Nov. 8, 2019
Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.
The President has authority to withhold appropriated funds under law, including military assistance to Ukraine while considering a deferral or rescission
Congressional
Democrats appear ready to vote to impeach and remove President Trump for even
considering requesting a rescission of military funding to Ukraine, which he’s
allowed to do under the Impoundment Control Act. Now, that might be cause to
perhaps to ham out a legal dispute in U.S. District Court of the District of
Columbia over the limits of fiscal apportionment and rescission law. That’s not
a high crime, misdemeanor, treason or bribery, it’s a dispute between the
branches over what the letter of the law means. In the end, however, no rescissions
were even sought, and certainly none carrying through the end of the fiscal
year, and all the monies were ultimately spent, rendering the question moot.
This is what Democrats want to overturn the 2016 election over? C’mon.
Cartoon: Triggered
Are candidates’ children off limits or not?
Video: Local governments take a second look at HUD grants after Congress prohibits federal interference in local zoning decisions
Some
municipalities who rejected Department of Housing and Urban Development community
development block grants are taking a second look after Congress prohibited HUD
from micromanaging local zoning decisions with the issuance of grants, and
forbidding preconditions on zoning.
Washington Times: Big voting bloc as military vets view Trump as the master commander
“Military
veterans have consistently positive sentiments about President Trump — a
dynamic factor that could come into play in the 2020 election. Indeed, military
vets make up 13 percent of the entire voting population according to a recent
New York Times analysis which, uh, focused on the Democratic Party’s failure to
connect with this demographic. The vets feel pretty good about Mr. Trump. A Pew
Research Center survey released in July found that 57 percent of all vets
approve of the job Mr. Trump is doing as commander in chief. Among Republican veterans,
the number is an astonishing 92 percent.”
The President has authority to withhold appropriated funds under law, including military assistance to Ukraine while considering a deferral or rescission
By Robert Romano
If the President is considering whether to defer or rescind military assistance to a foreign country, but has not yet made a decision to do so under the Impoundment Control Act, is he required to notify Congress? That’s what Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) wants to know and is asking the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to report on.
The question comes after decisions by the White House to temporarily freeze and review State Department and USAID foreign aid spending in August, and $250 million of military assistance to Ukraine in July. Both reviews were completed, with the broader foreign aid being released on Aug. 7 and the military spending in Ukraine being obligated on Sept. 11. Ultimately, the President chose not to request either a deferral or rescission of the funds.
And yet Democrats want to remove Trump from office over the issue.
The Office of Management and Budget for its part is saying it did nothing wrong, with OMB communications director Rachel Semmel issuing a statement saying, “As has been well documented, we fully complied with the law and decades of precedent with respect to these funds. Congress is notified if the administration intends to rescind, defer, reprogram or transfer funding, but in this case none of those things occurred and the funding was obligated as planned.”
Under 2 U.S.C. Section 684 or 2 U.S.C. Section 683, the Impoundment Control Act, the President has the power to propose deferring funds on a temporary basis or rescinding them altogether, subject to Congressional approval.
The question here appears to be what obligation the President has to spend the money whilst considering such a deferral or rescission. The answer comes under OMB’s authority under 31 U.S.C. 1512 to conduct apportionments, which the White House cited as authority for the three-day spending freeze of foreign aid in August in its letter to the Department of State and USAID.
The letter stated, “All previously apportioned unobligated resources in the [Treasury Appropriation Fund Symbols] shall be unavailable for obligation until three business days after the Office of Management and Budget receives an accounting from your agencies of the current outstanding unobligated resources…” The reviews were completed and the funds were released.
At the time, a question posed by critics was whether the funds could be withheld beyond the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30 while Congress was considering a proposed rescission, effectively preventing funds from being spent and expiring prior to Congress’ consideration.
Last year, GAO asked OMB General Counsel Mark Paoletta for his views on that question, and he submitted them in Nov. 2018, stating, “the text of Impoundment Control Act clearly allows the President to propose and withhold funds at any time in a fiscal year. In addition to the unambiguous statutory language, there is bipartisan historical precedent for the President to withhold funds at any time of the fiscal year, including in instances where funds proposed for rescission have lapsed prior to the expiration of the 45-day withholding period.”
Nonetheless, in Dec. 2018, GAO came back with an opinion saying that the withholding period could not carry into the expiration of the funds: “we conclude that the ICA does not permit the withholding of funds through their date of expiration. The statutory text and legislative history of the ICA, Supreme Court case law, and the overarching constitutional framework of the legislative and executive powers provide no basis to interpret the ICA as a mechanism by which the President may unilaterally abridge the enacted period of availability of a fixed-period appropriation.”
But that opinion is non-binding and in any event, was not at issue here. Given the context of OMB conducting a wider review of foreign aid packages, it is not unreasonable to suppose that foreign military assistance to Ukraine was falling under a similar review.
Here, Congressional Democrats appear ready to vote to impeach and remove President Trump for even considering requesting a rescission of military funding to Ukraine.
Now, this all might be cause to request another opinion from the GAO, or perhaps to ham out a legal dispute in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia over the limits of fiscal apportionment and rescission law. That’s not a high crime, misdemeanor, treason or bribery, it’s a dispute between the branches over what the letter of the law means.
In the end, however, no rescissions were even sought, and certainly none carrying through the end of the fiscal year, and all the monies were ultimately spent, rendering the question moot. This is what Democrats want to overturn the 2016 election over? C’mon.
Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
Cartoon: Triggered
By A.F. Branco
Click here for a higher level resolution version.
Video: Local governments take a second look at HUD grants after Congress prohibits federal interference in local zoning decisions
To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zruIY3cDymM
ALG Editor’s Note: In the following featured report from the Washington Times, President Donald Trump continues to have high approval ratings among the nations’ veterans:
Big voting bloc as military vets view Trump as the master commander
By
Military veterans have consistently positive sentiments about President Trump — a dynamic factor that could come into play in the 2020 election. Indeed, military vets make up 13 percent of the entire voting population according to a recent New York Times analysis which, uh, focused on the Democratic Party’s failure to connect with this demographic. The vets feel pretty good about Mr. Trump.
A Pew Research Center survey released in July found that 57 percent of all vets approve of the job Mr. Trump is doing as commander in chief. Among Republican veterans, the number is an astonishing 92 percent.
“Approval of Trump does not differ significantly by era of military service. Looking specifically at veterans who served before 9/11 and those whose service extended beyond 9/11, nearly identical shares say they approve of the way Trump is handling his job as commander in chief. In addition, there is no significant gap in views between veterans who served as commissioned officers, non-commissioned officers or those who were enlisted,” the poll analysis said.
Now comes some more nuanced findings. These perhaps reflect the global image of Mr. Trump, particularly among those who might want to challenge him in future days.
“Veterans are even more convinced these days that President Trump is a stronger military commander in chief than most of his recent predecessors in the White House,” says a new Rasmussen Reports voter survey.
It found that 60 percent of likely U.S. voters who are either now in the military or have served in the past see Mr. Trump as a stronger commander in chief than “most recent presidents.” That’s up from 53 percent in June of last year.
A third of the respondents felt Mr. Trump was a weaker commander; just 5 percent rate his performance about the same as his presidential peers of the past. The survey of 1,000 likely military voters was conducted October 29-30.