Category Archives: The Media

On the Severabilty of the Habeas Corpus Provisions of the Military Commissions Act

About a month ago, the New Yorker published Killing Habeas Corpus, Jeffrey Toobin's profile of Senator Specter's take on the Military Commissions Act (aka 'The Torture Bill'). It contained a revealing fact about the Senator, a fact whose significance Toobin seemed to have missed. Toobin quotes Specter as saying,

Specter is hoping the courts will restore the rights of the detainees to bring habeas cases. “The bill was severable. It has a severability clause. And I think the courts will invalidate it,” he told me. “They’re not going to give up authority to decide habeas-corpus cases, not a chance.”

Trouble is, the final version of the Military Commissions Act — the one the President signed — doesn't have a severability provision, although some earlier versions did. In theory, that usually means that the bill stands or falls as a whole — if one part of the bill is unconstitutional, the whole bill is void. (There are exceptions, for when the courts find Congress couldn't have intended that.)

So my colleague Steve Vladeck and I wrote the New Yorker a letter.

To the Editor:

In Jeffrey Toobin's marvelous profile of Senator Arlen Specter (“Killing Habeas Corpus,” Dec. 4), the Senator reveals that he labors under a fascinating misapprehension regarding potential judicial review of the Military Commissions Act of 2006. Senator Specter states that the Act contains a severability clause, and that, therefore, excision of the controversial (and, in our view, unconstitutional) habeas provision would have no implications for the continuing force of the rest of the Act.

In fact, as anyone who reads the Act will quickly discover, the statute as signed by the President contains no such provision. As a result, if the Supreme Court were to strike down any part of the statute, it would have to consider whether the rest of the Act can survive the loss. As the habeas-stripping clause was the subject of its own vote in the Senate, and the legislative history shows that the severability clause was removed during the consideration of the bill, it would be very difficult for the Court to find legislative intent supporting severability.

We draw some comfort from this observation, although not from the apparent failure of one of the bill's coauthors to understand what he was voting for.

A. Michael Froomkin, Professor
Stephen I. Vladeck, Associate Professor

The New Yorker just published it, in a version that keeps the essential point but edited all the cute out of it:

Toobin's profile reveals that Specter labors under a misapprehension regarding potential judicial review of the Military Commissions Act of 2006. Specter states that the Act contains a severability clause, and that, therefore, excision of the controversial habeas provision would have no implications for the rest of the Act. In fact, the statute contains no such provision, and, if the Supreme Court were to strike down any part of the statute, it would have to consider whether the rest of the Act can survive the loss. Since legislative history shows that the severability clause was removed during the consideration of the bill, it would be very difficult for the Court to find legislative intent supporting it.

A. Michael Froomkin, Professor
Stephen I. Vladeck, Associate Professor
University of Miami School of Law
Coral Gables, Florida

Of course, both Steve and I have complete faith that the Supreme Court could, if it wanted, find some excuse to sever the habeas provisions of the MCA from the rest of the bill — all they'd have to do is change current severability doctrine to fit. Whether it could be done in a principled way, on the other hand…

Posted in The Media, Torture | 14 Comments

Language Note: “Escalation”

The Media are full of articles discussing “the surge” proposal which is frat boy talk for sending more troops to Iraq.

For today, at least, we will pass over the minor fact that the The Decider™ has told us over and over that he doesn’t actually decide troop levels, he leaves that to Generals, and try not to figure out why we are discussing sending more troops over the objection of the Joint Chiefs with no reference to this oft-cited rule.

Rather, I should just like to point out that sending more troops into a war is properly called “escalation.” Yet, somehow, this term seems to have eluded much of the major media.

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I Am TIME’s Person of the Year

And so are you.

Time Magazine’s “person of the year” is … everyone who uses the Internet.

I think this means we’re riding for a fall.

Posted in The Media | 2 Comments

Manatees? Yes, Manatees

Old media meets new media: an adlib, a domain name acquisition, a web site, three million hits.

Yes, Mr. Jones, something is happening…

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Forgot to Mention I Was on The Radio this Morning

Forgot to mention that I was on Marketplace Morning Report today, since everyone else who knows about ICANN was already on a plane to Brazil. The item is just a “teaser” for the upcoming meeting, so it's very short.

Continue reading

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There’s Gold in Them Thar Hills …

My brother has a fun (and pugnacious) column up at Nieman Watchdog Blog bearing the gentle title of On Calling Bullshit:

Mainstream-media political journalism is in danger of becoming increasingly irrelevant, but not because of the Internet, or even Comedy Central. The threat comes from inside. It comes from journalists being afraid to do what journalists were put on this green earth to do.

What is it about Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert that makes them so refreshing and attractive to a wide variety of viewers (including those so-important younger ones)? I would argue that, more than anything else, it is that they enthusiastically call bullshit.

Calling bullshit, of course, used to be central to journalism as well as to comedy. And we happen to be in a period in our history in which the substance in question is running particularly deep.

But here’s the good news for you newsroom managers wringing your hands over new technologies and the loss of younger audiences: Because the Internet so values calling bullshit, you are sitting on an as-yet largely untapped gold mine. I still believe that no one is fundamentally more capable of first-rate bullshit-calling than a well-informed beat reporter – whatever their beat. We just need to get the editors, or the corporate culture, or the self-censorship – or whatever it is – out of the way.

Posted in Dan Froomkin, The Media | Comments Off on There’s Gold in Them Thar Hills …