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Obama Tries Going It Alone — And Moves Onto Murky Legal Ground

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

President Obama's plan to bypass roadblocks in Congress and govern through executive order isn't going over well on Capitol Hill. Republican lawmakers are demanding to see the legal justification for some of the president's decisions on healthcare and the minimum wage. NPR's Carrie Johnson has that story.

CARRIE JOHNSON, BYLINE: Ultimately, this may all be about the White House but the proximate target of Republican ire is the U.S. Justice Department, as Attorney General Eric Holder and his deputy learned when they made recent appearances in Congress. They're on the hot seat because of a little known unit in the Justice Department. It's called the Office of Legal Counsel and it regularly writes memos that weigh in on the legality of executive branch actions.

Republicans like Utah Senator Mike Lee think the administration has some explaining to do, as he told the attorney general last week.

SENATOR MIKE LEE: And I think the president certainly owes it the American people and you owe it to the president as his attorney general to make sure that when he does act by executive order that he do so clearly and clearly state the basis of his authority.

JOHNSON: Iowa's Charles Grassley, the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, went a step further. Grassley sent a letter to the Justice Department this week demanding those memos so he could understand the legal reasoning behind some unilateral White House decisions, such as raising the minimum wage for new federal contractors and for delaying the employer mandate in the president's healthcare law last year.

SENATOR CHARLES GRASSLEY: If you can't share it with me, will you tell me why you can't share it with me? Because I just don't want a big black hole here.

JOHNSON: Attorney General Holder said he'd think about it, then offered up this defense of his boss.

ERIC HOLDER: He has made far less use of his executive power at this point in his administration than some of his predecessors have. And he will only do so, as I indicated previously, where he is unable to work with Congress to do things together.

JOHNSON: For the record, the White House says Obama has issued 168 executive orders so far, compared to nearly 300 from President George W. Bush. But Senator Mike Lee says those numbers don't tell the full story.

LEE: When you look at the quality, not just the quantity, but the quality, the nature of the executive orders that he has issued, he has usurped an extraordinary amount of authority within the executive branch. This is not precedented.

JOHNSON: Under an important Supreme Court analysis, dating back to the days of President Harry Truman, the courts have said the president acts with the most power when he has clear authority from Congress. Without guidance from lawmakers, the White House can still act on its own, though it's murkier territory. And sometimes the president moves in ways that conflict with congressional commands, which lawmakers view as a power grab.

Senator Lee asked the attorney general which of those options covered President Obama's decision to hike the minimum wage.

LEE: There is a federal statute that authorizes him to issue the executive order regarding the minimum wage.

HOLDER: No, I think that there's a constitutional basis for it and given what the president's responsibility is in running the executive branch, I think that there is an inherent power there for him to act in the way that he has.

JOHNSON: Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee didn't seem convinced. Lou Fisher(ph), who studied executive power at the Congressional Research Service for decades, says the administration should make a better public case for its actions.

LOU FISHER: If there is authority, even if it's questionable authority, then don't say I'm acting unilaterally by executive order, say I'm exercising authority that Congress gave me. But he doesn't do that.

JOHNSON: Fisher says given the fractured relations between the White House and the Congress, there could be a reason for that.

FISHER: Now, I don't know, maybe the White House was worried if he talks that way, the members will say, we gave him that? Let's take it back.

JOHNSON: Senator Grassley says he expects an answer to his demands by next week. Carrie Johnson, NPR News, Washington. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

Carrie Johnson is NPR's National Justice Correspondent.