Showing posts with label Boston Tea Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boston Tea Party. Show all posts

Friday, January 7, 2011

Krauthammer & Constitutionalism

Charles Krauthammer, in his column today, explains the larger reasons for reading the Constitution in the House to start the 112th Congress. He also has a warning for the disparaging left. Yes, the move was symbolism, but it was anything but empty symbolism. Rather, it is symbolism attached to an ever growing, still inchoate movement that centers on returning government to something approaching the view of the Founders as expressed in the Constitution:

. . . Americans are in the midst of a great national debate over the power, scope and reach of the government established by that document. The debate was sparked by the current administration's bold push for government expansion - a massive fiscal stimulus, Obamacare, financial regulation and various attempts at controlling the energy economy. This engendered a popular reaction, identified with the Tea Party but in reality far more widespread, calling for a more restrictive vision of government more consistent with the Founders' intent.

Call it constitutionalism. In essence, constitutionalism is the intellectual counterpart and spiritual progeny of the "originalism" movement in jurisprudence. Judicial "originalists" (led by Antonin Scalia and other notable conservative jurists) insist that legal interpretation be bound by the text of the Constitution as understood by those who wrote it and their contemporaries. Originalism has grown to become the major challenger to the liberal "living Constitution" school, under which high courts are channelers of the spirit of the age, free to create new constitutional principles accordingly.

What originalism is to jurisprudence, constitutionalism is to governance: a call for restraint rooted in constitutional text. Constitutionalism as a political philosophy represents a reformed, self-regulating conservatism that bases its call for minimalist government - for reining in the willfulness of presidents and legislatures - in the words and meaning of the Constitution.

Hence that highly symbolic moment on Thursday when the 112th House of Representatives opened with a reading of the Constitution. Remarkably, this had never been done before - perhaps because it had never been so needed. The reading reflected the feeling, expressed powerfully in the last election, that we had moved far, especially the past two years, from a government constitutionally limited by its enumerated powers to a government constrained only by its perception of social need.

The most galvanizing example of this expansive shift was, of course, the Democrats' health-care reform, which will revolutionize one-sixth of the economy and impose an individual mandate that levies a fine on anyone who does not enter into a private contract with a health insurance company. Whatever its merits as policy, there is no doubting its seriousness as constitutional precedent: If Congress can impose such a mandate, is there anything that Congress may not impose upon the individual?

The new Republican House will henceforth require, in writing, constitutional grounding for every bill submitted. A fine idea, although I suspect 90 percent of them will simply make a ritual appeal to the "general welfare" clause. Nonetheless, anything that reminds members of Congress that they are not untethered free agents is salutary.

But still mostly symbolic. The real test of the Republicans' newfound constitutionalism will come in legislating. Will they really cut government spending? Will they really roll back regulations? Earmarks are nothing. Do the Republicans have the courage to go after entitlements as well?

In the interim, the cynics had best tread carefully. Some liberals are already disdaining the new constitutionalism, denigrating the document's relevance and sneering at its public recitation. They sneer at their political peril. In choosing to focus on a majestic document that bears both study and recitation, the reformed conservatism of the Obama era has found itself not just a symbol but an anchor.

Constitutionalism as a guiding political tendency will require careful and thoughtful development, as did jurisprudential originalism. But its wide appeal and philosophical depth make it a promising first step to a conservative future.

The left has, for decades, used an activist judiciary to amend the Constitution and alter our society, moving it ever further from that envisioned by our Founders. I think that we are indeed at a tipping point. Let's hope this "first step" is one of very many.

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Tuesday, January 19, 2010

In Massachusetts, National History Is Made Yet Again


Tonight history was made. In the words of the AP, there has been, in Massachusetts, an "Epic Upset." It deserves to be put in context.

In 1773, it was at Boston that the colonists warned the government of its overreach with the Tea Party.

In 1775, the people of Massachusetts ignited the Revolutionary War at Lexington and Concord.

In 1952, the Kennedy clan took hold of Massachusetts politics, gaining a Senate seat that the clan would not relinquish until the death of Ted Kennedy in 2009.

John F. Kennedy, who would later become President, was very much a moderate Democrat, strong on defense and conservative on fiscal matters. He instituted one of the first income tax reductions and he involved us in the Vietnam War. Teddy was not even a pale shadow of his brother, JFK. Yet so strong was the Kennedy hold on Massachusetts that Teddy, a man expelled from Harvard for cheating and a man responsible for homicide in the case of Mary Jo Kopechne, was still able to get elected to his older brother's Senate seat and retain it by wide margins in every election thereafter. Unlike JFK, Teddy made a name for himself as a far left ideologue and a true child of the anti-war 60's.

In 2004, Ted Kennedy was directly involved in getting Massachusetts law changed so that an interim election would have to be held to seat a new Senator if a seat became open. Ted expected John Kerry to win the Presidency and wanted to insure that the Republican Gov. Mitt Romney would not be able to appoint a Republican to serve out the term.

In 2008, with Democrats outnumbering Republicans three to one, Obama won Massachusetts by a 26 point margin and Democrats took full control of all branches of Congress, including a bare 60 vote supermajority in the Senate. By 40 seats in the House and 1 seat in the Senate, Republicans became utterly irrelevant to whatever the left wanted to do.

On 20 Jan. 2009, Obama was inaugurated, kicking off a period of far left governance for the first time in America's history. It was a year that saw Obama and the Democrats make a massive effort to move America far to the left.

On Aug. 25, 2009, Ted Kennedy died, leaving his Senate seat open and his "life's work" of instituting socialism and, more particularly, European style government controlled health care in America, near completion.

On 8 Dec. 2009, Scott Brown won the Republican primary for Teddy's seat. He ran explicitly on a plank opposing the socialist programs and profligate spending of Obama. On Dec. 19, Coakley polls gave her a 20 point lead over Brown. No one gave him a chance of winning and Coakley did not bother to campaign.

On 1 January 2010, the Democrat-controlled Congress was within weeks of passing a monstrosity under the rubric of health care reform.

On 18 Jan. 2010, with Coakley down in the polls, President Obama himself came to Massachusetts to remind the formerly faithful Democrats of the state that his plans for America where on the line in this election.

And now, on 19 January 2010, 237 years after the most famous act of rebellion in our history, 235 years after starting the Revolutionary War, 58 years after turning control of a Senate seat to the Kennedys, 4 years after Ted created the special election hoist for his own petard, one year after voting Obama into office by a landslide, and with Obama's entire plans for moving our country far to the left completely on the line:

MASS ELECTS REPUBLICAN BROWN TO THE SENATE BY 5 POINTS (OUTSIDE THE MARGIN OF FRAUD, ACORN, & SELECTIVE RECOUNTS)


That is a 31 point swing to the right in Mass. politics in the space of one year. The people of Massachusetts have given their verdict in a referendum on Obama. They have broken the far left's stranglehold on our federal government and ended their ability to ram through their far left agenda, working fundamental changes to America and its economy. The people of Massachusetts did so by breaking with their own tradition of being perhaps the Democrat's most reliable stronghold - a fact that will reverberate through our body politic long into the future.

This act of near rebellion by Massachusetts foreshadows and portends a backlash of massive proportions against the Democrats in 2010 unless they make a 180 degree change in their current trajectory. Massachusetts, in an incredible twist of irony - given a chance to have their say today thanks to the partisanship of Ted Kennedy himself - has once again rebelled against overreach of an arrogant, oppressive and overreaching national government. Let Freedom ring.

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