Jeff Cumberbatch - Columnist, Barbados Advocate
Jeff Cumberbatch – Columnist, Barbados Advocate

“A successful president need not have a degree in constitutional law. But he should understand the Constitution’s grant of executive power.” “He should share Hamilton’s vision of an energetic president leading the executive branch in a unified direction, rather than viewing the government as the enemy. He should realize that the Constitution channels the president toward protecting the nation from foreign threats, while cooperating with Congress on matters at home.” –James Yoo, University of California (Berkeley)

I feel almost a sense of compulsion to apologize to readers of the Barbados Advocate for returning for a second week to a commentary on the any matter associated with the ne’er-do-well Trump presidency in the US. This is even more keenly felt when locally there is much fodder for a columnist; last week’s launching of what claims hopefully to be a third political way; an unseemly public disagreement between Board and Governor at the Central Bank; and an overdue determination from the Prime Minister as to the viability of the controversial Bridgetown Hyatt project However, today’s effort is concerned only tangentially with what is swiftly morphing into a U S kakistocracy and pertains rather to the ongoing battle between the Trump administration and the courts for the constitutional governance of the republic.

A few columns back, I had tentatively advanced the thesis that President Trump, having been abandoned by some of the leading lights of the Republican party under whose banner he ostensibly campaigned, might have adopted an attitude of “I-can–and-will-do-it-myself” and thereby assume the role of a latter-day monarch. While I am not prepared to argue whether or not this has become an actuality, his attitude towards judicial rulings that have been adverse to him leads one to conclude that he is behaving less than merely a disgruntled litigant and more like one who regards the prudential application of the law as an officious gadfly to his overweening ambitions.

To bring the point closer home, if this were a game of cricket in the road and the bat and ball were his, he would have long ago taken both up and gone home in a huff after disagreeing vehemently with the umpire’s verdict that he was clearly out.

Readers will be reminded that both the “so-called judge”, as Robart J. was so irreverently termed, and the three judge federal appeals panel have rejected President Trump’s attempt to prohibit entry into the US of nationals from seven largely Muslim nations. These rulings have driven a ZR through a major plank of the president’s efforts to “make America great again”, the appeals court ruling stating that the Trump administration had shown no evidence that anyone from the embargoed nations had committed or were likely to commit terrorist acts in the US. Mr Trump’s bold openly voiced discriminatory threat to ban Muslims as a whole could scarcely have helped his cause since such a sentiment clearly betrays an intention to discriminate on grounds of religious affiliation, a patently unconstitutional act, and relegates to an afterthought the consideration of national security.

The matter now moves to the Supreme Court for consideration. However, an initial hurdle for the governing administration is whether the case will be taken at all by that body. In a brilliant and well researched article, Controlling Inherent Presidential Power: Providing a Framework for Judicial Review”, published in the Southern California Law Review, Professor Edward Chemerinsky of the De Paul University College of Law argues that “most suits to have a President’s act declared unconstitutional never reach the Supreme Court…” He references in support a number of instances among dozens where this has occurred, including disputes as to the authority of the President to impose wage price guidelines on government contractors and as to his authority to impose a 10% surcharge on most articles imported into the United States.

Even if the Supreme Court should decide to try the matter, however, the current jurisprudence is woefully unsettled. The author notes no fewer than four approaches to the question of whether the opening words of Article II of the Constitution to the effect that “the Executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America’ are to be construed as vesting the President with powers not enumerated in the Article.

There are those, doubtless including Mr Trump himself, who hold fast to the interpretation that the President’s powers are untrammelled and that he is permitted to exercise authority not specifically granted by the Constitution, while others are, contrastingly, of the considered opinion that such plenary authority would be inconsistent with a Constitutional ethos of a government with restricted authority.

According to Professor Chemerinsky’s analysis, the approaches used by the lower Courts range from a clear denial of any inherent judicial power at all and that he must act pursuant to constitutional or statutory authority only, to the existence of a broad and substantial inherent authority, especially, interestingly enough in the current context, in the field of foreign affairs.

In accordance with the first perception, there is no room in US governance for a “presidential prerogative” equivalent to the “royal prerogative” claimed by British monarchs of yore and still claimed by some to extend to the local Governor General, itself an office created by Constitutional provision and thus inherently of limited authority. On this approach, if there is no condign constitutional provision authorizing the president’s action, then it is unconstitutional.

