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Oona A. Hathaway Presidential Power Over International Lawmaking. How international treaties are made in the United States. Article II treaties Sole executive agreements Congressional-executive agreements Ex ante Ex post. Article II treaties. Made by the President plus 2/3 of the Senate
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Oona A. HathawayPresidential Power Over International Lawmaking
How international treaties are made in the United States Article II treaties Sole executive agreements Congressional-executive agreements • Ex ante • Ex post
Article II treaties Made by the President plus 2/3 of the Senate • Excludes the House of Representatives • Senators representing 8% of the population can defeat a treaty • The 67th Senator in the 109th Congress was twice as conservative (or liberal) as the 51st, • After the Supreme Court’s decision in Medellin, the treaty may not be enforceable in federal court! Today, fewer than 5% of U.S. international agreements are concluded as Article II treaties • Consider the Law of the Sea Treaty
Sole Executive Agreements Made by the President using his own constitutional power • To the extent they really are within the president’s constitutional powers, there’s nothing particularly problematic about such agreements, BUT: • The process is sheltered from view (agreements are not disclosed under 60 days after they enter into effect) • The process is therefore subject to abuse
Congressional Executive Agreements (Ex Ante) Congress grants authority to the President. The President then uses that authority to conclude agreements, without returning to Congress. • When Congress grants authority, it usually does so with no sunset or time limit. • Like sole executive agreements, the process is sheltered from public view. As a result, there is little accountability or transparency. • Around 85% of our international agreements are made through this process.
Congressional Executive Agreements (Ex Post) Agreements are negotiated by the President, then subject to Congressional approval. • Used for trade agreements, to join the International Labor Organization, International Monetary Fund, World Bank, Food and Agriculture Organization, UNESCO, the WHO. • All of Congress (the House included) participates • One stop shopping: treaty and implementing legislation in one. • More reliable commitments: courts will enforce.
Three Proposals • Submit more treaties as ex post CEAs • Enact broad-based “fast-track” legislation • Administrative Procedure Act for international law • Transparency • Opportunity for public involvement • Makes explicit that some of these agreements are administrative, not legislative. • What can you do? Keep up the pressure.
Professor Oona A. Hathaway Yale Law School