Separation of powers

The separation of powers is an essential element of our constitutional
structure. It is designed to limit aggregation of power at the federal
level at the expense of the people and to foster competition and a
balancing mechanism among the three branches of government: the
legislative, executive and judiciary.

Here is how it works: When
Congress objects to an action (or inaction) by the executive, it can
pass a law or withhold or increase an appropriation; the president can
veto a bill passed by the Congress; Congress can, with a two-thirds
vote, override the president’s veto; the Supreme Court can hold a law
passed by Congress and signed by the president unconstitutional;
Congress can pass, and the president sign, a new law overriding the
court’s decision; and so on and so forth.

{mosads}Therefore, it should not be a surprise that, in recent times at least, the legislative and executive branches both fare better when they are in different party hands and thus freer to pursue their institutional constitutional aims.

The problem that dogged both Clinton (for the first two years) and Bush 43 (for the first six) is that having both branches in the same party’s hands made it very difficult for either president to resist overreaching and overspending by their legislative partners. When Newt Gingrich took over the House in l994, however, he was liberated to pursue his own agenda. He became master of his own house, took charge of what had been a very fragile beginning period of governance and developed an agenda that put him in charge of the government, with, to his credit, many accomplishments — like welfare reform and spending restraint — that would have been nearly impossible otherwise.

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