As for the broad authority in international relations approach that the lawyers for the President will doubtless be hewing towards in their arguments, this limits the narrow approach to internal matters only. In one 1936 decision, the judge wrote:

“ The two classes of powers (domestic and foreign are different, both in respect of their origin and their nature. The broad statement that the federal government can exercise no powers except those specifically enumerated in the Constitution…is categorically true only in respect of our internal affairs…”

This approach reminds us “we are here dealing not with an authority vested in the President by an exertion of legislative power, but with such an authority plus the very delicate plenary and exclusive power of the President as the sole organ of the federal government in the field of international relations…”

Nonetheless, as if presaging the current dispute, after these dicta acknowledge that this power does not require as a basis for its exercise an act of Congress, it concludes ominously for the Trump administration:

“…but which, of course, like every other government power, must be exercised in subordination to the applicable provisions of the Constitution….”

The right to due process before any abrogation of an existing right is one such entrenched therein.

To be continued….

368 responses to “The Jeff Cumberbatch Column – The Rule of Law and Presidential Authority”


  1. @Alvin

    You live to n North America -what is your opinion?

    Are so-called aliens not entitled to due process under the law?

  2. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Alvin Cummins February 18, 2017 at 8:29 AM
    “Many families dread the resultant destruction of their family structure. The land of the free is now the hime of the coward.”

    What land of the free what!! What happened in Germany pales in comparison to what took place on that stolen landmass.

    America is founded on the destruction of the cultural, economic and physical fibres of indigenous people and those bought and brought in from the African continent.
    You should check to see what happened to the ‘native’ Americans’ main source of survival, the bison or buffalo, and what transpired on the Southern plantations to the black ‘family’. A good reading of Kyle Onstott and Lance Horner might just fill you in on the details.

    BTW, Alvin, shouldn’t home drums of a local rhythm be beating first in these times of crisis?

    You are sorely needed on the other post by David Commie to defend your embattled minister of falsehood (and by extension your mortally wounded lame duck administration going through its death throes).

    You had a lot to pronounce on the Hyatt in your fiercely sterling attack on Commie’s character and integrity so why not give your well-informed diagnosis of what is plaguing your administration now in the political ICU and being prepared for its electoral mortuary.

    Alvin, when you are bitten by your own dog expect to be diagnosed with deadly rabies. ‘Deliar’ will be the name in vogue for the many rabid canines roaming your once fair and pleasant land.

    Karma is indeed a rabid bitch to your ‘well-bitten’ administration.

  3. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/donald-trump-costs-trips-security-taxpayer-barack-obama-month-year-a7586261.html

    Ya aint hearing not one lowlife in the US complaining about this…the illiterate will break the treasury and it serves them right.

    “Trump family trips cost taxpayers $11.3m in one month – almost as much as Obama’s cost in a year

    Jaunts to estate in Mar-a-Lago, and secret service charges for his son’s business trips across the globe, are costing American taxpayers

    Peter Walker @petejohn_walker an hour ago

    Donald Trump, with Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, his wife, Melania Trump, and New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, in Mar-a-Lago AFP/Nicholas/Kamm/Getty
    Donald Trump’s family’s trips have cost taxpayers nearly as much in a month as Barack Obama’s cost in an entire year.

    The US President’s three visits to his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida since his presidential inauguration, combined with his sons’ business trips, reportedly cost $11.3m (£9.1m).

    Conservative watchdog Judicial Watch estimated Mr Obama’s travel expenses totalled an average $12.1m in each of his eight years in the White House”


  4. @ Alvin Cummins February 18, at 8:29 AM … It is unbecoming to conflate the current deportation of illegal aliens to anything associated with Hitler’s purge of Jewish immigrants beyond the simple logistically comparison of the proposed extradition of the alleged 11 million illegal immigrants in the US and what the Fuhrer did in ‘removing from his country’ over six million Jewish people.

    First of all let’s accept that this is NOT a new issue. Trump has enlarged and energized the conversation of illegal immigration (and too legal immigration) but some type of aggresive deportation action has been in place since the late 1980s under all Republican regimes. Then criminals first started (in a serious way) being unceremoniously sent home after serving their sentences.

