For my own education..can you show me some examples of those "long term permanent implications"? I'm not contesting just trying to learn.
The "New Deal" is a good example... previously, it was thought to be unconstitutional for the Federal Government to be involved with welfare, social security, wealth transfer, etc. FDR pushed through a socialist package and essentially forced the Supreme Court to find a way to make it Constitutional, which they did. They had unbelievable unitnended consequences and the Government had been growing almost out of control since then.
The Supreme Court finding a "right to privacy" in the Constitution (where none previously existed) for the right of married couples to use birth control ldirectly ed to Roe V Wade (no matter where you stand on the issue, it's bad law).
More recently, the Supreme Court found that cities could sieze your property to give to corporations which would devleop it and result in more tax revenues.
Mainly it's finding the right for Government to intervene in our lives in ways the Founders never envisioned. If the upcoming Congress has a Dem Supermajority, expect to see similar watershed changes no matter who is President.
Seems to me that using signing statements does set a long term precedent. The next Pres has a wide open door to do the same thing. Imagine that gnashing of teeth that would bring...about the same as now.
Presidents have used signing statement for generations... Bush just took it to a different level. until a cort finds that the signing statement has some sort of legal standing/implication, it's all show. In reality, the "worst" sort of "signing statements" Bush has done (basically saying how the Executitve branch intends to implement the law) are no different from previous Administrations' Exectutive Orders doing the same thing. Same result, different vehicle. Still subject to Justice action. So until a Court finds the signing statement carries some weight, I don't see any sort of legal precedent being set.
This Administration is certainly not "my guys"... and I'm not an apologist for them. (The things they've done are bad enough without the addition of inaccurate charges that they've forever changed the Constitution or Constitutional balance of powers. They may have exceeded them, but they've not changed them.)
My apologies! I was mistaken in reading a team choice into your statements.
I was actually hoping for a Hillary administration. Because I assume a Hillary administration would be a failure and that would be better for the country than a successful McCain or Obama administration. I like Government gridlock. ;-)
I am however, a libertarian student of Constutional law and history...
Pro-legalization then?
Absolutely. And when I say that, people assume I'm a user as well. No interest whatesoever except from a philosopical point of view...
Bill
ps... edit... wow some strange quoting I did here... follow the conversation and not the "quotes" ;-)