George Soros gave Ivanka's husband's business a $250 million credit line in 2015 per WSJ. Soros is also an investor in Jared's business.
Monday, March 23, 2020
US presidents and their congressional pals can't use "war" as excuse to take over private companies as they learned in 1952 Supreme Court case, Youngstown Sheet and Tube
In 1952 the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that President Truman couldn’t seize private companies.
June 2, 1952, “Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer”
Following is the case brief for Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579 (1952)
Case Summary of Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer:
*Responding to a threatened nationwide steel worker strike and concerned that much-needed steel would not be available to prosecute the Korean War, President Truman ordered federal control over most of the steel mills in the country.
*The owners of the steel mills sued in federal court, seeking an injunction.
*The District Court ordered a preliminary injunction, but the Court of Appeals stayed that decision until the Supreme Court could decide the case.
*The U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the District Court’s injunction, finding that Congress, not the President, has the power to seize private property.
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer Case Brief
Statement of the Facts:
In April 1952, President Truman believed that a threatened nationwide steel worker strike would jeopardize national security because of the need for steel for weapons in the Korean War. Accordingly, the President seized and operated most of the steel mills through an Executive Order.The Order was issued without any statutory authority, but rather purported to be based on the powers vested to the President under the Constitution, and as Commander and Chief of the Armed Forces.
President Truman reported his actions to Congress. Congress did not take any action in response. The executives of the steel companies filed suit in Federal District Court, seeking a declaration that President Truman exceeded his constitutional authorityand an injunction halting the President’s operation of the mills.
Procedural History:
*The District Court issued a preliminary injunction.
*The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals stayed the injunction, pending a decision from the Supreme Court.
*The U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari.
Issue and Holding:
Can the President of the United States seize and operate private companies in the absence of congressional authority? No.
Judgment:
The decision of the District Court is affirmed.
Rule of Law or Legal Principle Applied:
The President of the United States, who is charged with executing the laws of the Nation, does not have the legislative authority to seize private property without having the authority granted by Congress.
Reasoning:
The President’s power must stem from either an act of Congress or from the Constitution itself. There is no statute that expressly or impliedly authorizes the President to take possession of property as President Truman did in this case.
There are statutes under which the President could have acted to avoid the impact of the steel worker strike. The President, however, chose not to follow those procedures, finding them too time-consuming and cumbersome given the imminent emergency at hand.
The power to seize private property to help a war effort, however, is a job for lawmakers, not military authorities or those charged with executing the laws. Neither the President’s implied constitutional powers, nor his role as Commander in Chief, gives him any legislative authority. Accordingly, the President’s seizure order cannot stand.
Concurring and Dissenting Opinions:
Concurring Opinion (Frankfurter):
Congress expressly chose, in the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947, not to give the President the power to seize private property as a protective measure to solve a breakdown in industrial relations. Therefore, the President cannot exercise a power that Congress expressly chose not to give.
Concurring Opinion (Douglas):
Both Congress and the President are trustees of the national welfare. Our system of separation of powers was not adopted to promote efficiency but to stop the exercise of arbitrary, unchecked power. Therefore, just because the President can act more quickly than Congress does not mean that the President should have the power he exercised here. The power is legislative in nature, and therefore it is not within the purview of the President. Today the President’s motives may have been good, but tomorrow they may not be.
Concurring Opinion (Jackson):
There are three categories with regard to presidential power. First, the President is at his most powerful when acting under the express authority of Congress. Second, the President’s power is moderate when Congress is silent on an issue. Third, the President is at his weakest when he takes measures incompatible with the expressed or implied will of Congress, for then he can only rely on his constitutional powers. In this case, the President is in the third category, and no constitutional power allows the his order in this case.
Free government requires that the Executive be under the law, and that the law be made by parliamentary deliberations.
Concurring Opinion (Burton):
The division of power is such that Congress has the power to seize private property in emergencies, and the President does not have that power absent instruction from Congress. There were statutory alternatives for the President, which he did not follow. Rather, his order invaded the jurisdiction of Congress.
