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Disregarding Foreign Relations Law |
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, April 16, 2007 [View as PDF]
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116 Yale L.J. 1230 (2007)
What
deference is due the executive in foreign relations? Given the considerable
constitutional authority and institutional virtues of the executive in this
realm, some judicial deference is almost certainly appropriate. Indeed, courts
currently defer to the executive in a large number of cases. Eric Posner and
Cass Sunstein nevertheless call for a dramatic expansion in the deference that
courts accord executive interpretations of law in the foreign affairs context.
They maintain that courts should presumptively give Chevron-style deference to executive interpretations of foreign
relations law—even if the executive interpretation is articulated only as a
litigation position, and even if it violates international law. In our view,
substantial deference to the executive is singularly inappropriate in a large
swath of cases eligible for Chevron
deference under their proposal—namely, those involving foreign relations law
that operates in what we call the “executive-constraining zone.” Courts have
scrutinized, and should continue to scrutinize, executive interpretations of
international law that has the status of supreme federal law, that is made at
least in part outside the executive, and that conditions the exercise of
executive power. Failure to do so would undermine the rule of law in the
foreign relations context. It would also dramatically increase the power of the
President in ways that would subvert the nation’s interests, discourage the
executive from developing important internal checks on presidential power, and
lead to less congressional regulation of the executive. In short, we maintain
that deference at some point invites disregard and that law-interpreting
authority at some point effectively constitutes lawbreaking authority.
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