    Like others here I know of too many personal stories of immigrants in the US for many years now who though not criminally liable are still undocumented and can be deported.

    Unfortunately for them it is to their detriment that they were unable to legally establish themselves in the US and are now in an untenable situation if that dreadful knock comes to fruition.

    This is no different to the strident calls in Barbados for the deportation of Guyanese that was heard under BLP and DLP administrations.

    Rule of law is rule of law. We cannot condemn because of who is in power. Pres Obama also deported many illegals.

    It may be hard but if you get into the country of your dreams then you need to do everything possible and then some more to get that piece of paper validating your existence. Otherwise you better save your hard-earned money even as you send some home to build your lil bungalow…in preparation for that fateful day if the storm-troupers arrive.


  5. de pedantic Dribbler February 18, 2017 at 9:55 AM #

    This is no different to the strident calls in Barbados for the deportation of Guyanese that was heard under BLP and DLP administrations
    ………………………………………………………………………….

    According to my recollection the exodus of our Guyanese bretheren occurred under the admin of the present govt.


  6. @ Simple Simon
    Don’t want any pi!ssy old man p@@ing on me.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Perhaps PUDRYH was talking about the vice versa…..
    You seem to be silent on that version…. 🙂

    @ Vincent
    It is the mistaken notion that life is about acquiring money and wealth that drives people to uproot and move to jurisdictions where wealth appears to be abundant. While they are many genuine refugees who have suffered displacement, the overwhelming majority are looking for an easy fortune in a place where many crumbs fall off many tables.

    Unfortunately, in most of those attractive countries where tables seem to overflow, the stuff on those tables is tainted with the blood and tears of countless innocents over the centuries.
    Karma is a patient bitch…. and all those who drink of these centuries of wickedness and exploitation expose themselves to karmic retribution…..

    This world of ours has been conceived, designed, and created with such intricate complexity and wisdom, that you should not even think of trying to understand (least you hurt yourself 🙂 ) …but you can take Bushie’s word on it.
    LOL
    ha ha ha


  7. “home of the coward”…


  8. Miller,
    Don’t tell me about what happened to the Native Americans. I am well aware of it, and have posted denouncing this atrocity for a long long time. I have referred to the Doctrine of Manifest Destiny, which is the mantra of white America, and forms the basis for their racist policies; a policy that Trump is carrying to extremes.Unfortunately, his supporters and apologists keep forgetting (conveniently) the true history of the hatred, genocide, and prejudice exhibited by these descendants of the original settlers(illegal immigrants). I went to the U.S. first in 1958, and I remember the zeal with which the immigration authorities went after Caribbean immigrants, or farm workers who had not returned home after completion of their contracts on farms or in the cane fields, (illegals), who were taken from off their jobs, transported straight to the holding cells at the airports, or other places, and sent back home, without even being able to communicate with their family; going back home with just the clothes on their backs. Then it was not the Mexicans or the criminals. I remember those days. Trump is just building on the impression of many ignorant people who think thet anyone can just get on a plane and get into the U.S. They have absolutely no understanding of what getting to the U.S, from the Caribbean or non European countries entails. They pay no attention to illegal European (white) illegal aliens.
    On the matters, we know what your position and attitude has been since 2008 when you lost the election. Your pronouncements have not changed since then, and I do not expect it to change in the future, so I will not comment further.
    Dribbler,
    “This is no different to the strident calls in Barbados for the deportation of Guyanese that was heard under BLP and DLP administrations.”
    Surely you jest, in making this comparison. Nuff said.


  9. David,
    As far as Trump and his supporters are concerned these “illegal aliens” are not entitled to anything. They want them out of their country as fast as possible. What happens afterward is of no concern to them. They forget one of the basic laws of Physics; for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. He has no idea what the equal and opposite reaction will be. Wait and see. Unfortunately we will get some of the fall-out.


  10. @Alvin

    Cant fault your comment.

