The U.S. president’s relationship with American law has become distorted since the nation’s Founding. The U.S. Constitution’s supremacy places a limited, but important, role on the executive. This executive power acts as a double-edged sword. Favorably, the U.S. Constitution narrowly restricts the role of the executive branch; while unfavorably, it broadly grants executive power, without explicitly defining the jurisdiction of these presidential powers.
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The President and the Law
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The U.S. president’s relationship with American law has become distorted since the nation’s Founding. The U.S. Constitution’s supremacy places a limited, but important, role on the executive. This executive power acts as a double-edged sword. Favorably, the U.S. Constitution narrowly restricts the role of the executive branch; while unfavorably, it broadly grants executive power, without explicitly defining the jurisdiction of these presidential powers.