Legislating political careerism

I think most Americans would agree our political class is very disconnected from the world the rest of us live in.  A law recently passed in New Jersey illustrates one of the main reasons why:

Gov. Phil Murphy (D) signed a bill on Thursday that would allow Sen. Cory Booker (D), who has been widely seen as a possible 2020 presidential contender, to run for president and the Senate simultaneously.

How nice that “Spartacus” can now run for President now without risking losing his Senate seat.  I’ve said before that no candidate should ever be allowed to run for two offices simultaneously.  This often results in a special election, which is essentially a cost to the taxpayer to provide job security for politicians.  Our “representatives” stay too long in government as it is.  Why would we want to subsidize secure consolidation prizes for them?  Such careerism is the leading cause of the disconnect between “representatives” and the represented.  Mordor D.C. is an entirely different world from the rest of the country.  Those who “serve” there should be required to get out more (literally).

I’ve addressed this practice of “dual office-seeking” before:

I’ve said before we have to stop enabling careerism in politics.  No politician should be able to simultaneously run for higher office and reelection to his current seat (thus forcing the taxpayer expense of a special election if “promoted.”)  Politicians should not be able to shop around for a favorable district just by maintaining a second (or third…) home there. I’d even be in favor of allowing States to mandate their senators be drawn only from native-born residents (to prevent people like Her Hillariness from suddenly moving to a State just to become a Senator). 

Some time back I posted a long list of things I’d do if I could tweak our political system.  Since it’s election time, I invite my readers to review them again.  None will be on the ballot this time.  That doesn’t mean they couldn’t be in the future.

Be sure to vote tomorrow.  Early voting turnout suggests the country realizes what an unusually important midterm election this is.  Whatever you think about Trump personally, two things should be clear: first, his results to this point are far better than what many feared two years ago.  Second, the Democrats under their current “leadership,” governing philosophy and ongoing blind rage over their legitimate defeat two years ago must not be allowed to regain any of the levers of power.  Period.

Doing the small stuff right first

“If you are faithful in little things, you will be faithful in large ones. But if you are dishonest in little things, you won’t be honest with greater responsibilities. And if you are untrustworthy about worldly wealth, who will trust you with the true riches of heaven? And if you are not faithful with other people’s things, why should you be trusted with things of your own?”  Luke 16:10-12

Victor Davis Hanson notes the all-too-familiar scene of elected leaders pontificating about speculative global matters while failing utterly to address the needs of those closer to home, who put them in office in the first place:

Former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg used to offer all sorts of cosmic advice on the evils of smoking and the dangers of fatty foods and sugary soft drinks.  Bloomberg also frequently pontificated on abortion and global warming, earning him a progressive audience that transcended the boroughs of New York.

But in the near-record December 2010 blizzard, Bloomberg proved utterly incompetent in the elemental tasks for which he was elected: ensuring that New Yorkers were not trapped in their homes by snowdrifts in their streets that went unplowed for days.

The Bloomberg syndrome is a characteristic of contemporary government officials.  When they are unwilling or unable to address pre-modern problems in their jurisdictions – crime, crumbling infrastructure, inadequate transportation – they compensate by posing as philosopher kings who cheaply lecture on existential challenges over which they have no control.  …

We have become an arrogant generation that virtue-signals that we can change the universe when in reality we cannot even run an awards ceremony, plow snow, fix potholes, build a road or dam, or stop inner-city youths from murdering one another.

Governors who cannot build a reservoir have little business fantasizing about 200-mph super trains.

It’s said that “all politics is local.”  The failure of our self-righteous ruling class to address some very basic responsibilities is one of the main factors propelling the rise of the likes of Trump.  There are encouraging signs, however, that some in our capitols are listening to the rising anger; for instance, the call by 10 U.S. Senators and a number of Representatives to curtail or forego the standard Congressional recess in August in order to get some actual work done.

What a concept…

Note to the GOP leadership: it’s not gone unnoticed that you’ve spent more time fighting the president than trying to enable the agenda that got him elected.  You may think you’re blocking a fluke presidency.  In reality, if you stymie Trump you’re going to like what comes next even worse.  In martial arts I was taught to use three escalating approaches to stop a threat: “nice” (evasion and warning), “not-so nice” (evasion and inflicting a “stinger”), and “nasty,” involving serious physical injury to the assailant when all other options had failed and the threat had become critical enough to justify serious violence.  The Tea Party was “nice” and civil; they were unfairly demonized and marginalized.  Trump is the “not-so-nice” second attempt to get the government’s attention.  God help us all if we arrive at “nasty.”

