You are on page 1of 1

President Obama Overreaching on Trade

Throughout the twentieth century, the U.S. Government grabbed more and more
power from the governments of the member-states. Even within the U.S.
Government, presidents have tended to over-reach. Specifically, they have put their
role in proposing legislation and treaties above their role as that governments chief
executive in enforcing existing laws. In May 2015, Sen. Elizabeth Warren issued a
report whose thesis is that presidents of both parties had failed to enforce the laborprovisions in the existing trade treaties. That the current president, Barak Obama,
was in the midst of negotiating yet another trade treaty said to have labor
provisions included opens him up to the charge of over-reaching. That is to say,
rather than focusing first on enforcing existing trade arrangements to which the U.S.
was then a party, he was going beyondthat is, over-reachingto negotiate yet
another deal. Such over-reaching is akin to going beyond the negative legislative
power in vetoing legislation to spend a lot of time proposing legislation at the
expense of devoting time to running the executive branch as its chief executive and
conferring with members of Congress on ways to improve the administration of
existing law. In this essay, I use Warrens report as a means into answering why the
overreaching habit has become so ubiquitous among American presidents that the
electorate barely recognizes it as such.
The full essay is at Overreacting on Trade.

You might also like