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by nikanj
1627 days ago
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I believe it was originally designed to be a safety valve in the system. A person can be found guilty because the laws are blind, but if a (loud) majority of the population thinks it was a misjustice, the president can fix the situation. I don't think any of the founding fathers foresaw presidents using their power to pardon their friends. The whole system is extremely vulnerable to an insider attack - very few tools are in place to work around corrupt leaders. |
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Interestingly, this pattern repeats itself; countries which became independent from Britain later on often have a far less powerful president, with similar powers to when _they_ left. The president of Ireland, for instance, is non-executive, doesn't have a veto, and can't commute sentences... much like the British monarch when Ireland became independent.
As it stands, it's an anachronism that only survives because it's _really_ difficult to change the US constitution, I suspect.