Is More Presidential Power Necessary in the Modern World? A Soho Forum Debate
Stanford University's Terry Moe and the Cato Institute's Gene Healy debate giving fast-track authority to U.S. presidents.

Do U.S. presidents need fast-track authority or should their power be sharply curtailed? In order to save our democracy, says Stanford University political scientist Terry Moe, we have to make the U.S. government faster, more efficient, and more effective—and we can do that by expanding the power of the executive branch to use "fast-track" authority to approve all types of legislation. Moe, the co-author of Presidents, Populism, and the Crisis of Democracy, wants Congress to have the power to approve or deny these laws through an "up or down" vote (but not to add amendments or filibuster their passage).
The Cato Institute's Gene Healy says that non-libertarians of all political persuasions suffer from a "dangerous devotion" to the "boundless nature of presidential responsibility." Healy, who's the author of The Cult of the Presidency, says that instead of giving the executive branch more legislative authority, presidential powers must be brought back to their constitutional limits.
At a Reason-sponsored Soho Forum debate held on March 17, 2021, and moderated by Soho Forum Director Gene Epstein, Terry Moe and Gene Healy went head-to-head on this issue. It was an Oxford-style debate, meaning the winner is the person who moves the most people in his direction.
Narrated by Nick Gillespie. Audio production by Ian Keyser.
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No. Next question.
Maybe, if the congressional approval of presidential fast track bill required super majorities in both sides of Congress.
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In order to save our democracy, says Stanford University political scientist Terry Moe, we have to make the U.S. government faster, more efficient, and more effective—and we can do that by expanding the power of the executive branch to use "fast-track" authority to approve all types of legislation.
I guess the other post wasn't anti-Trump enough.
To prepeat what I said earlier: JFC! Why not just give a platform to anyone who can give a favorable reading of on of Stalin or Mao's Five Year Plans?
So, to save our democracy we give one guy the power to act without approval from the people's democratically elected representatives?
It's like fortifying our democracy to make sure the right candidates win.
Why do these always get posted twice?
One for the audio, one for the transcript.
You guys will complain about ANYTHING Reason does.
It was a simple fucking question Dee. You could have answered without the squawking thrown in. Oh wait, no you couldn’t.
Only if it's Drumpf. I mean, duh.
Because biden didn't destroy the record of actions through EO and the dema are trying to destroy the filibuster to get a 50 plus vp fast lane in the senate?
Sounds like Terry Moe wants to allow the president to write laws on his own and pass to Congress for approval.
Separation of powers is still there, but I think Moe needs to go back and read Articles I and II of the Constitution. And maybe pull his head out of his ass.
No, presidential power needs to as limited as is possible. Federalism and frontier culture and its remnants contributed greatly to the liberty we once enjoyed and in part retain, limiting federal growing power is key to regaining that lost and retaining that left. Presidential power is the worst element, being solitary, arbitrary, and too quickly imposed.
Gene Epstein | 3.26.2021 1:20 PM
Notice the date? Trump is no longer president. Biden is.
Biden is the one that issued over 40 royal decrees in the first two weeks in office. Why do you have a picture of a private citizen for this article? Oh yeah, TDS at un-Reason!
Separation of powers is still there, but I think Moe needs to go back and read Articles I and II of the Constitution.
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