Friday, February 22, 2019

Congress lets president do its job; reform of national emergencies needed



Declaring a national emergency, President Trump's way of rounding up funds for the Wall, is either a national scandal or a routine political maneuver.  Voters may get to make their choice.

Whatever it is, the fault for the latest crisis is squarely owned by Congress.  By blithely passing off its constitutional powers to the president, it is now faced with a president making the most of the opportunity.

Sen. Lindsay Graham has said that Congress refused to allow Trump to spend funds in ways it had authorized previous presidents, so he had to act on his own.  That's not how it is supposed to work.  When Congress sets spending priorities, the president cannot flout that decision just because he favors another policy.

The problem is not that Congress has rejected more wall-building.  The problem is that Congress has given the president the tool to ignore its constitutional control of federal spending.

Another understanding about how the federal government is meant to work within the terms of the Constitution has been eliminated.  Its disappearance joins a growing list of evaporating constitutional customs, altering the American system of government.  People voted for change, and they are getting it.

Presidents have used their power to declare a national emergency for a wide variety of reasons, from blocking the assets of certain enemies to prohibiting the import of "blood" diamonds to responding to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Trump has been criticized because the immigration threat is not newly urgent and has been diminishing in recent years.  

So why call it a national emergency now?  It looks like a mere political ploy.  Even so, it takes advantage of the possibly unjustified precedents established by assertive presidents acting in the absence of Congress.

What's different about Trump is that he has acted right after Congress expressly rejected the spending and precisely because of the congressional rejection.  That had not happened previously.  And his declaration was based on inaccurate or false data.

A national emergency should be an urgent situation that can be easily recognized by members of Congress and average voters.  It should not be a matter of politics, which this declaration surely is.  Consistent with his approach throughout his presidency, Trump wants to keep the political promises he made when he ran.

Congress may try to reject his declaration.  Much will depend on how Republican senators vote.  There must be enough of them to override his inevitable veto.  It is a virtual certainty that GOP senators will not abandon their loyalty to their president, though he shows them no such loyalty.

The declaration has also gone to court.  Opponents claim that Trump's action violates the separation of powers and that he cannot ignore the congressional power of the purse.  
They will expect a conservative Supreme Court to be more supportive of the Constitution than of the president.  Maybe.

The Court could well refuse to decide the matter.  It could simply say that Congress can pass laws about national emergencies, as it has in the past, leaving it up to the lawmakers to decide this matter, not the judiciary.  It might find that nobody has standing to make a legal challenge.

Dealing with Trump's declaration or at least future so-called national emergencies places the issue directly before Congress.  Senators Susan Collins and Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, both Republicans, say they oppose Trump's declaration.  They should come forward promptly with a bill to limit presidential power.

New limits in declaring national emergencies could be enacted.  They might be required to sunset in two weeks or a month.  That would give Congress the time to consider legislation authorizing further action.  These days Congress can reconvene quickly.  There's no need for give the president a blank check. 

This approach could be especially useful where the president is using funds that had been appropriated for other purposes.

Two classes of emergency might be established, cutting down on the use of a broad declaration to cover targeted issues.  A two-tier approach would reserve the declaration of a national emergency to events having national effect.

As for the Trump declaration, Congress could ban using any funds under any appropriation for spending on a border barrier above the level set in the Homeland Security budget.  
Even if the president vetoed it, the bill would give political wiggle room to Republicans who want to put some space between themselves and Trump in the 2020 elections. 

Reversing Trump would be a declaration that Congress is beginning to reassert its lawful powers.  The Wall is not what's most important.  The Constitution is.


Friday, February 15, 2019

Supreme Court makes big waves with little orders; Collins gets blame, Roberts gets credit – both mistakes



The Supreme Court has stirred controversy with two procedural orders.  They revealed much about the state of our political world.

In one case, the Court decided to suspend a Louisiana law that requires doctors performing abortions to be admitted to practice at a hospital.  The law could have the effect of eliminating all but one of the clinics and doctors providing abortions.

The factual question was whether three doctors could obtain hospital admission privileges.  The state promised to give them 45 days to try, deferring enforcement of the law.  It acknowledged that if only one doctors remained, that would not satisfactorily protect women's health.

In effect, the Court decision lengthened the 45-day period.  It did not decide on the law itself, though it will later.  Among the five-member Court majority were the four liberal justices and Chief Justice John Roberts.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh was among the four conservatives opposing the suspension, but was alone in providing a written explanation.  He took no position on the law, but said that the three doctors should continue performing abortions and make a “good faith effort” to gain hospital privileges in the 45 day window.

If they did not succeed, a stay suspending the law could then allow the Court to review the law itself.  In short, he said nothing about supporting the obvious effort to drastically limit abortions.

