[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 48 (Tuesday, April 5, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2110-S2111]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WAR POWERS ACT
Mr. PAUL. Mr. President, I very much thank the majority leader for
allowing this important debate to occur.
During his campaign, Candidate Barrack Obama said no President should
unilaterally initiate military conflict without Congressional
authority. I agree with that statement. It is a very important
constitutional principle and something that I think deserves debate.
I think the most important thing we do as representatives is voting
on whether to go to war. If Congress does not vote to go to war or does
not vote on the notion of going to war, we would have an unlimited
Presidency, and this is a very dangerous notion.
I would take this position no matter what the party affiliation were
of the President because I believe very strongly in the constitutional
checks and balances. We will vote today on the President's own words
verbatim. During the election, the President said: ``The President does
not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a
military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual
or imminent threat to the Nation.''
Clearly, the circumstances in Libya do not rise to this, and I think
this vote is incredibly important. Madison wrote that:
The Constitution supposes what history demonstrates. That
the executive is the branch most interested in war and most
prone to it. Therefore, the Constitution has with studied
care given that power to the legislature.
``Don't tread on me'' was a motto and a rallying cry for our Founding
Fathers. The motto of Congress appears to be: ``Tread on me, please
tread on me.'' The Congress has become not just a rubber stamp for an
unlimited Presidency, but, worse, Congress has become a doormat to be
stepped upon, to be ignored, and basically to be treated as irrelevant.
Some would say: We had no time. We had to go to war. There was no
time for debate. When we were attacked in World War II on December 7,
Pearl Harbor, within 24 hours this body came together and voted to
declare war on Japan. There is no excuse for the Senate not to vote on
going to war before we go to war.
The President had time to go to the United Nations, have a
discussion, and a vote. The President had time to go to the Arab
League, have a discussion, and a vote. The President had the time to go
to NATO. But the President had no time to come to the people's house,
to the Congress, and ask, as the Constitution dictates, for the
approval of the American people and for the approval of Congress.
Why is this important? It is important because when our Nation was
founded, we were founded as a constitutional Republic. We placed
limitations not only on the President but on the Congress. We are
supposed to obey the Constitution. These are important principles and
we have gone beyond that. We have gotten to the point where my question
is, Are we even obeying the Constitution in this body?
This is a sad day. This is a sad day for America. The thing is, we
need to have checks and balances. Do we want an unlimited Presidency, a
Presidency that could take us to war anywhere, anytime, without the
approval of Congress?
Some have said: We are going to have a vote sometime, sometime in the
next couple weeks. When we get around to it, we may have a debate about
Libya. Had the President shown true leadership, the President would
have, when he called the United Nations, when he called the Arab
League, when he called NATO, the President would have called the
leadership of the Senate and the leadership of the House, and we would
have been here within 24 hours, having what should be the most
momentous debate this body ever has on sending our young brave men and
women to war.
We are currently engaged in two wars, and we are now going to be
engaged in a third war. The interesting point is, when we went into
Iraq and Afghanistan, we had votes in this body. President Bush came to
Congress and there were votes.
The War Powers Act--some on the other side say: This is no big deal.
The President can do whatever he wants as long as he notifies Congress
within a certain period of time.
This is not a correct interpretation of the War Powers Act. The War
Powers Act does say he needs to notify Congress. But the War Powers Act
also says the President must meet three hurdles before taking our
troops into harm's way.
No. 1, there should be a declaration of war or there should be an
authorization of force from this body or there should be imminent
danger to the Nation. None of those were adhered to. The law was not
adhered to.
Some will say: The War Powers Act, no President recognizes it. Well,
The War Powers Act is the law of the land, and the President needs to
respect not only the statutory law of the land but the Constitution. I
do not think these are trivial questions. But I am bemused, I am
confused, I do not understand why your representatives are not down
here debating such a momentous event as going to war.
I can think of no vote and no debate more important than sending our
young men and women to war. It should be done reluctantly. We should go
to war only when threatened as a nation. When engaged in two wars, we
should debate the prudence of being involved in a third war. These are
not trivial questions. I am amazed this body does not take the time to
debate whether we should be in Libya.
Some have said: We will debate it next week. The problem is, the
debate should occur before we go to war. At this point, we will have a
vote. We will have a vote on the President's own words.
I will yield for a minute or two for a question, if that is OK. I
yield to the Senator from Utah.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah is recognized.
Mr. LEE. Mr. President, what we have with the situation with Libya
presents us with a fundamental question, one we have wrestled with for
a couple centuries as a nation. The founding era was a time that was
fraught with wars. It was a time when we learned that executives
sometimes abuse their power. Sometimes they will take us into wars in
faraway nations without the support of the people, knowing full well it
is the sons and the daughters of the people on the ground who are asked
to make the ultimate sacrifice in those battles.
We channeled the war power in the Constitution so as to make sure
these debates would always come to the forefront, that they would
always be brought up by the elected representatives of the people in
Congress. For that reason, although we give power to the President to
be the Commander in Chief in article II of the Constitution, in article
I of the Constitution, we reserve that power, the power to declare war,
to Congress.
This is how we guarantee that the people's voice will be heard and
that people's sons and their daughters will not be sent off to war
without some public debate and discussion by those
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who have been duly elected by the people and stand accountable to the
people.
We have, over time, clarified the intent. We have made clear there
are certain steps that have to be taken. We have also made clear that
although there is, to be sure, a certain unknown continuum, a continuum
that can be hard to define in every circumstance, between the
President's plenary authority as Commander in Chief, on the one hand,
and Congress's power to declare war on the other, there does come a
point at which we can recognize that we are at war and that some
authorization is required by Congress.
This very body, Congress, has, through the war powers resolution,
attempted to distill some of these principles. In section 1541 of the
War Powers Act--it is found at 50 United States Code section 1541--we
are told there are circumstances, three circumstances to be precise--
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, first of all, I wish to express my
appreciation to the Senator from Kentucky. He is a gentleman. I know
how sincere he feels about this issue. I admire him for feeling
sincerely about issues, as he does on a number of them.
It has been good for me to get to know him better during the last 4
or 5 days.
I ask for the clerk to report the pending business.
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