If a Congress cannot pass a balanced budget on time, or a Mayor cannot deal with large-scale violence in their city, or a State legislature cannot pass a budget at all, then these people have no business occupying their current positions, much less running for higher office.  (And I repeat: running for an office should require the candidate not currently hold an elective office, since modern campaigning inevitably results in shortchanging current duties.) We, the people, need to stop looking at the seniority and patronage of our individual representatives, and hold them collectively responsible for our nation’s current woes.  In fact, we need to borrow a phrase from The Donald himself:

You’re fired!”

The rigged game

*Update:  While my original post focused on how a mandarin class in our society has rigged the electoral game, this post focuses on how the concept of representative democracy itself has some inherent flaws and weaknesses.  None can deny that the electorate is complicit in the development of the current mess.  After all, pitchfork parades and tar and feathers are still options.  And far too many voters think they’re “sending a message” by voting for candidate X, when in fact they don’t know candidate X’s actual record or stated positions.  In other words, they’re voting by emotion, not fact and reason:

…as noted above, many people vote as an expressive act. The typical Obama voter knew nothing of his policies, but wanted to be “part” of “something”. There are all sorts of cultural and emotional connotations associated with Team Pepsi, and people want to affiliate themselves with those signals. Team Coke is no better: many Republican voters are in favor of a culture of God, Flag, and Apple Pie, and cast a vote for the GOP as an expressive act, without knowing or caring the actual positions of the candidates they vote for.  ((This, too, figures into the Rise of Trump, since many of his supporters see him as a chance to wave a middle finger at the mandarins, but haven’t taken the time to actually parse what he’s said. — Jemison))

ORIGINAL POST:

Read these two articles, then ask yourself: why is it we put so much faith in elections in this country?

After the final vote count in Nevada, Hillary Clinton has 52 pledged delegates and Bernie Sanders 51 — delegates required to vote for them at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia. All were acquired in state primaries and caucuses as a result of a vote of the people.

So Clinton and Sanders are virtually tied, right?

Wrong. Clinton is leagues ahead of Sanders in the overall delegate count, 503-70. This is because of “superdelegate” rules that allow 712 Democratic Party insiders to decide on their own whom to support at the convention.

The Democratic Party’s superdelegate rules, devised after George McGovern’s 1972 defeat, are not particularly democratic, reflecting an era when party officials were reluctant to lose control of the presidential nominating process.

The Republicans are little better:

That rule was fortified by amendments made at the Republican convention of 2012, ironically to handicap insurgent candidates in the future. It was a response to the phenomenon of Texas Rep. Ron Paul winning nearly all of the delegates in states like Maine, Minnesota and Nevada, in spite of losing wider initial contests in those states.

What point is there to elections if Elephant and Donkey insiders always get to pick the candidates?  We’re stirred up to resent the influence of “big money” in elections, but Big Political Party shenanigans constrain our ‘choices’ as much or more than does donor activity.  Is it any wonder our government’s policies are so out of line with what the people want?  The bi-factional ruling class makes sure the only “choices” the public perceives are slight variations around a tightly controlled mean.  That way they continue to do what they want, public wishes be damned.  The best explanation for Trump’s meteoric rise is that so many people think he represents a means to say “up yours” to the insiders rigging this game.  (He doesn’t; he merely represents another facet of that rigged game — the face that’s shown when the electorate needs to blow off a particularly large head of steam, as it does this year.  The real function elections seems to serve in our country is pacifying the electorate with the illusion they have some input into what Washington does.

As I’ve said in previous posts, I have no idea where this is going, but I’m pretty sure we won’t like the destination.  Ross Perot, Pat Buchanan and Ron Paul were “insurgent candidates,” to use the term in the article above.  Agree with them or not, they had a developed view of how they would approach governance.  Perot self-destructed, but the other two were deliberately (and in the case of Ron Paul, frantically) marginalized by the party apparatus — and the electorate let them do it.

So, having passed those off ramps, the course our nation is on has led to The Donald and his yuuuuuge ego, Bernie Sanders and the usual “hey kid, want some free stuff?” come on of socialism, and Her Hillariness, who promises to do for Washington what she did for information security at the State Department.  At this point I’m tempted to just write in “George Washington” this November.  I don’t think it would make my vote count any less.

Wake me when it’s time to rebuild from the ashes.

