
Congress passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, granting $170 billion for ICE, CBP, DHS and the Pentagon over four years, effectively sidestepping the Constitution’s two‑year funding limit for standing armies. The article argues this multi‑year appropriation violates the Army Clause, which was designed to prevent permanent, centrally controlled forces from entrenching executive power. It proposes a procedural rule allowing members to raise a point of order that would automatically strip any appropriation exceeding two years unless two‑thirds of the chamber vote to keep it. Enforcing the rule would restore congressional oversight of domestic militarized enforcement.
The Army Clause, embedded in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution, limits any appropriation for a standing army to a maximum of two years. Historically intended to prevent a permanent military from eclipsing civilian authority, the clause has rarely been invoked in modern budgeting. The recent OBBBA appropriation, however, extends funding for immigration enforcement and defense operations across four fiscal years, effectively creating a multi‑year standing force that operates under the executive’s direct command. By treating ICE and CBP as quasi‑military entities, the legislation blurs the line between civilian law enforcement and a permanent army, raising constitutional red flags.
Legal scholars contend that a functional interpretation of the Army Clause should apply to any permanent, centrally controlled coercive force, regardless of its agency label. Past Department of Justice opinions have already applied the clause to Navy and Air Force appropriations based on function, not nomenclature. Extending this reasoning to ICE and CBP underscores the risk of entrenching a federal paramilitary apparatus insulated from annual congressional review, which could be leveraged to suppress dissent or expand executive power without adequate democratic oversight.
To operationalize the constitutional safeguard, the article recommends that both chambers adopt a rule allowing members to raise a point of order against any appropriation exceeding the two‑year limit for forces that meet the functional criteria of a standing army. Such a rule would require a supermajority to waive, mirroring the veto threshold and ensuring that any deviation is a deliberate, transparent decision. By embedding the Army Clause into legislative procedure, Congress can proactively enforce the limit without relying on uncertain judicial review, thereby preserving the balance of power envisioned by the Founders.
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