|
- What is the Constitutional precedent for military aid?
Is there any Constitutional precedent for the claim that it is or is not within the rights or duties of the office of the President of the United States or of Congress to grant, to deny, or to susp
- united states - Is there precedent for a losing candidate to be . . .
Is there any precedent since 1913 1 for a Senate candidate who lost, to be appointed to the Senate shortly 2 after the election? 1 The Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified which established the direct election of senators, as well as means of filling vacant Senate seats
- Can a United States President issue a self-pardon?
Law in the US […] is a game of precedent When an element of law is vaguely written, as in the presidential pardon power, it remains largely undefined until it is "interpreted" (more accurately, assigned limits and meaning) by the courts — source This answer has more insight, including links to articles written by prominent legal scholars;
- Is there a precedent for a country attacking another and later . . .
13 Is there a precedent for a country attacking another due to unverified information and finding out later they were wrong? And what was the international response?
- What makes the Nuclear Option in the US Senate a precedent that its . . .
The precedent becomes part of the rules of the Senate Now suppose in future there is a cloture vote on an appointment, and it passes 52-48 (say) If the chair rules that this isn't enough there would be a point of order and the 52 votes would again overrule the chair
- united states - Why didnt a conservative majority SCOTUS repeal Roe v . . .
Stare decisis (aka Precedent ) Courts hate deciding "new" things A court prefers to show that they are just ruling the way they always have Changing things unsettles everybody, so it takes something really egregious, like Brown v Board of Education overturning Plessy v Furgeson only after it became obvious that separate was never equal
- election - Is there a precedent, in France, for barring a politician . . .
Is there a precedent, in France, for barring a politician from running for office due to (political) fraud or embezzlement? Ask Question Asked 1 month ago Modified 1 month ago
- international relations - Is there any precedent for refusing to . . .
Is there any precedent for this? We welcome interim President Guaido’s directive to all diplomatic missions in Venezuela that Venezuela intends to maintain diplomatic relations with all countries
|
|
|