Although prerogative power is fundamental to the survival of the nation under particular circumstances, as evidenced by President Lincoln’s suspension of habeas corpus at the beginning of the Civil War, unwarranted and exorbitant utilization of prerogative power is dangerous and may presumably lead to a presidential failure. President George W. Bush’s unabated desire for a regime change in Iraq, before and after the attacks on September 11, 2001, created a scenario in which Bush cherry-picked intelligence reports to justify a U.S.-led invasion with minimal input from Congress or adherence to framework legislation (Pious 2008, 224). Not only are the American people “averse to the unchecked exercise of executive power”, but the international community, which was already unified and committed in Afghanistan to fight the Taliban and Al Qaeda, was not willing to join the coalition against Iraq spearheaded by George W. Bush and Tony Blair (Pious 2008, 274). By choosing to ignore international allies and domestic support from Congress and the American people, President Bush chose prerogative power, without a clear and present danger to the United States, and entered into a decade-long conflict in Iraq which destabilized the entire
Although prerogative power is fundamental to the survival of the nation under particular circumstances, as evidenced by President Lincoln’s suspension of habeas corpus at the beginning of the Civil War, unwarranted and exorbitant utilization of prerogative power is dangerous and may presumably lead to a presidential failure. President George W. Bush’s unabated desire for a regime change in Iraq, before and after the attacks on September 11, 2001, created a scenario in which Bush cherry-picked intelligence reports to justify a U.S.-led invasion with minimal input from Congress or adherence to framework legislation (Pious 2008, 224). Not only are the American people “averse to the unchecked exercise of executive power”, but the international community, which was already unified and committed in Afghanistan to fight the Taliban and Al Qaeda, was not willing to join the coalition against Iraq spearheaded by George W. Bush and Tony Blair (Pious 2008, 274). By choosing to ignore international allies and domestic support from Congress and the American people, President Bush chose prerogative power, without a clear and present danger to the United States, and entered into a decade-long conflict in Iraq which destabilized the entire