Populist #24
The founders were absolutely clear in their demand that the country would only go to war upon the collective decision of the representatives of the People.
Additionally, as has been shown in previous papers, a primary reason for creating a system of representation was due to exigencies of the day that made it impossible for the People to meet and decide their fate in person. Thus, the true reason for entrusting the Legislature with the power to declare war was to ensure that the People would be involved in the decision as much as was physically possible.
What the Framers did not imagine was a weak and ineffectual Congress that failed to claim its rightful authority in deciding when the nation would go to war, or a power-hungry President that wouldn't refuse an extra-constitutional transfer of such power from Congress.
The typical statist response to this argument is to claim that previous Presidents have sent troops into battle "hundreds of times" without a Congressional declaration of war. Thus, the favorite Presidential excuse for claiming the right to initiate war unilaterally is nothing more than the reasoning of a child: Everybody does it.
But, the Constitution remains valid even after Presidents violate it.
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