Author Archives: Michael Froomkin

A Footnote on the Oath

I see that President Obama had the Chief Justice re-administer the oath of office (correctly) this time in an 'abundance of caution' following the imperfect recitation of the oath the first time (due to mis-prompting by the Chief during the Inaugural).

I don't think there are in fact four federal judges in the country who would have held that Obama was not in fact the President at all relevant times were the issue to have gone to trial. Even so, I agree that the re-administration of the oath of office was a fairly costless way for Team Obama to pacify the wingnuts and ultra-orthodox strict constructionists who might have been baying at the moon on this issue.

I post now, after it's (almost) all over only to make two points:

  • Those commentators (not naming names, sorry) who said the entire issue could never be decided on the merits due to the lack of probable plaintiffs with standing were in my humble opinion simply wrong. Any bill signed by the purported President would not in fact be law if the person signing it were not the office-holder. Ditto for any official act by anyone nominated by a non-President. There would have been armies of people with standing. Which makes me wonder whether Obama, in a further excess of caution, re-signed any first-day documents (such as the Cabinet nominations) post-re-administration of the Oath. In for a penny, in for a pound, I say.
  • Other than the fact that it would have cast an unwelcome and unnecessary cloud on a Presidency that has enough to worry about already, it actually would have been a fun case to watch. Since I believe every judge would have been results-oriented on this one, the process of getting to that result might have produced some interesting anti-formalist doctrine that might have had knock-on effects in other areas.

Update (1/22): From Political Animal,

Just for the record, Obama really was president after the first oath, and everything he did yesterday was legit. In 1789, George Washington was president for seven weeks before he'd taken the oath, but he still had all the authority of the office.

That sounds like contemporaneous construction to me.

Posted in Law: Constitutional Law | 2 Comments

I’m Not Complaining

According to TaxProf Blog: 2008 Law Prof Blog Traffic Rankings, the top 14 lawprof blogs are very, very popular.

This blog is #15 of the 35 listed.

Thank you readers, for your time and attention. There's certainly no justice here, many of the others further down the list, or not even on it, are much finer productions, but I'm not going to make a fuss.

I think (hope) posting will be a little less political in the weeks to come as my outrage muscles sidle down to a comfortable torpor, and allow me to focus on other things. We'll just have to see.

Posted in Discourse.net | Comments Off on I’m Not Complaining

Whitehouse.gov Doesn’t Like My Privacy Settings and Has Nothing on Guantanamo

Odd thing: when I go to Whitehouse.gov and allow Flash, the site complains about my privacy settings.

Click for a larger image.
Click for a larger image.

The error message says,

The page did not process successfully because of the following:
• Field 'Email' is invalid
• Field 'Zip Code' is empty

Second odd thing: I wanted the full text of the order postponing trials at Guantanamo, the one that caused the following motion to be filed in Guantanamo,

In order to permit the newly inaugurated President and his administration time to review the military commission process, generally, and the cases currently pending before the military commissions, specifically, the Secretary of Defense has, by order of the President directed the chief prosecutor to seek continuances of 120 days in all pending case.

The Secretary of the Defense issued his order to the Chief Prosecutor in order to provide the administration sufficient time to conduct a review of detainees currently held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba to evaluate the cases of detainees not approved for release or transfer to determine whether prosecution may be warranted for any offenses those detainees may have committed, and to determine which forum best suits any future prosecution.

But when I search for “Guantanamo” at whitehouse.gov I get … nothing.

Posted in Guantanamo, Internet | 1 Comment

Skype Security Considerations

Financial Cryptography: Skype: the gloss is losing its shine has lots of food for thought.

I just wish financialcryptography.com would format its RSS feed in a way my reader could parse better…

Posted in Cryptography, Law: Privacy | 1 Comment

Post-Mortems of the Bush Administration

Posted in Politics: US: GW Bush Scandals | Comments Off on Post-Mortems of the Bush Administration

Geekish, But Oh So Cool

Found via BoingBoing, The country's new robots.txt file at kottke.org.

Very geekish, but oh so cool.

Update: An expert writes: “This is actually crap. The old robots file just waved spiders off the text-only versions.”

If so, this may be the first time I misunderestimated the Bush administration.

Posted in Internet | 1 Comment