Relationship Details

President Grant Separation of powers Congress

Connected Entities

Entity A
President Grant
Type: person
Mentions: 17
Also known as: President
Entity B
Congress
Type: organization
Mentions: 1442
Also known as: Congressional Committees, Congressional Research Service (CRS), U.S. Congress, U.S. Congress, Select Committee, Select Committee, U.S. Congress, Congressional-Executive Commission on China, US Congress, 115th Congress, National People's Congress (of China), House Congressional China Caucus, US Congress (114th Congress), CBO (Congressional Budget Office), Congressional China Caucus, 114th Congress, Republican-controlled Congress, Congressional Research Service, National People's Congress (NPC), Republican Congress, National People’s Congress, International Congress of Mathematics, U.S. Congressional Budget Office, Congressional Budget Office, CRS (Congressional Research Service), National Congress, 3GSM World Congress, Congressional supercommittee, Library of Congress, National People's Congress, Party Congress, New York Building Congress, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC), World Jewish Congress, Congress party, Mexican Congress of Psychology

Evidence

The entire document discusses the constitutional tension between the President's duty to execute laws and the authority to refuse to enforce laws passed by Congress that the President deems unconstitutional.

The entire document discusses the constitutional tension between the President's duty to execute laws and the authority to refuse to enforce laws passed by Congress that the President deems unconstitutional.

The entire document discusses the constitutional tension between the President's duty to execute laws and the authority to refuse to enforce laws passed by Congress that the President deems unconstitutional.

The entire document discusses the constitutional tension between the President's duty to execute laws and the authority to refuse to enforce laws passed by Congress that the President deems unconstitutional.

Source Documents (1)

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012390.jpg

Legal Memorandum / Analysis • 3.58 MB
View

This document is a legal analysis, likely from a government entity like the House Oversight Committee, detailing the constitutional basis for U.S. Presidents to refuse to enforce laws they deem unconstitutional, often through the use of presidential signing statements. It cites several opinions from the Office of Legal Counsel (O.L.C.) and provides historical examples from the administrations of Presidents Wilson and Eisenhower to support the executive's authority. This document is unrelated to Jeffrey Epstein and contains no information about him or any associated individuals, events, or entities.

President Grant's Other Relationships

Constitutional opposition Congress
Strength: 5/10 View
Professional spousal First Lady
Strength: 5/10 View
Government delegation foreign ministers
Strength: 5/10 View
Work delegation foreign ministers
Strength: 5/10 View
Work delegation Aliny
Strength: 5/10 View

Congress's Other Relationships

Unknown China
Strength: 9/10 View
Advisory lobbying Department of Justice (DOJ)
Strength: 9/10 View
Political opposition President Johnson
Strength: 8/10 View
Advisory legislative commentary Department of Justice (DOJ)
Strength: 7/10 View
Governmental executive legislative communication Jimmy Carter
Strength: 7/10 View

Relationship Metadata

Type
Separation of powers
Relationship Strength
8/10
Strong relationship with substantial evidence
Source Documents
1
Extracted
2025-11-17 06:06
Last Updated
2025-11-17 06:24

Entity Network Stats

President Grant 7 relationships
Congress 32 relationships
Mutual connections 0

Discussion 0

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