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19 Jul 2011, 1:57 pm by nflatow
Yale law professor Jack Balkin and Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe have agreed that Section 4 of the Fourteenth Amendment does not authorize the President to act, but Tribe and others have noted that Congress’s behavior in “acting in a way to call the public debt into question” may be unconstitutional, even if there is no clear remedy other than to hold Congress publicly accountable. [read post]
18 Jul 2011, 1:47 pm by Eugene Volokh
But it helped – maybe even decisively – that Professor Laurence Tribe, professor at Harvard Law School and well-known Obama enthusiast, stood up and publicly denounced the faulty constitutional interpretation on which it rested, in an op-ed in the New York Times.Professor Tribe deserves praise for this. [read post]
11 Jul 2011, 6:10 pm by Lovechilde
Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe also argues in an op-ed in The New York Times that the Constitution “only grants Congress — not the president — the power ‘to borrow money on the credit of the United States. [read post]
10 Jul 2011, 4:22 pm by Jonathan H. Adler
Adler) On Balkinization, Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe responds to the Treasury Department’s suggestion that the Treasury Secretary had never suggested the executive branch could unilaterally borrow money to avoid default. [read post]
10 Jul 2011, 2:33 pm by Guest Blogger
I would appreciate your sharing this letter with the Secretary, and I will be sharing it myself with The New York Times.Sincerely,Laurence H. [read post]
8 Jul 2011, 3:34 pm by Sandy Levinson
Type III crises are a relatively common event in our history.So let's review the bidding: Laurence Tribe, who remains the country's leading academic constitutional lawyer, backed by Jack, argue that the President is without legal resources should congressional Republicans continue to behave like latter-day Jefferson Davises and risk the destruction of the national (and world) economy (and, according to Bruce Bartlett, vital American national security interests). [read post]
8 Jul 2011, 1:30 pm by Jonathan H. Adler
Department of the Treasury General Counsel George Madison has sent the following letter to the NYT in response to Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe’s op-ed on the debt limit.Contrary to Professor Laurence Tribe’s assertion (Op-Ed, July 8), Secretary Geithner has never argued that the 14th Amendment to the U.S. [read post]
8 Jul 2011, 9:26 am
Fred4Pres, commenting in the Laurence Tribe post, uses the world "mendoucheous. [read post]
8 Jul 2011, 6:50 am by Jonathan H. Adler
Adler) Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe has an op-ed in today’s NYT on the constitutional debate over the debt ceiling. [read post]
7 Jul 2011, 11:58 am by Kevin
(Laurence Tribe says no, if you need a second opinion from an actual constitutional scholar.) [read post]
23 Jun 2011, 1:33 pm by David Bernstein
Lee Optical, two very deferential post-1937 due process cases, as providing appropriate guidance in First Amendment commercial speech cases.Of course, Breyer is simply playing the rhetorical trick that modern liberal constitutionalists have been fond of since at least publication of Laurence Tribe’s constitutional law treatise in 1978: first, to segregate the pre-New Deal Court’s “economic” due process opinions like Lochner (bad!) [read post]
13 Jun 2011, 9:10 pm by Lawrence B. Ebert
[see Harvard Crimson on reprimand of Laurence Tribe] As they say at the Harvard Business Review: Plagiarize with Pride! [read post]
7 Jun 2011, 7:50 am by Randy Barnett
Some law professor defenders of the individual mandate such as Laurence Tribe, Charles Fried, and Walter Dellinger have complained that my Clause Clause objections are not really founded on “federalism,” but are actually founded on “liberty. [read post]
24 May 2011, 11:37 am by Trent
I saw Laurence Tribe, whose legal theory of constitutional law I studied my 1L year. [read post]
23 May 2011, 4:49 am by Lawrence B. Ebert
This derivative copying was likely also involved in the plagiarism incident involving Laurence Tribe of Harvard Law. [read post]
12 May 2011, 1:44 pm by Randy Barnett
There’s plenty of room for reasonable dispute over that proposition, but it’s unfair for Tribe to have maintained in his op-ed that the argument against the individual mandate is political rather than legal.You can read the rest here: Jeffrey Toobin and Laurence Tribe on Tribe’s “Advocacy Disguised as Analysis” on Obamacare [read post]
19 Apr 2011, 8:00 am by Marcia Oddi
Updating yesterday's ILB entry, the New York Times today, in an editorial, presents the opposing view. [read post]