  11. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Alvin Cummins February 18, 2017 at 12:18 PM
    “… and I remember the zeal with which the immigration authorities went after Caribbean immigrants, or farm workers who had not returned home after completion of their contracts on farms or in the cane fields, (illegals), who were taken from off their jobs, transported straight to the holding cells at the airports, or other places, and sent back home, without even being able to communicate with their family; going back home with just the clothes on their backs. Then it was not the Mexicans or the criminals. I remember those days. ”

    Why go back to 1958? Why not 2008? It is said that a sure sign of senility is when your short-term memory fails and your long-term recollection is enhanced in a most compensating way.

    The scenes you have just depicted could easily passed for those suffered by the Guyanese (and mostly blacks with obvious Bajan ancestry given their family or surnames) under the hands of your DLP administration only as recently as 2009.

    ‘Ever so welcome, wait for call’ was your administration’s diplomatic blowing of the Bajan trumpet in the sorrowful ears of those productive immigrants from the land your stupid administration will soon have to approach with a begging bowl in hand for a bag of rice to feed the soon-to-be-starving thousands of ungrateful Bajans who ancestors ran away in the thousands to BG many years ago.

    But there is a wise Bajan saying which your aging mind ought to recall: “De more de monkey climb, de more he expose he tail”.

    What goes around must come around; if not ‘soon’ then “shortly” à la Stinkliar.

    Btw, are you forgetting that you have been summoned to appear in defence of your man Stinkliar against the quack Doctor Deliar the aging mongoose who has thrown himself under the DLP bus after lying in the road of DLP destruction since 2009?

    Why allow the other ‘yellowed’ jackass ac to be the only martyr on the burning DLP deck?


  12. David Thompson was a Brit of Guyanese heritage and not a word was said about him. Bajan/Guyana links go back decades.
    People like Clive Lloyd, Lance Gibbs, and others can all trace their backgrounds to Barbados.

  13. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    “They pay no attention to illegal European (white) illegal aliens.”

    That’s just it, they pay no attention to white illegals…none, I even have a family member been there about 30 years who absolutely refuses to get any documents, they dont care about that one, but chase down black Caribbean people, Mexicans and others.

    That’s why Caribbean people are being warned, even those with green cards,, they will chase you down, detain you for years, a nice money making scam.., then deport you.., they are and have always been evil with that land stolen from the Natives and Blacks who were there long before them, and use the stolen land to live off the misery of others…that is how they have survived.

  14. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://ow.ly/4WS33098jCQ

    And whenever Karma books that visit to the US…she will be relentless. This dude is still alive for a reason…to help them bring down the illiterate.

    “NewsWorldAmericas
    The man who brought down Nixon says Trump is even ‘more treacherous’

    Watergate journalist Carl Bernstein criticises Donald Trump’s ‘unhinged conduct’ and warns ‘The most dangerous ‘enemy of the people’ is presidential lying’

    Adam Lusher 2 hours ago

    Watergate journalist Carl Bernstein has attacked Donald Trump’s “lying” and said his attacks on the media are more treacherous than those of Richard Nixon, the president he helped bring down.

    Bernstein, whose reporting with Bob Woodward and Ben Bradlee helped exposed the Watergate scandal of the 1970s, has told his 26,000 twitter followers: “The most dangerous ‘enemy of the people’ is presidential lying – always. Attacks on the press by Donald Trump [are] more treacherous than Nixon’s.”

    Apparently questioning Trump’s mental stability, Bernstein added: “Real news (not fake) is that Donald Trump is trying to make conduct of the press the issue instead of egregious (and unhinged) conduct of POTUS [President of the United States].”

  15. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Ignorance knows no bounds.

    Fruendel may want to speak to immigration lawyers in the US to get information, CONSULATES ARE ONLY CONTACTED BY ICE….if the immigration detainees agree to be deported. ..it’s a legal immigration court process that can take months or years,…..it takes up to 3 months for Consulates to be contacted by ICE to make arrangements for detainee travel….only if the immigration detainee agrees that they do not want to go through a tedious detention and immigration court process in a detention facility or local county jail…. where they may get immigration bail, parole or detained for years in the interim…..the latter being more likely under trump.

    Why does Fruendel as Prime Minister not know how the US system related to immigrants work……shameful….he might want to make an effort and find out.

