Jake Tapper talks with Fred Thompson about executive power:
Thompson agreed that he didn’t share the views of Vice President Cheney when it comes to the supremacy of the executive branch.
“No, I think the constitution in times of war, especially, is very definitive about that,” he said. “The president is the commander in chief, but the Congress has the power of the budget. The power of the purse. So everything has to go through that prism. So itâs divided power in the constitution. Our founding fathers divided that up. Divided it up at the federal level, the idea being that things like Watergate should be made very difficult to happen. So no one branch of the government can misuse power.”
. . .
Thompson said he sides with the Bush administration in its struggle with Congress over “issues of surveillance,” but he suggested in some of the cases on detainees that have been ruled upon by the Supreme Court he sides with the Congress.
I’m not sure what to make of this, but it’s not what I expected to hear from Thompson.