No provision of the
U.S. Constitution, federal statute, or common-law principle explicitly permits or prohibits signing statements. However, there is also no part of the Constitution that grants legal value to signing statements.
Article I,
Section 7 (in the
Presentment Clause) empowers the president to veto a law in its entirety, to sign it, or to do nothing.
Article II,
Section 3 requires that the executive "take care that the laws be faithfully executed". The Constitution does not authorize the President to cherry-pick which parts of validly enacted Congressional Laws he is going to obey and execute, and which he is not. The complexity is that if a section of U.S. code is not constitutional, then by definition it was not validly enacted. One part of the debate, then, is whether it is proper for a particular president to sign into law a statutory section that he considered at the time to be invalid, while declaring that he will not consider it binding, rather than vetoing the entire bill and sending it back to Congress. Signing statements do not appear to have legal force outside the executive branch by themselves, although they are all published by the
Federal Register. As a practical matter, those that announce a president's interpretations of—or constitutional objections to—newly enacted statutes amount, implicitly or explicitly, of instructions to subordinate government officials to interpret the new laws the same way. There is a controversy about whether they should be considered as part of
legislative history. Presidential signing statements maintain particular potency with federal executive agencies, since these agencies are often responsible for the administration and enforcement of federal laws. A 2007 article in the
Administrative Law Review noted how some federal agencies' usage of signing statements may not withstand legal challenges under common law standards of judicial deference to agency action.
Supreme Court rulings The
Supreme Court has not squarely addressed the limits of signing statements.
Marbury v. Madison (1803) and its progeny are generally considered to have established
judicial review as a power of the Court, rather than of the Executive.
Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984), established court deference to executive interpretations of a law "if Congress has not directly spoken to the precise question at issue" and if the interpretation is reasonable. This applies only to executive agencies; the President himself is not entitled to Chevron deference. To the extent that a signing statement would nullify part or all of a law, the Court may have addressed the matter in
Clinton v. City of New York (1998), which invalidated the
line-item veto because it violated
bicameralism and
presentment.
Presidential usage The first
president to issue a signing statement was
James Monroe. Until the 1980s, with some exceptions, signing statements were generally triumphal, rhetorical, or political proclamations and went mostly unannounced. Until
Ronald Reagan became president, only 75 statements had been issued; Reagan and his successors
George H. W. Bush and
Bill Clinton produced 247 signing statements between the three of them. By the end of 2004,
George W. Bush had issued 108 signing statements containing 505 constitutional challenges. The upswing in the use of signing statements during the Reagan administration coincides with the writing by
Samuel Alito – then a staff attorney in the
Justice Department's
Office of Legal Counsel – of a 1986 memorandum making the case for "interpretive signing statements" as a tool to "increase the power of the Executive to shape the law". Alito proposed adding signing statements to a "reasonable number of bills" as a pilot project, but warned that "Congress is likely to resent the fact that the President will get in the last word on questions of interpretation." A November 3, 1993, memo from White House Counsel
Bernard Nussbaum explained the use of signing statements to object to potentially unconstitutional legislation: This same Department of Justice memorandum observed that use of presidential signing statements to create legislative history for the use of the courts was uncommon before the Reagan and Bush presidencies. In 1986, Attorney General
Edwin Meese entered into an arrangement with the West Publishing Company to have Presidential signing statements published for the first time in the
U.S. Code Congressional and Administrative News, the standard collection of legislative history
Blue ribbon panel on signing statements On July 24, 2006, the
American Bar Association's Task Force on Presidential Signing Statements and the Separation of Powers Doctrine, appointed by ABA President
Michael S. Greco, issued a widely publicized report condemning some uses of signing statements. The task force report and recommendations were unanimously approved by ABA delegates at their August 2006 meeting. The bill would: • Instruct all state and federal courts to ignore presidential signing statements. ("No State or Federal court shall rely on or defer to a presidential signing statement as a source of authority.") • Instruct the Supreme Court to allow the
U.S. Senate or
U.S. House of Representatives to file suit in order to determine the constitutionality of signing statements. The bill was referred to the
Senate Judiciary Committee, which Specter chaired at the time, on the day it was introduced. == Signing statements by administrations ==