A tale of two countries

In “the land of the free, home of the brave,” if the government thinks you have too much cash on hand for an ordinary serf citizen, it reserves the right to relieve you of it:

For almost 40 years, Carole Hinders has dished out Mexican specialties at her modest cash-only restaurant. For just as long, she deposited the earnings at a small bank branch a block away — until last year, when two tax agents knocked on her door and informed her that they had seized her checking account, almost $33,000.

The Internal Revenue Service agents did not accuse Ms. Hinders of money laundering or cheating on her taxes — in fact, she has not been charged with any crime. Instead, the money was seized solely because she had deposited less than $10,000 at a time, which they viewed as an attempt to avoid triggering a required government report.

“How can this happen?” Ms. Hinders said in a recent interview. “Who takes your money before they prove that you’ve done anything wrong with it?”

The federal government does.

I’ve written before about these types of “civil forfeiture” laws, and how they are an example of the way our militarized social policy (i.e. the ‘war on drugs’) has eroded basic freedoms.  Whatever happened to innocent until proven guilty?  It’s come to this: if a bureaucrat deems your financial transactions to be unusual, they can just take your money.  This is freedom?  Other nations have certainly noticed this and raised an eyebrow.  Why haven’t we?

Between forfeiture and the rampant abuse of eminent domain, no American should feel secure that their own government won’t simply try arbitrarily to take away years of work and savings.  This nation simply is not as free as it thinks it is.  The irony is that other nations we’ve been conditioned over generations to believe are hopelessly less free than us may, in fact, now be doing better on this score:

the Vietnamese view of capitalism is based on their experience, while the American view, sadly, may be based on our own. The Vietnamese have their recent experience with the lies and deprivation that always accompany communism to contrast with the growth and opportunity that a newly opened free market has provided. Many Americans, on the other hand, look at our free market and see that it’s not all that free sometimes, and that a lot of what passes for capitalism is really what Jason Mattera calls Crapitalism, a politicized crony-capitalism in which insider connections and government subsidies and compulsion play a bigger role than they should.

Vietnam has a flat tax that makes life easy for small businesses; America has a convoluted code that requires professional help to understand — and that is administered by a politicized IRS that people don’t trust anymore. The Vietnamese see small businesses as essential to the country’s future; the American government is made up of politicians who meet objections to their policies by saying things like “I can’t be responsible for every undercapitalized entrepreneur in America.”

But the Vietnamese advantage may boil down to this: Free markets are new there, whereas America has had them for a long time. Scientist Thomas Ray once said that every successful system accumulates parasites, and the free market in America has been successful for a very long time. Established businesses get tied down with regulations that keep out new innovations — like Michigan’s GM-backed anti-Tesla law that bars carmakers from selling directly to the public — while politicians line up to line their pockets with taxes and fees and campaign contributions.

Don’t believe the rhetoric and the rah-rah that ‘Merica is the world’s greatest bastion of freedom, capitalism and self-governance.  Instead, take a good look at what’s going on around you — even if it’s not happening to you… yet… — and ask some hard questions about how we got here.  Who benefits from the way things are run now… from “Crapitalism?”  Why are Americans tolerating the level of lawlessness we currently do?

I’m not quite to the point of believing elections no longer matter here (though I’m getting there rapidly), so I’ll close with this: once you’ve asked the questions above, act accordingly next week.

NO INCUMBENTS, PLEASE!

And we wonder why things are a mess

I’ve long said people should have to pass an objective civics knowledge test before being allowed to register to vote.  If you can’t even name the branches of government, you shouldn’t be allowed to vote for who runs them (and yes, wisecrackers, I know we don’t vote for the U.S. Supreme Court…).

Now I wonder if I shouldn’t modify that position to include pop quizzes before going into a voting booth:

Over one-third of Likely U.S. Voters remain unaware which political party controls the House of Representatives and which has a majority in the Senate – less than two months before an election that may put one party in charge of both.

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that only 63% are aware that Republicans have majority control of the House. An identical number (63%) know that Democrats run the Senate…

Ninety percent (90%) believe voters in countries with democratically elected governments have a responsibility to be informed about major policy issues, but just nine percent (9%) think most Americans are informed voters.

“Ninety percent” believe voters have a responsibility to be informed.  Wonder how many of those respondents believe they’ve fulfilled that obligation.

Have you?

NO INCUMBENTS, PLEASE!

We need much more of this

fresh, alternative voices, that is:

Florida voters know enough about former Gov. Charlie Crist and Gov. Rick Scott (R) to know they don’t like or trust either man running for governor of their state.