Two conclusions immediately emerged from the decision, both most likely wrong.  One was that Sen. Susan Collins had been fooled when she said Kavanaugh would respect precedent, presumably the Roe v. Wade decision allowing abortions.  The other was that Roberts was emerging as the Court' swing vote.

Abortion advocates would not trust Louisiana's assurances which Kavanaugh had accepted.  Because he was not suspicious, he was complicit.  That meant he opposed Roe.  Distrusting any statement from those you oppose is how politics works these days.

Collins took him at his word in his dissenting opinion.  The media reported that opponents of Kavanaugh's confirmation had “slammed” her with the obvious intent to weaken her reelection chances. 

As for Roberts, as much as we want a new swing vote, he showed his credentials for the title are limited.

In Alabama, a convicted criminal was slated for execution.  A Muslim, he asked for an imam to be present.  The state refused, saying only its Christian staff chaplain may attend.  Otherwise, it claimed, without proof, the event might be unsafe.  The state claimed he should have known the rules, though his request for them had been refused.

The Court of Appeals had suspended the execution so that it could hear arguments on both sides.  The Supreme Court overruled the lower court and allowed the execution to take place.  The five member majority included the five conservatives, including the Chief Justice. 

Justice Elena Kagan said the decision was a direct violation of the clause in the Constitution that prevents the government from favoring any single religion or religion itself.  She said the state's reason for its rule should have been examined in court.  After the decision, Alabama quickly banned any religious counselor from executions.

Roberts had fallen in line with the conservatives, not on procedure as was the case on abortions, but on a basic constitutional question.  That raised a question about the quality of his status as swing justice.

Both decisions could affect millions of people.  The Court owed people more than the short, procedural orders, providing little detail and judgment.  It left the explanation to the media, which could easily misinterpret the abortion order, making more out of it than justified and while ignoring the true meaning of the religion case.

As a result, people were misled or ill-informed.  That undermines democracy.  The Court deals with the law, but it also affects the people.  It might remember that.

A note.  This column during the week near Washington's Birthday traditionally is devoted to the exceptional man who embodied the American nation and was its first president.  Because last fall, a column was devoted to his words, relevant in light of the Pittsburgh massacre, this column does not focus on him.

But we have heard recently from our current president that his first two years in office were the greatest in history.  In his first two years, George Washington created the American executive branch of government, balancing conflicting views.  He was well aware that he was setting precedents that might last as long as the Republic.  And he displayed great modesty, even reticence, at times. 

These days, his exceptional accomplishments are worth remembering, especially in the White House.

Friday, February 8, 2019

Pundits speculate on presidential election like it's a sport


If you follow any major sport, you probably know about weekly power rankings. Teams are rated on their recent performance, and their standing may change from week to week. The ranking supposedly reveals the ultimate winner.

Power rankings have now come to the presidential campaign. Washington Post pundits plan to rank weekly all potential candidates, Democrats, Republicans and independents. But not Donald Trump. Perhaps the Post assumes that he has all the power he needs to get the GOP nomination.

The presidential campaign is well under way, starting barely after the latest elections. The pundits are hard at work, speculating on the latest news. The voters are likely to be confused.

The congressional races have also begun. Last week, Sen. Susan Collins' campaign announced her best fundraising quarter ever. It openly attributed the support, from all 50 states, to her vote in favor the appointment of Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court.

Meanwhile, Kavanaugh's opponents have raised a war chest to support whatever candidate opposes Collins, the expected Republican standard bearer. Money in politics? Here is a case of money seeking the candidate, not the reverse. It seems clear that the campaign will be mainly about that one vote by Collins.

There might be as many as 20 Democratic hopefuls in the presidential race. Inevitably, this campaign crowd must be seen as reflecting the belief that Trump is vulnerable and almost any respectable Democrat can beat him. The problem is that's just what the Democrats thought in 2016, when the result did not support their optimism.

Only a few of the Democrats have a platform. The Post's power ranking focuses more on where candidates fit in their parties, based on their personality and where they hail from.

Are the Democrats inclined to select a reformer willing to upset tradition, as young voters supposedly want? Or will they prefer a candidate who appeals to the white, working class men who usually line up with the GOP? Is it the right moment for a woman to be elected, thanks in part to the growing involvement of women in the political process?

Whatever happens, it would be a mistake to conclude that the Democrats will end up so badly divided they cannot win. Unlike the GOP, the Democrats are accustomed to internal battles and the campaign losers often stick with the party's candidate.

On the GOP side, Trump seems to be having trouble finding his footing. He has always relied on the cheers of his base, the core group of supporters who stick with him no matter his policy choices. But other Republicans, especially in the business community, and even some of his core are now becoming less reliable.

The economy is strong. But if it slows, as forecast, will Trump still be able to take credit for a boom? The tax cut has produced only small benefits, but a large deficit, making it less popular than it was originally.

