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Can Trump adjourn Congress? An 1834 debate sheds light.

A willful president claiming expansive executive power clashes with the Senate, including over his unorthodox appointments. The president’s clever allies point to a constitutional clause he might invoke to unburden himself of the recalcitrant upper chamber. Language tucked away in Article II, Section 3 says that if the House of Representatives and the Senate disagree “with Respect to the Time of Adjournment,” the president “may adjourn them to such Time as he shall think proper.”


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Voilà, say proponents: If the Senate goes too far in defying the president, he can summon the more pliant House to call for Congress to adjourn. When the Senate disagrees, the president can send them both packing. The president’s opponents, of course, warn of a constitutional crisis: “What principle of morality — what code of laws — what provision of the constitution,” one newspaper asks, would this president “not sweep away like a cobweb?”


This state of affairs could, of course, describe Washington in the aftermath of Donald Trump’s 2024 election. It actually describes Washington in 1834, during President Andrew Jackson’s second term, as his battle with the Senate over the Bank of the United States reached a crescendo.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...?itid=mc_magnet-cartoons_inline_collection_20

The 1834 debate over the scope of the president’s power to adjourn Congress has been largely forgotten. But it can shed light on a troubling constitutional clause that a bold or desperate president might try to exploit. The history also contains broader lessons for America’s current era of populist politics and constitutional hardball: that fears of a dictatorial presidency extend far back in the country’s history, and that any quasi-monarchical powers the Constitution does afford American presidents are best left untested at their limits.

Unlike Trump, who in 2020 explicitly threatened to adjourn Congress, Jackson never did so. But early in 1834, newspapers began to circulate rumors of a purported plot to bring the Senate to heel. “The Kitchen Cabinet” — a derisive term invented for Jackson’s band of partisan political advisers — “have a scheme for shortening the session,” claimed a dispatch in the Morning Courier and New-York Enquirer.


“It has been the talk here for some days past that the President intends to prorogue Congress about the first of April, provided the House will agree to adjourn, and the Senate prove refractory,” said a letter in the Columbian Centinel. But the writer added that this was unlikely: Jackson “would not dare to play the part of a Cromwell and Napoleon.”
Some Jackson opponents weren’t so sure. Congressional records show that on March 12, 1834, John Quincy Adams — the former president and Jackson foe who was then a representative from Massachusetts — warned in a speech of “whispers within this Hall” that “a disagreement is to be gotten up between the two Houses of Congress” so that the House could serve Jackson’s “royal prerogative.”
He expressed alarm that “a question of presidential power, which, until this memorable day, has slept undisturbed in the constitution” was now up for debate. Another representative, George McDuffie of South Carolina, said in April: “We are not, indeed, without some very significant indications that this royal mandate will be executed.”

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The Globe, a paper close to Jackson’s administration, published a forceful defense of presidential adjournment power two days after Adams’s speech. It accused senators of threatening to stay in session until the Bank of the United States — which Jackson had vowed to destroy — was rechartered. Jackson could preempt this supposed senatorial extortion: The Constitution, the Globe insisted, empowers “the Executive, whenever the two Houses, on any occasion, cannot agree as to the time of their adjournment, to interpose and untie for them the Gordian knot.”




Though the Senate infuriated Jackson by censuring him in March 1834, the two houses of Congress ended their session voluntarily without rechartering the bank. Jackson didn’t need to act against the Senate, but he probably thought the Globe was right that he had the constitutional power to do so. A veto message on unrelated legislation in the last year of his presidency asserted “the contingent power of the Executive” to intervene in Congress’s adjournment decisions in the future. No president has ever exercised that power, and its scope remains unknown.
Jackson’s political opponents, the Whigs, advanced two interpretations that would limit the president’s adjournment prerogative. The first was that the prerogative applied only during extraordinary sessions of Congress called into being by the president. After all, as Maryland Sen. Robert Henry Goldsborough noted in an 1836 rebuttal to Jackson’s veto, the Constitution mentions adjournment “in the same breath” as it mentions the ability to convene special sessions. The president, says Article II, Section 3:


may, on extraordinary Occasions, convene both Houses, or either of them, and in Case of Disagreement between them, with Respect to the Time of Adjournment, he may adjourn them to such Time as he shall think proper.
That context arguably limits the president’s power, as one writer argued in May 1834 in the Richmond Whig & Public Advertiser. The adjournment prerogative, he observed, is triggered “‘in case of disagreement between them’ — between whom? The two Houses — what two Houses? The two Houses extraordinarily assembled — the only two Houses alluded to in the section.”
This narrower view of the clause made pragmatic as well as linguistic sense. Extraordinary sessions of Congress were common during the first half of American history, when the national legislature was a part-time body. As an article in the National Gazette and Literary Register observed, “no great injury can result from permitting the President” to dismiss a Congress he himself convened.
But allowing a president to combine with one house of Congress to suppress the other in a regular session would undermine the legislative branch’s ability to check the executive. The Gazette piece claimed that if the president’s power applied even to ordinary sessions of Congress without limitation, “it would virtually establish a Dictatorship.”


