LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation.
Imagine you order a pizza with friends. Everyone agrees on the toppings, the size, and where to get it from. The final order is written down and sent to the kitchen. But just before the pizza goes in the oven, one person—the one paying—grabs a marker and crosses off the mushrooms and onions, declaring, “We're not paying for these.” They didn't reject the whole pizza, just parts of it. In essence, they unilaterally changed the group's agreement after it was made. This is the core problem the supreme_court_of_the_united_states tackled in Clinton v. City of New York. For decades, presidents wanted a “line-item veto,” a power to strike individual spending items from massive budget bills passed by congress, much like crossing off unwanted pizza toppings. Congress finally granted this power with the Line Item Veto Act of 1996. But the Supreme Court, in this landmark 1998 decision, declared it unconstitutional. They ruled that the Constitution gives the President only one choice with a bill: sign the whole thing into law or veto the whole thing. Creating a new law by picking and choosing which parts survive is a power reserved for Congress alone.
The idea of a line-item veto wasn't born with President Clinton. It was a long-simmering political desire, dating back to the post-Civil War era. As the federal government grew, so did its budget. Members of Congress became notorious for tucking “pork-barrel” projects—special funding for a specific district, like a “bridge to nowhere”—into huge, must-pass spending bills. Presidents from Ulysses S. Grant to Ronald Reagan lamented their predicament. They were often faced with a terrible choice: either sign a massive appropriations bill filled with what they considered wasteful spending, or veto the entire bill and risk shutting down the government. It was a high-stakes game of legislative chicken. The call for a line-item veto reached a fever pitch in the 1980s and 1990s amid rising concerns about the national debt. Proponents argued it was a common-sense tool for fiscal responsibility, a “surgical scalpel” to trim government fat. In fact, most state governors have some form of line-item veto power over their state budgets. The 1994 “Contract with America,” a platform by the Republican Party, made passing a federal line-item veto a central promise. The idea had broad, bipartisan appeal, and in 1996, a Republican-controlled Congress passed the Line Item Veto Act, which was eagerly signed into law by Democratic President Bill Clinton. For a brief moment, it seemed a new era of executive power and fiscal discipline had dawned.
The entire legal battle in *Clinton v. City of New York* hinged on a few crucial lines from the U.S. Constitution. The Line Item Veto Act of 1996 gave the President the power to “cancel” three types of provisions in bills that had already been signed into law:
The President had to sign the entire bill first. Then, within five days, he could send a message to Congress identifying the specific items he was canceling. Congress could then pass a “disapproval bill” to reject the cancellations, but the President could veto *that* bill, requiring a two-thirds majority in both houses to override it. This process directly conflicted with the Framers' original blueprint for lawmaking, found in Article I, Section 7, Clauses 2 and 3 of the Constitution—the presentment_clause. This clause states:
“Every Bill which shall have passed the House of Representatives and the Senate, shall, before it become a Law, be presented to the President of the United States; If he approve he shall sign it, but if not he shall return it, with his Objections to that House in which it shall have originated…”
The key constitutional process is:
The Line Item Veto Act created a third option that doesn't exist in the Constitution: sign a bill into law and then unilaterally amend it by canceling parts of it. This, the challengers argued, was not a veto; it was the creation of a new, different law that had never been voted on by Congress.
The central tension was between a modern desire for efficiency and the Constitution's deliberate, process-oriented structure. The Framers designed a slow, difficult legislative process on purpose to prevent any single branch from accumulating too much power. The line-item veto, while perhaps practical, threatened to upend this delicate balance. Here is a comparison of the two powers:
| Power | Traditional Veto | Line-Item Veto (as per the 1996 Act) |
|---|---|---|
| Source | U.S. Constitution, article_i_section_7 | Line Item Veto Act of 1996 (a statute) |
| Scope | All or Nothing: Applies to the entire bill. | Surgical: Applies to specific items within a bill. |
| Timing | Before the bill becomes law. | After the President signs the bill into law. |
| Effect | Rejects the bill, sends it back to Congress. | Creates a legally different version of the law than what Congress passed. |
| Constitutional Role | A check on legislative power. | Allowed the President to essentially rewrite legislation. |
This table illustrates the fundamental shift the Act created. It transformed the veto from a protective shield (rejecting a law) into a creative sword (crafting a new one).
