Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from University of Illinois Studies in the Social Sciences, Vol. 9: March June, 1920; War Powers of the Executive in the United States
The executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America.1 The language here used by the Constitution in describing the executive power in the govern ment of the United States is strikingly different from that describing the general power of either of the other two great de partments. The article dealing With the legislative department uses the words, All legislative powers herein granted '2 showing that the following specified powers clearly constitute a limitation on the possible claims of that department to power; While the article devoted to the judiciary also expressly states that the judicial power of the United States shall extend to certain enumerated cases,3 thereby obviously excluding all other cases over Which the judiciary might otherwise claim jurisdiction.
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