Okay, I have several good candidates for external links:
-
For definition/general info (Federal Register):
-
For historical context/comparison with Executive Orders (National Archives or a reputable legal/CRS source):
- The Jenkins Law Library snippet22 is excellent for distinguishing. It mentions "Executive Orders and Proclamations: A Study of a Use of Presidential Powers". The URL in the snippet is
https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHQ1Jzb6FfOqITiZ3N0hXwTUNlmJ2l8a4KYV-svb439_EbkHokHO8cMeEpjHEI1Ya43BKmQ7oVnvBrIRYedadbtWjmYq3Ve6PSEGYcH8MfoNvqCjsqT9dcXeyMtGSdJ4MYjxdcB2MRrUN3_4fROZYc5fu5eSJXMk43EJqTQvtXCYeURaRulxlB8neEd8GDl6-3eq0pNZe2D2KEox7ce
. This is a redirect from the search result, not the original URL. I need to find the actualjenkinslaw.org
or similar URL if I want to cite this. - Alternatively, the Wikipedia snippet provides concise definitions and distinctions, but Wikipedia is generally avoided for "premium encyclopedia-style articles" in favor of more primary or authoritative sources.
- Let's check
archives.gov
again.https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/executive-orders/
mentions both EOs and Proclamations. This might be a better overall historical/definitional source than trying to dig up the Jenkins Law Library direct link.18, 19, 20, 21 (Specifically,https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/executive-orders/
is a good overarching page).
- The Jenkins Law Library snippet22 is excellent for distinguishing. It mentions "Executive Orders and Proclamations: A Study of a Use of Presidential Powers". The URL in the snippet is
-
For practical application (economic/trade impact):
- The "New presidential proclamation doubles tariffs on steel and aluminum imports" from
jdsupra.com
16, 17 andbucklandcustoms.com
14, 15 orepi.org
13 (Economic Policy Institute) are strong candidates for a real-world example of economic impact.epi.org
seems more academic/policy-oriented.https://www.epi.org/blog/trump-proclamation-resets-steel-and-aluminum-tariffs/
12 is a good article discussing a specific economic proclamation.
- The "New presidential proclamation doubles tariffs on steel and aluminum imports" from
-
For limitations/criticisms (legal review, challenges):
- The Jenkins Law Library snippet11 mentions judicial review. "Courts sometimes review the legality of executive orders" and that proclamations "do not generally hold the power of a law, except when the matter in the proclamation is something the president has power over according to the Constitution or federal law."10
- The EBSCO Research Starters snippet9 states: "Unless authorized by the United States Congress, a presidential proclamation does not have the force of law." and mentions that a proclamation "can be used to reverse other presidential proclamations." It also mentions "The Court of International Trade recently found the reciprocal tariffs to be unlawful – a decision that the Trump administration has appealed to the Federal Circuit." This indicates limitations and potential legal challenges.
jdsupra.com
also mentions this.
7, 8
Let's finalize the external links:
-
Official Source for Definition/Process:
https://www.federalregister.gov/executive-orders/proclamations
(from federalregister.gov) - Provides official information on proclamations. -
Historical/Distinction Source:
https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/executive-orders/
(from archives.gov) - Explains both EOs and Proclamations from the National Archives. -
Economic Application Example:
https://www.epi.org/blog/trump-proclamation-resets-steel-and-aluminum-tariffs/
(from epi.org) - A specific, real-world example of a proclamation impacting tariffs. -
Limitations/Legal Review:
https://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/new-presidential-proclamation-doubles-1681759/
(from jdsupra.com) - Discusses a proclamation facing legal challenges, highlighting limitations. (The snippet p5, 6oints to this. It's a legal firm's article, but it accurately describes a legal challenge, which is verifiable).
These four links are from federalregister.gov
, archives.gov
, epi.org
, and jdsupra.com
, fulfilling the "at least 3 different trusted domains" requirement. All seem live and relevant based on the snippets.
Internal Link Pool (15 unique, plausible terms):
- Public law
- Executive order
- Regulatory policy
- International trade
- Tariffs
- Sanctions
- Economic policy
- National emergencies
- Legislative process
- Administrative law
- Statutory authority
- Checks and balances
- Federal Register
- Legal framework
- Foreign policy
Now I can proceed with writing the article, incorporating these links naturally. I will ensure Presidential proclamation
is mentioned at least four times in the body, in addition to the H1 and intro.
I need to be careful to use each internal link only once.
I will also ensure the tone is neutral and factual, avoiding any forbidden phrases.
Here's the plan for link placement:
- What Is [TERM]?: 3-5 internal links. (e.g., Public law, Regulatory policy, Economic policy)
- History and Origin: 1 external link (archives.gov).
- Interpreting the [TERM]: 2+ internal links. (e.g., Legislative process, Statutory authority, Federal Register)
- Practical Applications: 2-3 internal links, 1 external link (epi.org for tariffs example). (e.g., International trade, Tariffs, Sanctions)
- Limitations and Criticisms: 2-3 internal links, 1 external link (jdsupra.com for legal challenge). (e.g., Checks and balances, Administrative law, Legal framework)
- [TERM] vs. [RELATED_TERM]: Link to [RELATED_TERM] (Executive order).
- FAQs: 2-3 internal links. (e.g., National emergencies, Foreign policy, Diplomacy (if I can naturally fit it, or a related term))
- Hypothetical Example: 1-2 internal links.