Westonci.ca is the ultimate Q&A platform, offering detailed and reliable answers from a knowledgeable community. Get the answers you need quickly and accurately from a dedicated community of experts on our Q&A platform. Explore comprehensive solutions to your questions from a wide range of professionals on our user-friendly platform.

A group of rebels in a foreign country overthrows its president and surrounds and eventually
storms the American Embassy taking hostages. The president declares war on that nation's
government. Where in the Constitution is this power found?
Is this a Constitutional or inherent?

Sagot :

The power of the president to declares war on that nation's government is an inherent power and can not be found in the Constitution.

What is an inherent power?

It refers to those powers that are not explicitly specified in the Constitution that enable the government to take actions necessary to efficiently perform essential duties. The practice is that both the President of the United States and Congress exercise inherent powers.

While not granted by the Constitution, these inherent powers are a reasonable and logical extension of the powers delegated to the president and Congress. An examples of the inherent powers include regulating immigration, acquiring territory, ending labor strikes etc

Even though the Constitution divides war powers between Congress and the president; only the Congress can declare war and appropriate military funding and yet the president is commander in chief of the armed forces.

Read more about inherent power

brainly.com/question/2940163

#SPJ1