Concurring Opinion (Clark):
Chief Justice John Marshall in Little v. Barreme halted the President from seizing a vessel coming from France. No Court decision has held differently since then. Where Congress gives the President specific procedures to follow when dealing with a crisis like the steel worker strike, the President must follow those procedures.
Dissenting Opinion (Vinson):
When in extraordinary times, the President has the inherent authority to seize property to further a war effort. The President’s order merely maintained the status quo. Congress can respond by showing its approval or disapproval.
Significance:
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer is a significant case because it was a rebuke to a President who tried to federalize private steel mills outside of congressional authority. It is also a significant opinion because every Justice in the majority wrote a separate opinion, with slightly different reasoning to reach the same result.”
……………………………………….
Added: Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579 (1952)
U.S. Supreme Court, justia.com
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer
Argued May 12-13, 1952
Decided June 2, 1952*
..................
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Followers
Blog Archive
-
▼
2020
(493)
-
▼
March
(53)
- Via virus, profound reorganization of US Executive...
- Bill Gates isn’t practicing “safe social distance”...
- Dennis Miller has new interview show on RT, today’...
- Washington Post, NY Times, and Wall St. Journal di...
- Worried about pending Corona virus economic disast...
- Trump’s illegal frat-boy sanctions on one quarter ...
- Relax, elites have it handled. They save you from ...
- Dozens of sailors test positive for Corona on US n...
- “I’ve been watching people routinely accept whatev...
- Top Imperial College London scientist says Corona ...
- Corona crisis overwhelms World Health Organization...
- Trump must recuse himself from all Corona decision...
- NY State Governor Cuomo is proud of high Corona nu...
- Gilead pharmaceutical with close ties to Trump “Co...
- Despite pandemic, 4000 US troops carried out drill...
- US places UK in charge of NATO branch of Endless M...
- The cure will magically appear after corporate bai...
- In Italy Corona occurs in same regions affected by...
- Trump Corona bailout beyond Wall St’s wildest drea...
- Iran's older men have weakest lungs in the world d...
- This could’ve been Florida’s governor today
- Vin Scully: “If baseball starts up, we’ve got this...
- US presidents and their congressional pals can't u...
- French physicians group says that all patients exh...
- Hydroxychloroquine sulfate tablets are already app...
- Trump should resign. Americans are being lied to a...
- Crowdstrike PR firm says Crowdstrike never said Ru...
- 115 War Industry parasites and mass murderers sign...
- Looking at empty shelves, Americans get a taste of...
- Likelihood that generic drug already exists to end...
- All of Italy’s victims under 40 have been males wi...
- Mass murderer John McCain is de facto US president...
- Putin spent practically nothing in key Battlegroun...
- Earlier travel ban from Iran would’ve prevented NY...
- DOJ drops case against Russian troll farm that cre...
- Dorothy Mullen, founder of Suppers Program, dies a...
- Aspen Ski Co. likes to think it saves humanity, sh...
- Biden has 6 point lead over Trump, 48%-42%, in Ras...
- Globalist Errand Boy Trump in talks to annex part ...
- NY Times wants to bomb Russia and thinks Biden is ...
- HTS Islamic terror group and its partners have lau...
- To rehearse war against Russia, thousands of US tr...
- Trump continues US "Big Stupid Bully" role in Syri...
- Breaking quarantine in 1943: A fan breaking quaran...
- Four years after billions of US tax dollars were s...
- Kolomoisky loves neo-Nazi enforcer Avakov who is t...
- Zelensky taps Ukraine oligarchs and US war machine...
- Thank-you, Mr. Putin. You continue to be the only ...
- Trump regime AG Bill Barr continues 18 year cover ...
- 20,000 US soldiers now in Europe for war games aga...
- America can't be great again as long as US taxpaye...
- In July 2017 US said terror caliphate in Idlib is ...
- Mass murdering US dictators remind US taxpayers wh...
-
▼
March
(53)
About Me
- susan
- I'm the daughter of a World War II Air Force pilot and outdoorsman who settled in New Jersey.
No comments:
Post a Comment