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Show 150 the way objective en through political moment ing to he sees the expressed through the sticking when it is the binding the .fee ts of gool Q a social iegal rule, the will instance, he is insistent of It following even by an to be obiective moiorlty principle belns greater than definite procedure. use the achieved Thomas' position is patGdoxicQl, for ot overwhelming signfficonce of in mind that of It and not the Certainly Perhcrps at another to a kept accompli.hed as important as action. override the sanction; then ;s on of the and is will people the bonds of the way the thing However, the paradox vanishes when he insists on Itrongly .Iegol is to done, some extent form he has in mind the interest group to thwort the will of the statement one spirit mofority. expresses his ideast Franklin D. Roosevelt, by vetoing a bill fer the second time, thus overcoming the Congressional review which is gronted by the Constitution, manifested G similar disregard for the spirit of that document. So, too, when he showed hi:s evident distrust of Congress, especially of the Senate, after his defeat on ,the St. Lowrence waterway and the World Court protceoJ. The sp,irit of the constitution ploinly expects the President to work with the Senate, not against it. When the Pt8$ident of the United States vetoes the same bill Q .econd time it had been reviewed and repassed by unan imous vote of both Houses of CongreiS, he marred the spirit of the veto theory. This I protested, because if It became a prac tic. the right Senatorial courtesy hcn A dent and Congress. ment of Mr. Roberts Virginia. Thomas' eese to own a in of review would be denied always point been was .4 • bone of contention between the Pr.i- in the instance of the t\-esident's (udiclal position words in (I c.ongress without the consent quoting the President's appoint- of the Senaton from statement and in comment- |