As detailed above, this was the constitutional heart of the case. The Supreme Court's majority opinion, written by Justice John Paul Stevens, focused intensely on this procedure. The Court found that the Act failed to follow the “single, finely wrought and exhaustively considered, procedure” laid out in the Constitution. There are no provisions in the Constitution that authorize the President to enact, amend, or repeal statutes. By canceling parts of the law, President Clinton was effectively repealing them, a power the Constitution does not grant him. The law that resulted from the cancellations was a law that had never been voted on by either the House or the Senate.
This foundational principle of American government, `separation_of_powers`, holds that the federal government is divided into three co-equal branches: the Legislative (Congress), the Executive (President), and the Judicial (Courts). Each branch has its own distinct powers and responsibilities to prevent tyranny. Congress writes the laws. The President executes the laws. The Judiciary interprets the laws. The Court ruled that the Line Item Veto Act blurred this line by giving the President a core legislative power—the ability to decide what the final text of a law will be. It was a clear transfer of legislative authority to the executive branch.
Before a court can decide a case, the person bringing the lawsuit must have standing_to_sue. This means they must prove they have suffered a real, concrete injury. An earlier challenge to the Line Item Veto Act was dismissed because the plaintiffs (members of Congress) couldn't show they had been personally harmed. In *Clinton v. City of New York*, the plaintiffs had clear standing:
Because these parties could show direct financial injury, the Court could proceed to rule on the constitutionality of the law itself.
This isn't just a historical case about constitutional procedure. The ruling in *Clinton v. City of New York* has profound, ongoing consequences for how Washington D.C. operates and how your tax dollars are spent.
Understanding the core arguments from the case helps clarify its importance.
> “If the Line Item Veto Act were valid, it would authorize the President to create a different law—one whose text was not voted on by either House of Congress or presented to the President for signature… There is no provision in the Constitution that authorizes the President to enact, to amend, or to repeal statutes.”
> “This is not the chaotic democratic process envisioned by the Framers; it is the anarchic democratic process that has developed since… The title of the Line Item Veto Act is well deserved. It has been re-described by the Court, however, so that what it authorizes is not a line-item veto but a law-canceling veto.”
This is the most important predecessor to the line-item veto case. In ins_v._chadha, the Supreme Court struck down the “legislative veto.” For years, Congress had included provisions in laws that allowed one house of Congress to unilaterally veto an action by an executive agency. For example, an agency might decide to suspend an individual's deportation, but a legislative veto provision allowed the House of Representatives alone to overrule that decision. The Supreme Court ruled this was unconstitutional. Why? Because it violated the same principles as the line-item veto: bicameralism and presentment. For Congress to take a legally binding action, the action must be passed by *both* houses and presented to the President. The one-house legislative veto failed this test. *Chadha* established the strict, formalist interpretation of the Presentment Clause that the Court would later apply in *Clinton*.
The *Clinton* decision remains a cornerstone in modern debates about executive authority. It is frequently cited in cases and discussions concerning:
The desire for a presidential line-item veto has never truly disappeared. It remains a popular talking point, especially during periods of high national debt and political gridlock.
One alternative tool that remains is rescission. The President can propose to rescind (cancel) previously appropriated funds, but for this to take effect, both houses of Congress must approve the rescission within 45 days. This respects the legislative process but is far less powerful than the line-item veto was.
As political polarization and legislative gridlock intensify, the appeal of a “quick fix” like the line-item veto may grow. In an era where passing even basic funding bills can bring the government to the brink of a shutdown, some may see granting the President more power as a necessary evil to make government function. However, the constitutional hurdles identified in *Clinton v. City of New York* remain immense. The Supreme Court's clear, procedure-focused ruling sets a very high bar. For the foreseeable future, any attempt to grant the president a line-item veto via a simple law would almost certainly be struck down. The only viable, though politically difficult, path remains a constitutional amendment. Therefore, the “all-or-nothing” dynamic of the presidential veto will continue to define the power struggle between Congress and the White House for years to come.