Not Everything Is a National Emergency
If the National Emergencies Act goes without reform, presidents will continue to misuse emergency declarations as leverage to shift Congress.

"Action on climate change and clean energy remains more urgent than ever," President Joe Biden said Friday after Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) rejected his own party's climate legislation. "So let me be clear: if the Senate will not move to tackle the climate crisis and strengthen our domestic clean energy industry, I will take strong executive action to meet this moment."
Monday night, citing three unnamed sources, The Washington Post broke the story of what that action may be: "Biden is considering declaring a national climate emergency," the paper reported, and it could happen "as soon as this week." Activists believe a national emergency would let Biden "halt crude oil exports, limit oil and gas drilling in federal waters, and direct agencies including the Federal Emergency Management Agency to boost renewable-energy sources," the Post notes. Though political realities—especially high gas prices and inflation—and the inevitable Republican-led lawsuits may serve as some restraint on Biden, the activists are correct that emergency declarations are a potent boost to presidential power.
And that's exactly the problem. Emergency declarations have become a lazy political workaround, a way for presidents to bypass Congress after it fails to do its job—or, in some cases, outright rejects what the president wants. National emergencies have become a loophole to administrative lawlessness, and they are in dire need of reform.
In their present form, emergencies are governed by the National Emergencies Act of 1976. Presidents from Jimmy Carter onward have declared 75 emergencies citing the authority of that law, and about half of those declarations, many now decades old, remain in effect today. Some of them address situations (the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, for example) that may fairly be described as national emergencies. Others plainly do not, like those sanctioning people undermining democracy in Zimbabwe and Belarus, two emergencies initially declared during the George W. Bush administration and re-upped by Biden. However bad these situations are for the people of Zimbabwe and Belarus, they are not national emergencies for the United States, and Congress could have acted on these circumstances if it so chose.
Climate change is more obviously of import to our country and may well be an emergency in a colloquial sense. But as far as its legal status goes, the phrasing of Biden's threat gives the game away: If the Senate will not move, he says, the administration will act instead. But the very point of an emergency declaration is that it permits the federal government to act when Congress does not have time to move. Congress has had a year and a half of Democratic trifecta governance to move on climate change and has not done so as Biden desires. Yes, that is mainly Manchin's fault—to his Democratic colleagues' great frustration. Alas for them, Manchin is part of Congress, and the problem here simply is not lack of congressional opportunity to act.
"An 'emergency' does not elicit endless debate without consensus, nor is it addressed with a plan requiring years to execute," as former Libertarian Rep. Justin Amash has argued. "A house is burning, a ship is sinking, a city is flooding—these are considered emergencies precisely because everyone agrees they require immediate action."
National emergency declarations are not for when a senator won't vote the way the president wants. They are not tools of presidential blackmail to make the legislature do the executive's bidding. For all its demonstrated openness to presidential abuse, the purpose of the National Emergencies Act was not to completely invert the Constitution's design for the flow of federal action. Unfortunately, recent presidents have realized how emergency declarations might be used to that end.
Biden's attempt to strong-arm the Senate on climate change is remarkably reminiscent of former President Donald Trump's 2019 threat to declare a national emergency so he could get funding to build his much-promised border wall. Trump might "think that Congress's repeated failure to provide funds shows the need for emergency action," Elizabeth Goitein of the Brennan Center for Justice wrote in The Atlantic. "The truth is the exact opposite. By giving Congress time to definitively establish its unwillingness to fund the border wall, Trump is both taking away any legitimate justification for emergency action and proving his intent to subvert the constitutional balance of powers." Swap out a few words and the same critique applies to Biden and climate change.
So long as the National Emergencies Act goes without reform, presidents will continue to misuse emergency declarations as leverage to shift Congress, as Trump and Biden have done. The law should be changed to strictly limit why and for how long national emergencies can be declared and to more carefully define the scope and nature of the problems these declarations can address as well as how long the state of emergency can continue without congressional endorsement of the president's plan. That time limit should be quite short—a few days, perhaps, instead of the current six months—so lawmakers are forced to consider emergency actions on their own merits rather than rubber stamping entrenched federal programs. If it's really an emergency, even our legislators should be able to get themselves together to act.
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Republican-led lawsuits? Would these be lawsuits demanding we have a right to heat our homes in the winter?
Has to be partisan, Diane.
Just like most of it is the doing of that pesky senator from West Kentucky or wherever... traitor to his party. That ONE MAN is holding up the President's work.
Let's not bother to mention that there are 50 other senators you could try to convince of the benefits of your proposed legislation. If you can't even got one single senator out of 51 to your side, maybe you're not trying hard enough to strike a compromise the representatives of their respective states can support.
West Virginia is more East Kentucky
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You only have the government given right to make other people pay to heat your home.
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If they could have staged a fake police beating, they would have tried that too.
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I honestly can't decide what's worse. These performative, substance-free, well paid elected officials engaging in the most cringy, pathetic, theatrical, superficial, and comical acts, or the fact that they have legions of followers who will post things like "yassss queen" and fully support such hollow, entitled, and misguided virtue signaling.
