Published April 18, 2016 This content is archived.
No, President Trump could not make Mexico pay for a border wall.
President Cruz cannot shut down 30 federal departments and agencies.
President Sanders can’t impose a comprehensive $15 minimum wage.
President Clinton cannot negate the Supreme Court’s ruling in Citizens United.
Professors from the UB Law School became the “Party of No” on April 13, as they responded to students’ questions in a forum titled “2016 Presidential Campaign Promises: Can They Be Achieved?”
The forum, sponsored by the Buffalo Human Rights Center, drew a substantial crowd to an O’Brian Hall lecture classroom. Questioners raised issues of immigration reform, mass incarceration, free trade, climate change and the presidential primary process.
In almost every case, interim Dean James A. Gardner, Professors Meredith Kolsky Lewis and Rick Su, and Associate Professor Anthony O’Rourke responded that the presidential candidates’ campaign promises were beyond the reach of the executive branch acting alone.
Why, then, do the candidates make such promises?
“It signals their commitment on a certain kind of issue and should be understood in its political context and not its legal context,” Gardner said. Campaign promises, he added, also signal an agenda for the eventual winner.
But, Gardner said, extravagant political promises come at a cost. “Presidential candidates deliberately confuse the public about the structure of governmental authority in this country,” he said. “You never hear a presidential candidate say, ‘I don’t have a position on that because it wouldn’t be in my authority to do that. Take it up with your governor.’ It seems like a form of negative civic education.”
But the candidates’ pronouncements did call attention to what was on students’ minds as the New York presidential primary neared. Among the comments:
But, O’Rourke noted, “The U.S. government uses foreign aid as a carrot to get countries to comply with the treaty. Trump was suggesting the United States no longer do that and I think that would be well within the scope of the president’s powers.”