And he has stumbled. His Wall is not happening and he looks increasingly desperate. His rebuke of the government intelligence chiefs backfired, and he admitted that he had only followed their analysis in the media, when most presidents would have been briefed by them. The shutdown failed and left him looking unsympathetic to workers.

Moderate GOP office holders have been hinting they might run against him in party primaries. But they would need massive funding and enough support from reluctant Republicans to defeat Trump in early primaries. Achieving either seems unlikely unless more of his base washes out.

Of course, the Mueller report may contain enough damaging information about Trump's involvement with the Russians in the 2016 campaign that even some of his base deserts him. His continued coziness with Russia, while the diplomats and military openly worry, could make him more politically vulnerable.

If Trump weakens or drops out, watch for an army of GOP candidates. They would test whether the GOP has permanently abandoned moderate politics to become a party of the far right.

The political scene is too unsettled and the primaries are too many months away for television's talking heads to get much right.

With the campaign under way, it is worth remembering picking a president is serious business, not a sport to handicap. Speculation can swamp knowledge. The voter far from Washington may be treated more like a commodity than as a citizen.

Conclusion? Don't pay much attention to the pundits and don't rush to pick a candidate. Plenty of time remains for candidates to emerge, shine or simply disappear. This is not a sport.

Friday, February 1, 2019

Picking Supreme Court justices: the lost lesson


Here's a good story that should have had a sequel.

About 100 days after he suddenly found himself president of the United States, Harry S Truman had to fill his first vacancy on the Supreme Court. In 1945, the Court was composed of seven Democratic appointees and one Republican.

Himself a Democrat, Truman naturally wanted to reward a member of his own party. He was said to have considered several possibilities, and the Secretary of Labor claimed that Truman had promised him the slot.

The Senate had a Democratic majority, though many Democrats were southern conservatives, often closely aligned with the Republicans. Truman's advisors urged him to name a Republican, a move never before made by a Democratic president. He decided to follow their advice.

He finally settled on Sen. Harold H. Burton of Ohio. Burton had been a member of the Truman Commission, the watchdog body that fought wasteful military spending during World War II. Truman found him thoughtful and honest. Above all he supported the role of Congress in lawmaking and a limited role for the Court.

Burton, a former mayor of Cleveland was originally from Massachusetts and a Bowdoin College graduate. He was nominated and confirmed in a single day. The Democrats supported their president and the GOP supported a Republican. Above all, senators readily supported one of their own.

The new justice was no legal theorist, but he was an effective and respected jurist. Few would ever know that Chief Justice Earl Warren had allied himself with Burton, a long-time opponent of racial segregation. Together, they carefully forged the unanimous Court that ended school segregation and "separate, but equal."

Fast forward to 2016. The sudden death of Justice Antonin Scalia created a vacancy on the Court. President Obama sought to replace the conservative justice with a more moderate jurist. But the Senate was controlled by Republicans who wanted to replace Scalia with an exact copy.

Obama nominated a highly qualified judge, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told him face to face, that he would block any Obama nominee. He expected the GOP would win the presidency, though a Republican could not take office for about a year. He intended to keep the seat vacant until then.

While nobody doubted the qualifications of Judge Merrick Garland, Obama's nominee, nobody could reasonably expect him to be confirmed. Obama was reluctant to retreat in the face of McConnell's obstinacy. The White House seemed frozen.

This scenario worried supporters of the Court's Roe v. Wade decision, which had affirmed that abortions are legal. With a new Scalia, the threat of the Court reversing that decision might remain a real possibility.

The problem was not about Obama refusing to back down. It was about his failure to try to outmaneuver McConnell. Obama was not Truman.

If Obama had followed Truman's action, he might have ended up with a new justice who was favorable to Roe v. Wade. How?

Obama might have appointed a Republican senator to the Court. Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski is rated as a moderate who supports Roe. Her appointment would place on the Court its only justice without an Ivy League law school degree, which could add to her appeal. And it would be a first for Alaska.

Would McConnell block consideration of her nomination? Senatorial courtesy plus party loyalty would have virtually required him to let her enter the confirmation process. She would have access to make her case with her colleagues at any time, a privilege that was denied to Garland.

Allowing her to move the Court would have been a major boost for the GOP, which faces declining support from women.

If Murkowski had gone to the Court, she would have left one less appointment for President Trump to pick off the list of conservatives given to him. Even if he appointed a conservative when the next vacancy occurred, Murkowski could have become the swing vote on the Court.

Obama would have produced change, as he had promised. Even in the unlikely case Murkowski rejected the appointment or was denied confirmation, Obama would have made a gesture to provide the kind of cooperation that voters have said they want.

In the 2016 election campaign, the question of the Supreme Court vacancy faded from view, becoming a non-issue. If Obama had sought to appoint a Republican woman to the Court, he may well have enhanced the chances for his own party in the presidential and congressional elections.

Lacking this move, Harold Burton remains the only Republican appointed to the Court by a Democratic president.