The Washington Post | Andrew Rudalevige: Back in 2015, there were loud calls not least from senators for President Barack Obama to ask the Senate to ratify the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with Iran, calling it a treaty. Instead, hechose to enter into an executive agreement, which has become something of a trend:Treaties are a tiny fraction of international agreements overall. A2007 studyby political scientists Kiki Caruson and Victoria Farrar-Myers found that between 1977 and 1996 presidents negotiated nearly 4,000 executive agreements but only 300 treaties.
Tuesday, though, manyopponentsof the agreementarguedthat Obamas failure to seek ratification was what allowed President Trump to end it unilaterally.According toSen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), Donald Trump isnt ripping up a treaty. President Obama made a bad deal with Iran without support from Congress, and today President Trump is pulling out of President Obamas personal commitment, and he doesnt need Congresss support to do so. Rep. Ron DeSantis (R-Fla.)tweetedthat President Trump had every right to withdraw the U.S. from what was effectively an Obama executive agreement.
Perhaps these lawmakers are fans ofThomas Jeffersons 1801 manualon parliamentary practice, which reads, Treaties being declared, equally with the laws of the United States, to be the supreme law of the land, it is understood that an act of the legislature alone can declare them infringed and rescinded.
But presidents havent necessarily understood things the same way.
Its surely possible that a treaty, in place of an executive agreement, would have wider support. Republicans would have had to vote to ratify it, and thus its abrogation might carry higher political costs.As I noted on these pagesin 2015, the difference between seeking a treaty and negotiating an executive agreement is, at base, a political question. So is the outcome of either. And as political scientists Glen Krutz and Jeffrey Peakeargue in their bookTreaty Politics and the Rise of Executive Agreements, executive agreements conducted in truly unilateral fashion without even tacit congressional cooperation will be codified but essentially hollow.
Yet all else equal, calling the JCPOA a treaty and getting Senate ratification would not have protected it froma presidential decisionthat it was a horrible one-sided deal that should never, ever have been made. In 1978, after all, Jimmy Carter gave notice that the U.S. was going to withdraw from its 1954Mutual Defense Treaty with Taiwan thereby nullifying an agreement that had been so ratified. By doing so, he enabled diplomatic relations with the Peoples Republic of China, completing a process begun by Richard Nixons famous (and evenoperatic)visit to Beijing.
Similarly, in December 2001, George W. Bush informed Soviet president Vladimir Putin (yes, the same one) that the United States would withdraw from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty. This time the prompt came from internal debates: The Bush administration wanted to implement a missile defense program that the treaty prohibited.
In neither case did Congress as a whole seek to take up Jeffersons mantle. The Senate did vote to protest Carters action. But in the 2002 case, when Bush abrogated the ABM Treaty, as then-Sen. Russ Feingoldtells it, that body took no action at all and even blocked Feingold from joining a lawsuit brought against the Bush administration by more than 30 House members.
In the Taiwan case, Carters chief antagonist was Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.),who arguedthat the president had set a dangerous precedent for executive usurpation of Congresss historically and constitutionally based powers. A district court judge agreed but the D.C. Circuit did not, holding that since a president could decide whether or not to move forward with a treaty even after ratification, he had the constitutional initiative in the treaty-making process.
The question went to the Supreme Court which refused to comment on the merits. It effectively dismissed the case,holding thatthe question was a political question beyond the Courts capacity. Justice Powells concurring opinion noted that such a case might be justiciable someday but at present it cannot be said that either the Senate or the House has rejected the Presidents claim. If the Congress chooses not to confront the President, it is not our task to do so.
With no such confrontation in sight, the D.C. district courttook the same stancein 2002. The House members suit was set aside both because its members had no standing to sue and because they could not be said to speak for Congress. Since President Bush announced his intention to withdraw from the ABM Treaty, neither the House nor Congress has made any attempt whatsoever to register disapproval as a body, or to insist on a role in the termination of the Treaty.
In 1979 and 2002, legislative ire seemed to be driven more by partisanship and policy preference than by constitutional principle. In 1979, Goldwaters suit was opposed by Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.) and supported by Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah). But in 2001, their roles flipped. Kennedy attacked Bushs action and Hatch prevented a Senate resolution asserting that bodys role in treaty termination from coming to a vote.
Even Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.), vigilant advocate of Senate prerogative, noted on the Senate floor in December 2001 that Bush had the right to abrogate the ABM treaty. I dont question the Presidents legal right to do that. That is not the question,Byrd said.
But he did suggest that law and wisdom might diverge. I think the President should have asked for some advice from the Senate, the senator went on. He does not have to take the advice, but I have seen no evidence of the President seeking advice on this matter. He simply made up his mind to do it and did it. I think the administration would be much wiser if it took the Senate into consideration and had some expression of support. Let the American people hear some debate in the Senate.