Marriage is now not only the center of a national
debate, it's now the center of a constitutional debate.
Weeks ago some members of the press suggested that Republicans would
ignore the budget and focus on social issues. I find it ironic now that
the President has submitted a budget that will raise the national debt
to $26 trillion, by his own numbers, and he has decided to change the
national debate from fiscal issues to social issues and gay marriage.
As a Congress, we cannot demand of the executive branch, which is a
coequal branch of government. But I believe we must require the
executive branch to fulfill its oath of office and constitutional
requirement to faithfully execute the laws of the United States.
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