Friday, February 14, 2020
Washington's legacy wanes under self-proclaimed 'greatest' president
Gordon L. Weil
On Monday, we celebrate George Washington's official birthday.
Each year on this occasion, I remind readers that Washington's Birthday is the legal U.S. and Maine government holiday. In remembering all presidents, some outright failures, the day meant to honor Washington has become "Presidents' Day," a commercial holiday.
Upon taking office as president, Washington realized that he would set precedents for his successors and have a deep impact on his country's political evolution.
The presidency had been designed for Washington, after he had turned down the opportunity to be the new American king. He was committed to the republican form of government in which the people, not the monarch, would be sovereign.
This new form of government existed nowhere else in the world and consequently, the American system of government was considered an "experiment." It still is.
Washington was its first leader, though the founders were wary of a president with powers to rival a king. Washington set out to limit the exercise of his authority, often deferring to congressional policy initiatives. He did not believe the Constitution gave him unlimited power.
He created the presidential cabinet and believed in executive privilege when it came to his communications with department heads. Still, he said that privilege did not apply in cases of impeachment.
President Washington put people who shared his views on the Supreme Court. Long after the opposition party led by Thomas Jefferson took control of the federal government, Washington's Federalist appointees dominated the Court.
Washington believed in “big government.” During the Revolutionary War, he had depended on voluntary state financial and military contributions. The experience made him a supporter of a strong national government.
He agreed with constitutional drafters who argued that the United States could only become a great nation if powers were transferred from the states to the federal government. He advocated the expansion of the government he led.
He faced strong opposition from those worried that the national government would override states’ rights and individual freedoms. Washington accepted the Bill of Rights as an essential part of the deal to make a new country.
Washington worried about the growth of political parties that he witnessed. He predicted “the spirit of revenge, natural to party dissension ....” He concluded that strong partisanship could undermine the functioning of government.
In proposing an accord with the British, his former enemy, Washington subscribed to a view later formulated by a British statesman: "Nations have no permanent friends or allies, they only have permanent interests." Jefferson and his supporters disagreed, years later launching the disastrous War of 1812 against the British.
Jefferson attacked him openly. Though Washington would ultimately cut off contact with him, he refrained from any personal attacks on his fellow Virginian. Such values seem lost in today’s politics.
In a country populated mostly by white Protestants, he advocated equality for all groups. He even opposed the use of the word "tolerance," because it implied the superiority of one group over others.
Washington, a southern slave owner, agonized over slavery. He recognized that the country might break apart over the issue. If it did, a friend reported in 1795, "he had made up his mind to remove and be of the northern."
He believed that slavery would disappear as the nation's economy developed, though he was overly optimistic about its end. He recognized that the future lay in the development of wage labor in manufacturing, already beginning in the North.
Thus, 70 years before Lincoln's willingness to compromise on slavery to save the Union, Washington used his national standing to hold the country together. His will freed his slaves soon after his death, and, against Virginia law, he left money for their education.
He resigned as general, accepted no pay as president and declined to serve more than two terms. When Britain’s King George III, America’s old enemy, was told that Washington would walk away from high office, he said, “If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world.”
No American has ever enjoyed more prestige in his own lifetime than Washington. But he wore the mantel of power with modesty and showed great respect for the views of others.
Perhaps above all, Washington created the aura of the presidency. As chief of state as well as partisan head of government, he believed the president should try to represent all Americans and the national interest.
Since his time, most presidents have tried to retain that dual role. But his legacy wanes in bitter partisanship promoted by the self-proclaimed "greatest" president. Washington's successor next year may face the task of restoring the presidency itself.
Friday, February 7, 2020
Trump badly erred, but Senate lets voters decide on his removal
Gordon L. Weil
Words spoken by two Republican senators fairly summarize the
impeachment experience.
Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska stated sadly, “Given the
partisan nature of the impeachment from the very beginning and throughout, I
have come to the conclusion that there will be no fair trial in the Senate.”
Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, concluded, “Just because action
met a standard of impeachment does not mean it is the best interest of the
country to remove a president from office.”
The bottom line in the House was that impeachment was
political. By giving the impeachment
power to the House and requiring only a simple majority, the founders well
understood they were allowing for charges against the president that could be
entirely partisan.