It's the second one, because without the second one, we wouldn't have the first one.
I honestly can't decide what's worse.
None of the above. The worst part is that it's not clear it isn't just going to get worse until someone, intentionally or not, purges it with fire. Unclear as to whether Omar and Cortez are already beyond the point where anyone could tell them "OK, enough is enough. This isn't governing. Your mock arrest literally doesn't represent *anyone*. It's just retarded. More retarded than Trump standing in front of St. John's Church with a Bible." and they would listen, or if it's their successors that someone is literally going to have to slap in the face or have the Sergeant at Arms remove from the chamber or whatever.
Democracy good and hard. And then harder.
CULTURAL APPROPRIATION
Texas listened to me about those asshole Tesla drivers and told them to let grandma have her a.c. first lol
It's only an emergency for the climate alarmunists who have been telling us for nigh on 40 years now that the Earth is doomed in 10 years.
It is a fraud, a hoax, directly attributable to subsidizing science. You always get more of whatever you subsidize, and if that encourages more unqualified students demanding science degrees, the market will supply them by providing ever more poor-quality pseudo-science fields. It's exactly comparable to subsidizing student loans, encouraging ever more unqualified students to seek out the simplest, easiest-ontainable degrees possible, and the market responded with woke teachers, students, and degrees.
It's just bullshit with a fancy government label.
Climate change is more obviously of import to our country and may well be an emergency in a colloquial sense.
By what measure?
Yeah, even accepting the standard narrative on climate change, how can something that slowly changes over decades be an emergency of any kind? It's something that has been widely believed for many years and could have been acted on at any time. That's not an emergency in any sense of the word. Emergencies are, well, emergent.
by colloquially, I think the author is pointing out that the evolving language in the press (Global warming -> climate change -> climate crisis -> climate emergency) has gotten to the point where the mainstream press is using the words crisis and emergency in all articles about climate now.
For political purposes an emergency is anything that makes people scared.
And, even if it were true, why is one single man's plan to address it better than all of the elected representatives or leaving it to the market?
Holy fuck, he's just realized that he's got a pen and a phone, people.
But no brain or soul.
He will forget by tomorrow.
Wasn't there some ancient civilization that gave emergency powers to one dude and then everything went to shit?
If you wrote a novel with that premise it would be rejected by publishers for being so played out and cliché.
What about non-fiction?
Probably in non-fiction too
Yeah. History is icky. It's all about people with power doing terrible things. If we forget all about history and start off with good intentions, what could possibly go wrong?
Exactly. I mean, ignoring the whole "road to hell" thing.
You just described the whole progressive ideology in a nut shell.
You can't argue someone out of a point of view that you don't understand.
I understand progressivism quite well, from it's inception it's been an elitist, technocratic ideology that defers personal choice to the government, especially 'enlightened' experts. From it's beginnings in the 19th century to today. And it's never resulted in liberty. That is why I stated what I stated.
I was once part of the progressive cult until I asked myself one question: Who decides?
People are just people, and because of that giving them these incredible decision making powers is, well, mad. Who decides?
Our betters, of course!
What is interesting is that the Roman Republic gave Dictator powers to many, many people before someone declined to return them.
Frankly, if we follow the Roman model, we will be at our own Cincinatus pretty soon. That will be grand...until our Caesar graduates from West Point or wherever.
Washington was offered these powers, he turned them down (he did actually have almost these powers for a time in 1777-78 by order of the Continental Congress for 6 months, he didn't try to renew them after that period and when offered to be made president for life with far more power than even the current executive branch has (which goes far beyond what the constitution envisioned) he turned them down.
Make every emergency declaration last for 60 days and then it requires reauthorization by 2/3's of the House to be renewed, otherwise it sunsets after 60 days. That will quickly settle out the BS from an actual emergency. There is no "climate emergency". There might be temporary adverse climate conditions, but with the temporary weather exception of hurricanes, floods, tornadoes and such, none of them are a "climate emergency" Every single bit of the "climate emergency" is a power grab. And the people grabbing for power have just about convinced enough idiots to follow them off the cliff.
The Founders tried to prevent a standing army by requiring the House to appropriate money every 2 years or something.
See how much good it did?
Give a safe-cracker enough time with a safe and he will open it.
Locks are old technology. Find a youtube video on picking locks. Before long you'll have popped every padlock you can without breaking the law, and be wondering why anyone things those things make a difference.
Analogies are a thing.
So are lock picks.
No, not enough accountability. There are innumerable better ways.
* Every executive invocation of emergency powers must be confirmed by a 90% legislature vote within 72 hours, or the executive is shot for treason.
* Every executive who invokes emergency powers, and every legislator who votes to confirm an emergency, loses their job immediately afterwards. Small price to pay for such an emergency, eh?
* If public opinion does not agree one year later that it was an emergency, every executive who invoked emergency powers, and every legislator who voted to confirm an emergency, is shot for treason.
Well, you get my vote for appropriate use of expensive ammunition...
