撤职与建国之初关于行政权力的不断变化的争论

IF 0.6 Q2 LAW
Jonathan Gienapp
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关于美国总统最初权力范围的持久而漫长的争论往往归结为一个简单的问题:美国宪法》第二条归属条款中 "行政权 "一词的最初含义是什么?然而,这种单一的关注点掩盖了一个关键的历史转变。为了聚焦这一未被重视的转变,本文就 1789 年国会关于罢免行政官员的大辩论提出了四点看法:第一,辩论出人意料;第二,辩论涉及新的领域;第三,在辩论过程中,参与者公开改变了主意;第四,辩论直到最后仍悬而未决。本文并不试图解决长期以来使学者和法学家产生分歧的免职问题,而是提出了这些看法,希望重新调整我们的关注点:要看到免职辩论之所以充满不确定性和困惑,是因为此时关于行政权力的辩论本身也在发生变化。早在宣布独立之前,18 世纪的美国人就已经开始就行政权展开辩论,但在宪法获得批准之后,这场辩论持续了近一个世纪的问题开始发生变化。随着问题的变化,争论本身也发生了变化,对行政权的理解也随之发生了变化。罢免辩论是这一重要转变的关键标志之一。人们对总统权力的历史基础仍然不乏兴趣。如果我们不了解宪法诞生之初的辩论框架本身是如何变化的,我们就会误解建国时期美国人对行政权的看法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Removal and the Changing Debate over Executive Power at the Founding
The enduring and protracted debate over the original scope of American presidential power often reduces to a simple question: What did the words ‘executive power’ in the Article II vesting clause of the US Constitution originally mean? Yet this singular preoccupation has concealed a crucial historical transformation. To bring this underappreciated shift into focus, this article offers four observations on the great 1789 congressional debate over the removal of executive officers: first, the debate was unexpected; second, it covered new ground; third, during the course of it, participants openly changed their minds; fourth, it remained unresolved until the end. Rather than attempting to settle the issue of removal that has divided scholars and jurists for so long, this article instead offers these observations in hopes of redirecting our focus: to see that the removal debate was marked by uncertainty and confusion because the debate over executive power was itself changing at this time. Eighteenth-century Americans had been debating executive power since long before declaring independence, but the question that had animated that debate for close to a century began to change after the Constitution was ratified. As the question mutated, so too did the dispute itself, and, with that, understandings of executive power. The removal debate was one of the key markers of this important transformation. There remains no shortage of interest in the historical foundations of presidential power. We misapprehend what Founding-era Americans thought about executive power unless we appreciate how the framework of debate was itself changing at the time of the Constitution’s birth.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Legal History was established in 1957 as the first English-language legal history journal. The journal remains devoted to the publication of articles and documents on the history of all legal systems. The journal is refereed, and members of the Judiciary and the Bar form the advisory board.
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