Most Floridians with a voter registration card don’t know anything at all about the third candidate in the 2014 race for governor, Libertarian Adrian Wyllie. But enough of them might vote for Wyllie to worry both Crist and Scott.

Full disclosure: I know very little about Mr Wyllie.  But I do know the gubernatorial race in Florida exemplifies the national dilemma.  You have a recycled former Republican governor running against the current, used-to-be-Republican-but-is-now-Democrat governer.  This is a choice, or the best we can do?  Recycle candidates, including those whose party changes underscore how there is really only one party: the pro-powerful-government one?  Given the power the Republicrat system has amassed to shape voting districts and rig the primary process so as to exclude ‘non-approved’ choices, it would appear so.

We NEED more ‘third-party’ choices like Mr Wyllie, if only to break the destructive monopoly the two-party system has entrenched.

Dynastic politics are a common thread of this monopoly as well, as  Jason Carter runs for the Georgia Governor’s mansion once occupied by his grandfather (Jimmy), and the chattering classes entertain themselves by speculating whether Jeb will try to achieve a hat trick for House Bush at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.  Heck, even Chelsea Clinton is being groomed for something eventually — why else would someone so young and inexperienced be drawing such a journalistic salary? (hint: it’s called bribing the dynasty by those who are honest)

These are not the symptoms of a healthy, functioning republic.  Should Hillary actually ascend to the Throne of Mordor in 2016, it will mean that in 2020 the U.S. President will have been either a Bush or a Clinton for 24 of the previous 32 years, broken only by the strange odyssey of the one called Obama!  That this is even a possibility emphasizes how we’ve devolved into feuding oligarchic coalitions who actually have broad agreement on one key thing: that government should be powerful enough to let them control the masses, both subtly and openly, when they get their turn at the controls.

This is not what the Founders intended.  Nor, I think, is it what most Americans want (at least, for those who bother to think at all).  The trouble is they don’t pay enough attention, nor are they willing to commit to such simple actions as “out of principle I resolve not to vote for any relation of the Bush, Clinton, Kennedy, Cuomo, Daley, or Rockefeller families.”  I’m sure there are plenty of perfectly lovely people in those dynasties.  I’m also sure it’s not a good thing for us to elect our leaders based largely on family brand names.

Nor should Americans offer any loyalty to party brands, since it should be glaringly obvious those are no indicator of how loyal a particular candidate will be to the ‘brand‘ of governance once actually elected.  Even such movements as the “Tea Party” all too often are coopted by politicos seeking to put a fresh spin on the same old game.  It’s time to focus on individual candidates–preferably ordinary citizens who have felt a call to serve the nation for a brief period before going on with the rest of their lives–examine their records, and vote accordingly.  Voting ‘straight ticket’ is both a relic and intellectually lazy.

If you want better government, the price is due diligence to seek out better candidates, and then to watch them like a hawk once in office in order to hold them accountable.  There are signs significant numbers of voters are starting to realize this (though sadly, they are far from a majority).  Perhaps this is why our bi-factional ruling class is so eager to distract us with foreign adventures while flooding the nation with a large pool of newly arrived future political participants, no?

NO INCUMBENTS, PLEASE!

Check, please

Even the President’s political allies are becoming concerned at his unilateralism:

Liberal law professor Jonathan Turley warned a panel of lawmakers that they “must act” in support of a lawsuit against President Barack Obama for executive overreach or face “self-destruction” as a deliberative body.

Turley appeared as a witness for the House Rules Committee on Wednesday as that panel considered advancing a proposed lawsuit that would check the White House’s recent moves to cut out Congress on issues like health-care reform, immigration and drug policy.

The George Washington University law professor — who supports many of President Obama’s policies but opposes their unilateral implementation — expressed his support for the lawsuit and his belief that Congress, as a coequal branch of government, has the standing to sue to presidency.

“Our system is changing,” he warned, “and this body is the one branch that must act if we are to reverse those changes. We are seeing the emergence of a different model of government, a model long-ago rejected by the framers.”

Turley excoriated lawmakers who he believes won’t stand up for their own rights under the Constitution.

“A dominant presidency has occurred with very little congressional opposition,” he noted. “Indeed, when President Obama pledged to circumvent Congress, he received rapturous applause from the very body that he was proposing to make practically irrelevant. Now many members are contesting the right of this institution to even be heard in federal court.”

