[Congressional Record: December 23, 2009 (Senate)]
[Page S13884-S13885]


          STATEMENTS ON INTRODUCED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS

      By Mr. FEINGOLD (for himself and Mr. Whitehouse):
  S. 2929. A bill to prohibit secret modifications and revocations of
the law, and for other purposes; to the Committee on Homeland Security
and Governmental Affairs.
  Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, today Senator Whitehouse and I will
introduce the Executive Order Integrity Act of 2009. The bill prevents
secret changes to published Executive Orders by requiring the President
to place a notice in the Federal Register when he has modified or
revoked a published Order. Through this simple measure, the bill takes
an important step toward reversing the growth of secret law in the
executive branch.
  The principle behind this bill is straightforward. It is a basic
tenet of democracy that the people have a right to know the law.
Indeed, the notion of ``secret law'' has been described in court
opinions and law treatises as ``repugnant'' and ``an abomination.''
That's why the laws passed by Congress have historically been matters
of public record.
  But the law that applies in this country includes more than just
statutes. It includes regulations, the controlling legal
interpretations of courts and the executive branch, and certain
Presidential directives. As we learned at a hearing of the Judiciary
Committee's Constitution Subcommittee that I chaired last year, some of
this body of executive and judicial law was increasingly kept secret
from the public, and too often from Congress as well, under the Bush
administration. The administration concealed Department of Justice
legal opinions and interpretations of the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court.
  The shroud of secrecy extended to Executive Orders and other
Presidential directives that carry the force of law. The Federal
Register Act requires the President to publish any Executive Orders
that have general applicability and legal effect. But through the
diligent efforts of my colleague Senator Whitehouse, we learned in late
2007 that the Department of Justice took the position that a President
can ``waive'' or ``modify'' any Executive Order without any notice to
the public or Congress--simply by not following it. In other words,
even in cases where the President is required to make the public, the
President can change the law in secret.
  The Office of Legal Counsel memorandum that contains this position is
still classified, but Senator Whitehouse convinced the Department of
Justice to declassify certain propositions in the memorandum. Among
them is the proposition that ``[w]henever [the President] wishes to
depart from the terms of a previous executive order,'' he may do so,
because ``an executive order cannot limit a President.'' And he doesn't
have to change the executive order, or give notice that he is violating
it, because by ``depart[ing] from the executive order,'' the President
``has instead modified or waived it.''
  Now, no one disputes that a President can withdraw or revise an
Executive Order at any time; that is every President's prerogative. But
abrogating a published Executive Order without any public notice works
a secret change in the law. Worse, because the published Order stays on
the books, it actively misleads Congress and the public as to what the
law is.
  This is not just a hypothetical problem dreamed up by the Office of
Legal Counsel. It has happened, and it could happen again. To list just
one example, the Bush administration's warrantless wiretapping program
not only violated the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act; it was
inconsistent with several provisions of Executive Order 12333, the
longstanding executive order governing electronic surveillance and
other intelligence activities. Apparently, the administration believed
its actions constituted a tacit amendment of that Executive Order. Who
knows how many other Executive Orders were secretly revoked or amended
by the conduct of the administration over the past 8 years.
  The bill that Senator Whitehouse and I are introducing provides a
simple solution to this problem. If the President revokes, modifies,
waives, or suspends a published Executive Order or similar directive,
notice of this change in the law must be placed in the Federal Register
within 30 days. The notice must specify the Order or the provision that
has been affected; whether the change is a revocation, a modification,
a waiver, or a suspension; and the nature and circumstances of the
change. If information about the nature and circumstances of the change
is classified, it is exempt from the publication requirement, but the
information still must be provided to Congress so that we, as
legislators, know how the law has been changed.
  That is what our bill does; now let me talk briefly about what our
bill does not do. First, it does not expand the existing legal
requirements, under the Federal Register Act, that determine which
Executive Orders must be published. To the extent the Federal Register
Act permits a certain amount of ``secret law'' in the form of
unpublished Executive Orders, our bill leaves that framework in place.
  Second, our bill does not require public notice when the President
revokes or modifies an unpublished Executive Order--even if the
substance of the unpublished order is well-known to Congress and even
the American people. This bill is narrowly aimed at the situation in
which the American people have been given official notice of one
version of the law, but a different version is being implemented.
  Third, the bill does not require the President to adhere to the terms
of an Executive Order. Many scholars have argued that a President must
adhere to a formally promulgated Executive Order unless or until the
Order is formally withdrawn or amended, just as the head of an agency
must adhere to the agency's regulations. I happen to agree. But this
bill does not take issue with the Bush administration's assertion that
any deviation from the Executive Order by the President is a
permissible amendment of that Order. It simply requires public notice
that the amendment has occurred.
  Fourth, the bill does not require the publication of classified
information about intelligence sources and methods or similar
information. The basic fact that the published law is no longer in
effect, however, cannot be classified. On rare occasions, national
security can justify elected officials keeping some information secret,
but it can never justify lying to the American people about what the
law is. Maintaining two different sets of laws, one public and one
secret, is just that--deceiving the American people about what law
applies to the Government's conduct.
  It is my hope and my expectation that the Obama administration will
not continue the previous administration's practice of purporting to
amend the law in secret. But even if the administration agrees to end
this practice, that will not end the need for this legislation. At last
year's Secret Law hearing, the Deputy Assistant Attorney General for
OLC testified that during the Iran-Contra scandal in the 1980s, the
Reagan Department of Justice took the same position: that the President
could secretly modify executive orders simply by not complying with
them. We can safely assume that the ability to modify the law in secret
will hold as much appeal for a future administration as it did for at
least two administrations in the past. We can't wait for this to happen
in order to act, because we won't know that it has happened--the entire
point of the practice, after all, is to keep Congress and the public in
the dark. The time to prevent this eventuality is now.
  I commend Senator Whitehouse for his tireless work to bring this
issue to light, and I urge all of my colleagues in the Senate to
support this modest effort to ensure the integrity of our published
laws.
   Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the text of the bill be
printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the text of the bill was ordered to be
printed in the Record, as follows:

