WASHINGTON -- Today's health policy "summit" comes at a moment when, as
happens with metronomic regularity, Washington is reverberating with
lamentations about government being "broken." Such talk occurs only when the
left's agenda is stalled. Do you remember mournful editorials and somber
seminars about "dysfunctional" government when liberals defeated George W.
Bush's Social Security reforms?
The summit's predictable failure will be a
pretext for trying to ram health legislation through the Senate by misusing
"reconciliation," which prevents filibusters. If the Senate parliamentarian
rules, as he should, that most of the legislation is ineligible for enactment
under reconciliation, the vice president, as Senate president, can overrule
the parliamentarian. This has not happened since 1975, but liberals say
desperate times require desperate measures.
Today's desperation? Democracy's majoritarian ethic is, liberals say, being
violated by the filibuster that prevents their enacting health legislation
opposed by an American majority.
Some liberals argue that the Constitution is unconstitutional, for two
reasons, the first of which is a non sequitur: The Constitution empowers each
chamber to "determine the rules of its proceedings." It requires five
supermajorities (for ratifying treaties, endorsing constitutional amendments,
overriding vetoes, expelling members and impeachment convictions). Therefore
it does not permit requiring a sixth, to end filibusters.
The second reason filibusters are supposedly unconstitutional is that they
exacerbate the Senate's flaw as "inherently unrepresentative." That is, the
Founders -- who liberals evidently believe were dolts or knaves -- designed it
to represent states rather than, as the House does, population.
Liberals fret: 41 senators from the 21 smallest states, with barely 10
percent of the population, could block a bill. But Matthew Franck of Radford
University counters that if cloture were blocked by 41 senators from the 21
largest states, the 41 would represent 77.4 percent of the nation's
population. Anyway, senators are never so tidily sorted, so consider today's
health impasse: The 59 Democratic senators come from 36 states containing 74.9
percent of the population, while the 41 Republicans come from 27 states -- a
majority -- containing 48.7 percent. (Thirteen states have senators from each
party.)
Since there have been 50 states, Republicans have never had 60 senators.
There were 60 or more Democratic senators after seven elections -- 1960 (64),
1962 (66), 1964 (68), 1966 (64), 1974 (61), 1976 (62) and 2008 (60, following
Arlen Specter's discovery that he is a Democrat, and the protracted Minnesota
recount). But both parties have been situational ethicists regarding
filibusters.
In 2005, many Republicans, frustrated by Democrats blocking confirmation
votes, wanted to ban filibusters of judicial nominees. They said such
filibusters unconstitutionally prevent the president from doing his
constitutional duty of staffing the judiciary. But this is not just the
president's duty; the Senate has the constitutional role of consenting -- or
not -- to nominations.
"Great innovations," said Jefferson, "should not be forced on slender
majorities." Hence Barack Obama recently embraced a supermajority mechanism:
The 18-member commission he created to recommend measures to reduce the
deficit requires that any recommendation be endorsed by 14 members.
Filibusters are devices for registering intensity rather than mere numbers
-- government by adding machine. Besides, has a filibuster ever
prevented eventual enactment of anything significant that an American
majority has desired, strongly and protractedly?
Liberals say filibusters confuse and frustrate the public. The public does
indeed mistakenly believe government is designed to act quickly in compliance
with presidential wishes. But most ideas incubated in the political cauldron
of grasping factions are deplorable. Therefore, serving the public involves --
mostly involves -- saying "No." The Bill of Rights, like traditional
conservatism, effectively pronounces the lovely word "no" regarding many
possible government undertakings -- establishment of religion, unreasonable
searches and seizures, etc.
The fiction that government is "paralyzed" by partisanship is regularly
refuted. Presidents Reagan, Clinton and Bush reached across party lines in
1986, 1996 and 2001 to pass tax reform, welfare reform and No Child Left
Behind, respectively. The $700 billion TARP legislation and the $862 billion
stimulus were enacted with injudicious speed.
Liberals are deeply disappointed with the public, which fails to fathom the
excellence of their agenda. But their real complaint is with the government's
structure. And with the nature of the politics this structure presupposes in a
continental nation wary of government and replete with rival factions.
Liberals have met their enemy and he is the diminutive "father of the
Constitution," of whom it was said that never had there been such a high ratio
of mind to mass: James Madison.