“This body is moving from self-loathing to self-destruction in a system that is in crisis,” the law professor charged. “The president’s pledge to effectively govern alone is alarming, and what is most alarming is his ability to fulfill that pledge.

The Founders created a system of checks and balances, placing Congress–the direct representation of the people–as a sort of ‘first among equals’ (note the Executive’s powers are in Article TWO of the Constitution, not Article One…).  An institution that once prided itself on rivaling the historic British Parliament as ‘the world’s greatest deliberative body’ has degenerated into partisan preening and little else.  Obama is not the first president to test how far he can try to govern unilaterally — but his administration has certainly set a new benchmark for the attempt.  The Executive swears an oath to faithfully execute the laws.  So what to make of an Executive that decides not to deport ‘dreamers’ (read: illegal aliens), or even to enforce provisions of his own signature legislation (Obamacare) that have proven politically troublesome?  If the Executive gets to choose what laws are enforced, what point is there to having a legislature?

But it goes much farther than that.  As noted in yesterday’s post, this administration has blocked even the feeble attempts Congress has made to date to investigate smoke and smells coming from all across the Executive Branch: the Department of Justice, the IRS, the EPA, the Federal Elections Commission… the list goes on and on.  And when anyone in D.C. points this out, it’s apparent the administration’s attitude is “whadya gonna do about it?” (insert Chicago accent here, since this is nothing more than importing that city’s notorious Godfather-style political machinery to Mordor D.C.)

The gauntlet has been thrown.  Thrown, in fact, picked back up, slapped across Congress’ collective face multiple times, and thrown yet again.  I agree with Turley that Congress needs to act.  But I think it’s long past time for a lawsuit (though perhaps that could be pursued alongside more robust measures).  No, Congress needs to assert itself on the basis of the powers the Founders gave it — something difficult to do with the President’s enablers entrenched in the Senate and a bunch of Big-Government-Big-Corporation Republicans (AKA “RINOs”) leading the House.

In a more sane world, the previous vote to hold the current Attorney General in Contempt of Congress would have been accompanied by demands for his resignation or firing… and a zeroing out of that official’s salary until such had taken place.

In a more sane world, Congress would completely defund the IRS as a first step to repealing both the Sixteenth Amendment and the Federal Reserve Act.

And in a more sane world, the Congress would march to the White House and demand the Executive either secure the border against the current criminal invasion, or immediately resign.

Alas, there is no moral courage left in that institution, nor the fortitude to see through any confrontation.  Before any such check can be re-instituted in our system, We the People have to play our role as a check, too.  It’s time to turn over the entire House and the fraction of the Senate standing for election this year.  Not one incumbent should be returned.  I realize there are still local darlings, but nobody in that place is indispensable.  And there is no better way for the people to reassert the fact that “government derives its just powers from the consent of the governed” than by deliberately tossing Congress out en mass just on principle.

Perhaps an all-Freshman House of Representatives and a Senate full of newbies might find the backbone to reassert Congress’ role on behalf of the people.  It might even listen to them, too… what a concept!

NO INCUMBENTS, PLEASE!

And if We, the People, can’t even agree on that much at this point, can we even call ourselves one nation anymore?

It’s a start…

The number two-ranked Republican in the U.S. House of Representatives now needs a new job:

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor lost in his Republican primary election Tuesday to a little-known economics professor, a stunning upset for the GOP’s No. 2 in the House and a major victory for the tea party. Cantor, viewed as a possible successor to House Speaker John Boehner, was taken down by a political novice with little money named Dave Brat.

If the flood stage is to crest and have any chance to recede, there are 434 other Representatives who need to be ‘taken down by a political novice’ this year.  Such ‘novices’ are also needed for more than 35 Senate seats.

It’s up to you, America.  “Get ‘em skeered and keep the skeer on ‘em.”

No Incumbents, Please!

A refrain with these people

Harry Reid channels his inner Hillary over the Bergdahl-Talian swap:

A reporter asked, “How come it seems that you were the only one who got a heads-up the day before?”

Senate majority leader Reid answered, “Im not sure I’m the only one.  I mean, this is making a big deal over nothing.  The whole deal, is it Friday or Saturday?  What difference does it make?  What difference does it make?”

I suppose if he’d gone for more than a sound bite echo of Her Hillariness, Reid might have tried to explain how a law requiring notification of Congress prior to releasing any detainees at Guantanamo is really just a suggestion.  But when our nation’s leaders treat Constitutional and statutory law like many citizens treat speed limits, there’s a real problem.

NO INCUMBENTS, PLEASE in 2014!