[[Page S13885]]

                                S. 2929

       Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
     the United States of America in Congress assembled,

     SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

       This Act may be cited as the ``Executive Order Integrity
     Act of 2009''.

     SEC. 2. REVOCATIONS, MODIFICATIONS, WAIVERS, AND SUSPENSIONS
                   OF PRESIDENTIAL PROCLAMATIONS AND EXECUTIVE
                   ORDERS.

       Section 1505 of title 44, United States Code, is amended by
     adding at the end the following:
       ``(d) Revocations, Modifications, Waivers, and Suspensions
     of Presidential Proclamations and Executive Orders.--
       ``(1) Notice required.--If the President, whether formally
     or informally, and whether through express order, conduct, or
     other means--
       ``(A) revokes, modifies, waives, or suspends any portion of
     a Presidential proclamation, Executive Order, or other
     Presidential directive that was published in the Federal
     Register; or
       ``(B) authorizes the revocation, modification, waiver, or
     suspension of any portion of such Presidential proclamation,
     Executive Order, or other Presidential directive;
     notice of such revocation, modification, waiver, or
     suspension shall be published in the Federal Register within
     30 days after the revocation, modification, waiver, or
     suspension, in accordance with the terms under paragraph (2).
       ``(2) Content of notice.--
       ``(A) In general.--Except as provided under subparagraph
     (B), the notice required under paragraph (1) shall specify--
       ``(i) the Presidential proclamation, Executive Order, or
     other Presidential directive, and any particular portion
     thereof that is affected;
       ``(ii) for each affected directive or portion thereof,
     whether that directive or portion thereof was revoked,
     modified, waived, or suspended; and
       ``(iii) except where such information is classified, the
     specific nature and circumstances of the revocation,
     modification, waiver, or suspension.
       ``(B) Revised executive order.--Where the revocation,
     modification, waiver, or suspension of a Presidential
     proclamation, Executive Order, or other Presidential
     directive is accomplished through the publication in the
     Federal Register of a revised Presidential proclamation,
     Executive Order, or other Presidential directive that
     replaces or amends the one that was revoked, modified,
     waived, or suspended, that revised Presidential proclamation,
     Executive Order, or other Presidential directive shall
     constitute notice for purposes of paragraph (1).
       ``(3) Classified information.--If the information specified
     under paragraph (2)(A)(iii) is classified, such information
     shall be provided to Congress, using the security procedures
     established under section 501(d) of the National Security Act
     of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 413(d)), in the form of a classified annex
     delivered to--
       ``(A) the majority and minority leader of the Senate;
       ``(B) the Speaker, majority leader, and minority leader of
     the House of Representatives;
       ``(C) the Committee on the Judiciary of the Senate and the
     Committee on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives;
     and
       ``(D) if the information pertains to national security
     matters, the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate
     and the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the
     House of Representatives.
       ``(4) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this subsection
     shall be construed as either authorizing or prohibiting the
     revocation, modification, waiver, or suspension of any
     Presidential proclamation, Executive Order, or other
     Presidential directive that was published in the Federal
     Register through means other than a formal directive issued
     by the President and published in the Federal Register.''.
                                 ______