The Globe insisted that the president’s adjournment prerogative applied to all congressional sessions, no ifs, ands or buts. The pro-Jackson editorialists even appealed to the Constitution’s drafting history to support their point. They noted that in an early draft of the Constitution, the president’s power to call special sessions and his power to adjourn Congress “were written separately, in distinct sentences.” It was only in a later draft that they were “condensed into one sentence.” That suggested that the president’s adjournment prerogative existed independently of his power to convene Congress, the Globe argued. The Framers ultimately linked the two powers together “from mere taste as to punctuation and euphony in the structure of the section.”

Recruits in the new rankings







It is great to be an Iowa Wrestling fan.

Go Hawks!

Iowa man placed on federal probation for disturbance on airplane

A 37-year-old Iowa man who yelled "God is real" and began attempting to open a cabin door on a flight from Omaha to New York City was sentenced to three years of probation Friday in federal court.

Wesley Orban, of Ireton, in northwest Iowa, was sentenced in the U.S. District Court for Nebraska for assault in a special aircraft jurisdiction. Orban was a passenger Nov. 9, 2023 on a Delta Airlines flight from Eppley Airfield to LaGuardia International Airport.
Shortly after the plane had pushed back from the jetway and began to taxi to the runway, Orban began yelling and speaking about demons. He then left his seat and ran to the front of the plane.

Orban began "pounding on the cabin door" and attempted to open the door. He physically struggled with a flight attendant, who got between Orban and the cockpit door.




Orban was then subdued by passengers and crew. He was removed from the airplane before takeoff and taken into custody by police officers from the Omaha Airport Authority.

Ireton is a town of about 590 residents located 36 miles north of Sioux City, Iowa.

Anyone a fan of Anise Cookies?

It's pronounced "Ann, ise."

There's an anise oil that is part of the ingredients list.

I totally forgot about these cookies until a relative mentioned that she was making these for Christmas.

Here's one recipe:

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Reactions: Moral

Port strike, global war, runaway inflation, border crisis. Want more of the same, vote Kamala. Want change that matters: D J T !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

No wars under Trump.
Much more secure border under Trump.
Record low inflation under Trump.
A businessman who knows how to deal with labor disputes. DC bureaucrats who have never written a payroll check have no phuckin' clue about labor relations.

Dems couldn't run a lemonade stand without regulations and bureaucracy getting in the way and folding after about a month in business.

House approves $895B defense bill with military pay raise, ban on transgender care for minors

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House on Wednesday passed a $895 billion measure that authorizes a 1% increase in defense spending this fiscal year and would give a double-digit pay raise to about half of the enlisted service members in the military.

The bill is traditionally strongly bipartisan, but some Democratic lawmakers opposed the inclusion of a ban on transgender medical treatments for children of military members if such treatment could result in sterilization.

The bill passed the House by a vote of 281-140 and will next move to the Senate, where lawmakers had sought a bigger boost in defense spending than the current measure allows.

Lawmakers are touting the bill’s 14.5% pay raise for junior enlisted service members and a 4.5% increase for others as key to improving the quality of life for those serving in the U.S. military. Those serving as junior enlisted personnel are in pay grades that generally track with their first enlistment term.

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IF 2025 is KF final season....

If the 2025 season is Kirk's final year, could he end it the same way he started his career in conference play.......winless? Oregon, Penn State, Indiana, Michigan State, Minnesota all at home. Maybe Michigan St and Minnesota could be wins. Nebraska, Rutgers, Wisconsin, and USC on the road? The QB situation in Iowa City is not the best.

Cop turns to adult movies...

I think I've seen this one!

A police officer has resigned after it emerged that she’d been working as a porn star to make ends meet.

Shannon Lofland performed in half a dozen sex scenes before Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office in Colorado discovered her side gig.

The 44-year-old – who ran the department’s driving academy – said rising debt, high interest rates and spiralling costs left her needing extra money.

She didn’t inform her employer and resigned last week after 21 years of service.

https://metro.co.uk/2024/12/09/cop-resigns-moonlighting-pornstar-pay-500-000-bills-22153491/

SEC_232607317-0e36.jpg

Pop the cork on the finest bottles of maple syrup, get a shirtless Bernie Sanders off of the overturned and burning car, the Cinderella Catamounts...

..., unseeded in the NCAA Men's Soccer Tournament and beat 4 top 10 teams in the final national poll to win it all. Upset #3 San Diego in the Soccer Sweet Sixteen, #9 Pitt in the Elite 8, #4 Denver in the College Cup semis, and 2020 NCAA Champion #8 Marshall (who beat #1 Ohio State in the semis) in the championship game to win the NCAA title. The University of Vermont had never played a national championship game in any sport, and had never won an NCAA title outside of skiing. And what a way to do it! Gotta love sports...

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Impressive stat for Iowa special team returners

From Hawk Central:

Since the Rodgers-Dwight Return Specialist of the Year was first given out in 2015, four Hawkeyes have won it, further exemplifying Iowa’s special teams prowess (2018, Ihmir Smith-Marsette; 2021, Charlie Jones; 2023, Cooper DeJean; 2024, Kaden Wetjen).​
It's not only named after a Hawkeye, but 4/10 of those who have received it since it started are Hawks.
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