When did the distortions start? Was it with Officer Crowley and the Cambridge Police Deparment “acting stupidly”? Was it with the distortions over ObamaCare? How about dressing down the Supreme Court while the camera catches Samuel Alito saying “not true”. His assault on Paul Ryan’s budget blueprint after inviting Congressman Ryan to come hear his speech, brings to mind Joe Wilson’s outburst, “You Lie!” during another Obama address in Congress. It is becoming all to common to hear the lies and distortions from this president, but they keep coming. The good news is that Congressman Ryan is not afraid to counterpunch.
United States Congress
Long Island’s own Peter King (R) plans to introduce legislation that would make it illegal for someone to knowingly carry a gun within 1,000 feet of certain high-ranking federal officials, including members of Congress. Before I take on the nuttiness of the law itself, I have to ask, “What makes them so special?”
Tim Bishop has one reason that he consistently gives for sending him back to Congress and that is that his opponent, Randy Altschuler, started a company and Bishop claims it outsourced jobs overseas.
In a New York Post article yesterday, Raymond J. Keating informs us that the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council, where he serves as chief economist, just released their Small Business Scorecard for the 111thCongress. The scorecard rates members of Congress on a wide range of votes (27 in the Senate and 22 in the House) that cover such things as workplace regulation, ObamaCare, government spending, tax policies, energy legislation, and bailouts. Overall, he tells us the New York delegation scored just 11 percent on the scorecard, the sixth worst of the fifty states. The two members of the delegation that scored well are Peter King, and John Lee. On the other hand Tim Bishop failed to vote even once with small business on big issues. A big fat zero.
We currently have a commission investigating how to deal with our ballooning deficit and Brobdingnagian debt. In the past we have had a commission on military base closings and I am sure there were others that don’t immediately come to mind. Why do we need them when Congress and the President have the necessary power to make these changes? Cowardice. It may be a harsh charge, but that is basically it, no one wants to go on record making tough choices, but if they can get an unelected bipartisan commission to make a recommendation that Congress can vote “all or none” then there are plenty of political fig leaves to go around.
“Well, I didn’t vote for that one, I voted for this one, but it was an all or nothing deal so I couldn’t separate them out.” We pay these people $174,000 each in base pay and they punt the hard choices to a commission. Why? Because they see their primary job as keeping that $174,000 per year job, something that gets easier once you are an incumbent, so long as you don’t make a major mistake, like a hard decision for the benefit of the country.
If you look at the Constitution, the powers granted to the federal government were few and defined, as Madison put it in Federalist No. 45. With such limited and defined powers, the federal government should focus on a limited number of items and deal with them directly. But the size and scope of the federal government has grown enormously and the current administration wants to grow it even more enormously. So don’t look for any tough choices. Look for more and more commissions to deliver up “solutions” that the weak kneed members of Congress can vote up or down for. This is gridlock by design.
Once you move most government functions to the federal level, how can anything possibly be accomplished? How do you pass a law that benefits New York and doesn’t harm Alaska? How much do Alaska and New York have in common? Perhaps that is why most major pieces of legislation coming out of Congress run into thousands of pages? Look at it this way, if a bill of twenty pages is applied differently to fifty states, you soon have 1,000 pages. But what the Constitution says is that there are a few enumerated powers given to the federal government and everything else is left to the states and the people. Let the people of Mississippi pass a law of twenty pages that suits the people of Mississippi and let the people of Idaho pass their own. This will bring about the ability for the other 48 states to look at these two examples and decide for themselves which one would work better in their state or choose a completely different path or none at all. But if it is all at the federal level you can yell and scream and jump up and down on your Congressman’s desk for all that matters and he can say, “Gosh, I’m just one of 435 members here. I agree with what you are saying, but…” If the issue is at the state level you have more clout and at the local level even more so.
But what we have is a government whose spending is out of control. We have a commission that will not report until after the mid-term elections and as sure as I draw a breath, their report will be full of new taxes including a Value Added Tax (VAT) to bring buckets of tax revenue to put out the spending conflagration. Sure there will be some spending cuts, mostly in the discretionary areas that don’t add up to much of the budget anyway, but probably make for good media coverage.
We need to shrink the monster. We need to take away from the federal government those responsibilities that are not spelled out in the Constitution and let the states and their residents decide how to handle the rest, if at all. If we don’t take these steps, the gridlock we see today will continue. The only difference will be that our Congressional representatives will be making over $200,000 a year before long to do what would get them fired in the private sector.