Latest polling on this isn't good for Democrats or Biden.
https://tippinsights.com/i-i-tipp-poll-americans-want-their-old-fossil-fuel-economy-back/
Democrats must become pariahs. Democrats should be afraid to leave their houses.
Yeah, but haven't you noticed how hot is is outside right now? I mean, it's really really really hot out there. The government has to do something, dammit!
I like a post on Facebook last week. So you want to move to Montana. Today it was 105 degrees in five months it will be 140 degrees colder, and we have bears that will eat you. Still want to move here?
That is very similar to a bill already proposed in Congress.
https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/house-bill/63?q=%7B%22search%22%3A%5B%22emergency+powers%22%2C%22emergency%22%2C%22powers%22%5D%7D&s=1&r=1
Thanks to Overt for pointing it out.
Oh, you mean like 60 days to flatten the curve?
You realize that changing the National Emergency Act requires Congressional action, which their failure to act is the exact cause of the problem? Congress ain't getting their fingerprints on a damn thing they don't have to, they're happy to let the Executive take the blame for everything. I mean, my God, they don't even declare wars any more!
Brandon is a national emergency.
Fuck this Brandon guy.
"we hold these truths to be self-evident, except, you know, if there's an emergency. Then all bets are off"
To paraphrase Frederick the Great: If everything is an emergency, then nothing is an emergency.
Climate change may eventually cause some significant problems, but it's a long way from being an emergency right now. High temperatures now are barely higher than they were in the 1930's or 1970's, and the US migration evidence is that people want to move (voluntarily) to warmer climates. So even if it gets 2 or 3 degrees warmer in a few decades, it will just save people money since they won't have to move to get the weather they prefer. Hard to call that an emergency.
Of course it’s an emergency. And like all emergencies, which everything is, the only solution is Marxism.
Maybe we should treat "emergencies" like the challenge to a call in baseball.
If congress agrees within 14 days by validating the emergency declaration exactly as promulgated, it stars in effect, otherwise, that president can never again declare an emergency for any reason.
Yes, the National Emergencies Act is an abomination. Along with the Defense Production Act. Both of these laws give way too much power to the executive. It would be nice if one of the two teams, when they are out of power, would campaign and champion the idea of radically reforming or repealing these acts. But of course they won't because both teams understand that they benefit from the two shitty laws when they are in power.
This is precisely the type of issue that a third party could gain some traction on promoting. An issue that ought to be an easy sell to the public but which both major teams have little political incentive to change. Anyone know of a third party that could use a winning issue to campaign on?
Who is going to vote for someone who isn't promising to hurt people they don't like?
So the real, pressing problem, as you see it, is that the out of power party isn't campaigning to end this practice? That's your take?
For what it is worth, all signs point to the out of power party trying to curb the use of emergency powers.
https://www.congress.gov/search?q=%7B%22source%22%3A%22legislation%22%2C%22search%22%3A%22emergency%20powers%22%7D
I didn't say that it was the most important issue on the planet, no.
Yes, there is one bill, that has 1 sponsor and 2 co-sponsors, that would reform the Emergency Powers Act. Good. It ought to have more support.
I have a suspicion, though, that this is really just an attempt to score points against Biden, knowing that their bill has zero chance of passing. And, lo and behold, if you look at the previous Congress, when you-know-who was President, only lonely Amash sponsored a bill to reform the Emergency Powers Act. No co-sponsors, not even the three from this session's bill. Hmm. So we will see.
Someone isn't reading the polls or really wants the Republicans to win overwhelmingly in November:
https://tippinsights.com/i-i-tipp-poll-americans-want-their-old-fossil-fuel-economy-back/
The wackos pulling Biden’s strings are desperate to wreck the country as fast as they can.
You can't possibly be stupid enough to actually believe the wokenazis insane "climate change" cult nonsense might be true--"climate change" has been going on for over four billion years and there is not a damned thing we can do about it. To publicly proclaim your a dupe to this is to render the rest of your screed presumptively worthless.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenhouse_and_icehouse_Earth#Icehouse_Earth
The climate cult cannot admit that it happens without us.
I think the "emergency" is that the GOP may take the majority in the House in November. So, an executive order must, simply must, be signed that states that climate change is such a risk, that voters shall be required to stay at home beginning the first of October and continuing until all the general election votes have been "counted". This will probably be until the end of December. (Or maybe through New Year's Eve so no one will be setting off those climate harming fire-works). All voting will be done by mail and if you aren't able to mail a ballot the election officials will be happy to cast a vote on your behalf.
"Action to KILL the USA for National Socialism (Nazism) remains more urgent than ever ----- and climate change is the excuse and clean energy is the target," President Joe Biden
When I was in high school 20 years ago, I made a quip in polisci/government, whatever it was called, class that we should just shoot the environmentalists in response to whatever the teacher was saying. The teacher said that makes me a nazi.
Well... a few years later he got fired for shoving a student who was on crutches with a broken leg, and it turns out I was right about what needed to be done with the environmentalists.
The hardcore left needs to be forcibly expatriated. With the exception of the really powerful and dangerous ones. Who need to be either executed, or put in SuperMax for the rest of their life.