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Post by avordvet on Nov 14, 2014 6:30:49 GMT -5
Executive Orders: Issuance and RevocationFurther, as long as it is not constitutionally based, Congress may repeal a presidential order, or terminate the underlying authority upon which the action is predicated. For example, in 2006, Congress revoked part of an executive order from November 12, 1838, which reserved certain public land for lighthouse purposes. Congress has also explicitly revoked executive orders in their entirety, such as in the Energy Policy Act of 2005, which revoked a December 13, 1912, executive order that created Naval Petroleum Reserve Numbered 2.29 Another example of the express nullification of an executive order by Congress involved the revocation of an executive. intelligencelaw.com/files/pdf/law_library/crs/RS20846_3-25-2010.pdf
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