1. FOREIGN AFFAIRS, NONDELEGATION, AND ORIGINAL MEANING: CONGRESS'S DELEGATION OF POWER TO LAY EMBARGOES IN 1794.
- Author
-
Parrillo, Nicholas R.
- Subjects
Delegation of powers -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Exceptions (Law) -- Laws, regulations and rules ,International trade -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Executive power -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Embargoes -- Laws, regulations and rules ,International trade regulation -- Evaluation ,Administrative discretion -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Delegated legislation -- Laws, regulations and rules ,United States v. Curtiss-Wright Export Corp. (299 U.S. 304 (1936)) ,Government regulation ,Embargo Acts ,United States Constitution (U.S. Const. art. 1, s. 1) - Abstract
INTRODUCTION 1804 I. THE EMBARGO AUTHORIZATION ACT OF 1794 1810 A. The Act Itself 1810 B. Events Leading to the Act 1812 C. Reasons for the Delegation 1820 II. THE [...], Originalist proponents of a tougher nondelegation doctrine confront the many broad delegations that Congress enacted in the 1790s by claiming that each fell into some exceptional category to which the original nondelegation doctrine was inapplicable or weakly applicable, one being foreign affairs. There is lively debate on whether the founding generation actually recognized an exception to nondelegation principles for foreign affairs. This Article, commissioned for a symposium on "The Statutory Foreign Affairs Presidency," intervenes in the debate by examining the Embargo Authorization Act of 1794, which empowered the President to lay an embargo on all ships in U.S. ports (and/or other classes of ships) if "the public safety shall so require," for the upcoming five-month congressional recess. This was a delegation of remarkable power over the U.S. economy, which at the time depended heavily on maritime transport. An examination of the Act undermines the idea that there existed a foreign-affairs exception to cover it. Originalist proponents ofa tougher nondelegation doctrine claim the doctrine was meant to protect private individual rights of liberty and property, yet Americans in the late 1700s lived in an economy that was more dependent on foreign commerce than it has ever been since, in which a five-month international embargo could be disastrous for private business nationwide. In this context, an "exception" for foreign affairs would be strange, turning economic reality on its head. Furthermore, the Act itself flouted any objective or even workable distinction between the foreign and the domestic. The Act's unqualified use of the term "embargo" authorized the President to prohibit the departure of all ships, not only those sailing to foreign ports but also to other U.S. ports in the coastwise trade, which was then the main channel of U.S. domestic commerce. And even if the President were to impose an embargo aimed mainly at international maritime trade, preventing evasion of such a restriction required regulation of the coastwise trade--regulation that contemporaries apparently understood the Act to authorize.
- Published
- 2024