    PM Stuart: No evidence of Barbadians detained in US
    BGIS,
    Added 18 February 2017

    “NO BARBADIANS are being detained under the new immigration policy being implemented by the United States (US).
    Prime Minister Freundel Stuart gave this assurance following media reports that 19 Barbadian nationals had been held as part of a crackdown on immigration authorities in the US.
    Mr Stuart explained that investigations with Barbados’ Consulate-General in New York revealed that the claim was untrue.
    – See more at: http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/93688/pm-stuart-evidence-barbadians-detained-us#sthash.Frp7Z05q.dpuf

  16. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://ow.ly/4IZ83098mmZ

    The curse ALWAYS repeats itself in this stolen land, washed in the blood of the true owners.

    “Remember how FDR vilified Italians when mulling Trump Muslim ban
    BY ROSARIO A. IACONIS
    SPECIAL TO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Saturday, February 18, 2017, 1:59 PM

    President Trump isn’t the only chief executive to run roughshod over America’s tradition of civil liberties. (KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS)
    President Trump’s immigration executive order smacks of bigotry wrapped in a mystery inside a fiasco. But the 45th President of the United States isn’t the only chief executive to run roughshod over America’s tradition of civil liberties.

    February 19, 2017, marks the 75th anniversary of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s infamous Executive Order 9066. With the nation at war against the Axis powers — and still reeling from Pearl Harbor — FDR promulgated a directive that branded 600,000 Americans of Italian descent “enemy aliens.” Over 10,000 on the West Coast were forced to relocate.

    More than 250 were placed in internment camps in Georgia, Maryland, Montana, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Texas. Joe DiMaggio’s father could not visit his son’s restaurant in San Francisco. In New York, opera star Ezio Pinza was arrested.

    Italian-American homes and businesses were confiscated; property was seized; newspapers ceased publishing; and draconian curfews were established. Fishermen were not permitted to sail their boats and earn a livelihood. Four Italian-Americans committed suicide.

    But this wasn’t the only chapter of anti-Italian intolerance in American history.

    In the 19th century, the Know-Nothings targeted Roman Catholic immigrants from Italy as undesirable foreigners. And Italian-Americans endured persecution at the hands of a benighted nativist horde. On March 14, 1891, the city of New Orleans became a charnel house as eleven innocent Italian-Americans were wantonly slaughtered by a lynch mob numbering nearly 20,000.

    It was the largest mass lynching in U.S. history.

    A savage rabble fired shotgun blasts indiscriminately, tore bodies limb from limb and smashed human skulls with glee. Genteel Southern belles in search of souvenirs dipped their lace handkerchiefs in the blood of the butchered Italians.

    The New Orleans massacre was so horrific that President Benjamin Harrison paid reparations of $25,000 to the Italian government.”

  17. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Wait..nearly an hour and no one challenged me on US immigration procedures for detainees…..ah must be losing me touch…anyway, neither US Immigration, nor US Emassy may admit what I posted, but they sure wont dispute it either…lol…ya know, that miserable immigration court process and all.

    The detainees’ relatives will be allowed to visit them, so will their immigration attorneys.

    Even if invited by detainees, I dont see any of those lazy consular officers in the Barbados Consulate on 2nd Avenue and Lexington. ….trekking across the US to any detention facilities or jails to visit with bajan detainees, they will sit on their tails and await a call from ICE for the detainee to be transported to the consulate by ICE..just before beig deported…….if that is what the detainees wish.

    When Simple’s friend who told her that her bajan sister was detained last week or this week gets more information and shares it with Simple…we will hear more.

  18. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://ow.ly/C6iB3098yvJ

    You are fired..lol…they are on a firing rampage, things are falling apart for those frauds them.

    “White House fires senior NSC aide who criticized President Trump
    BY JESSICA SCHLADEBECK
    NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Saturday, February 18, 2017, 3:45 PM

    The White House promptly fired a senior National Security Council aide after learning he openly bashed the President and several of his top advisers, including daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner.

    Craig Deare earlier this week took aim at President Trump and his administration during an off-the-record roundtable hosted by the Woodrow Wilson Center for about two dozen scholars, Politico reported.

    Deare had been serving as the National Security Council’s senior director for Western Hemisphere affairs before he was fired Friday.

    The ousted official complained during the discussion that senior national security aides don’t have access to the President and gave “a detailed and embarrassing readout of Trump’s call with Mexican president Enrique Peña Nieto,” a source told Politico.”

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