Commentary

Obama, McCain, Clinton on Executive Power

How much power will the next president try to grab? Reason magazine’s Jacob Sullumn takes a look. Sen. John McCain, writes Sullum, “declined to identify areas where the Bush administration has overstepped its constitutional authority. [Sen. Barack] Obama, by contrast, gave half a dozen detailed examples. In general, the Illinois senator’s answers to the Globe’s questions were direct, thoughtful, and complete, apparently reflecting a sincere determination to limit his own power if elected. After the election, of course, such promises may not be worth much. But on that score I worry more about Hillary Clinton. The New York senator’s answers to the Globe survey, though less detailed than Obama’s, were similar in substance. I just find it hard to believe them. Clinton agreed, for example, that the president has to seek congressional authorization before attacking another country, except in response to an ‘imminent threat.’ Yet she has bragged about urging her husband to bomb Serbia as part of an unauthorized war that had nothing to do with national defense. Although Clinton now claims to have a modest view of presidential power, she was singing a different tune a few years ago. ‘I’m a strong believer in executive authority,’ she told George Stephanopoulos of ABC News in 2003. ‘I wish that, when my husband was president, people in Congress had been more willing to recognize presidential authority.’ With the War on Terror as a rationale, her wish could be her command.”