The situation is different in the Senate. By requiring a two-thirds majority to
convict, the Constitution almost mandated the agreement of members of both
parties. This requirement raises the
level of the proceeding beyond simple partisan politics to an issue of the
greatest national importance.
The House Democrats must have known that they could not get
the Senate to convict Trump. They may
have calculated that by revealing his effort to get Ukraine to help his
campaign, they would gain support in November.
Their case suffered from being thin, based only on the withholding
from Ukraine of desperately needed military aid in an effort to get its
president to undermine Joe Biden, then Trump's most likely opponent. The Democrats avoided obstruction of justice
issues raised in the Mueller report or the emoluments clause, relating to his
profiting from the presidency.
They tried to use the stark revelations by John Bolton,
former national security advisor, of Trump's direct involvement to buttress
their case, but he came forward too late.
Republican senators have become dependent on Trump's
popularity and would not likely oppose him so close to an election. The case was not flagrant enough to detach
them from partisanship.
Trump has continually violated so many governmental norms
that it was difficult for the Democrats to show his attempt to get political
help from Ukraine was extraordinary enough to remove him from office. To some degree, both Washington and voters
had become accustomed to Trump's expansive tactics and frequent lies.
It was obvious that at least some GOP senators believe Trump
is guilty of the charge made against him.
Despite their trial support, they cite technicalities to put distance
between themselves and the president.
Whatever he may claim, it is evident that Trump was not
exonerated in the minds of a Senate majority.
Murkowski called his behavior "shameful and
wrong." Impeachment at least elevated
the issue of foreign involvement in elections.
That alone may have been worth the effort.
Republicans claimed that the Democrats had always sought to
reverse the 2016 election results and remove Trump from office. That's an almost irrelevant argument, because
an election cannot be reversed, Trump has been president for three years and
the loss of the president is covered by electing a vice president as well.
Because both the House and Senate votes were almost purely political,
the arguments for and against Trump, some bordering on the absurd, become less
important in an historical context.
Little has been done that is likely to have a lasting
constitutional effect, any more than the Clinton impeachment did. In perspective, Clinton looks purely
political and almost nobody remembers the legal arguments.
The impeachment experience has educated some voters about
the lengths of Trump's efforts to justify his 2016 upset win and use the 2020
election to confirm its validity. The
Democrats see his open willingness to accept foreign help in a U.S. election as
a major negative that can be exploited to their advantage.
Trump's gamble, which he could win, is that voters
appreciate the state of the economy, leading them to overlook his possible constitutional
violation. The GOP appears to believe
that most people won't care about his Ukraine move. It is possible many voters saw impeachment as
political and boring.
With the benefit of hindsight, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
might have chosen to hold a vote of censure of the president. Censure could have been voted by the House
without requiring additional Senate action.
But it might have sparked a similar effort in the Senate, where only a
51-vote majority would be required, not the two-thirds needed for removal.
But a House vote of censure and a Senate attempt, successful
or not, might have done as much politically for the Democrats as political impeachment-acquittal. It would have also put pressure on GOP
senators, like Susan Collins, who thought Trump had made a serious mistake,
though insufficient for removal.
Wednesday, February 5, 2020
Tax cuts yield exploding Federal debt, Maine road decay
Gordon L. Weil
“You can pay me now or you can pay me
later,” goes the saying.
When it comes to government budgets, if
it's later, it must be Washington. If it's pay now, it's Maine.
The Congressional Budget Office, which
is independent of both political parties, reported last week that the
federal government will run deficits averaging $1.3 trillion dollars
a year for the next ten years. That's not a typo – trillion dollars.
The government spends far more each
year than it receives in revenues, mostly from taxes. Of each dollar
Washington now spends, 22 cents is financed by borrowing.
Economists think governments can run up
that kind of deficit when times are bad. Government becomes the
major customer in the country and its spending helps restart economic
activity. That's what happened ten years ago.
The economy got moving again, producing
the longest sustained period of economic growth. But, instead of
bringing down deficit spending, Congress cut taxes, reducing revenue,
while jettisoning an earlier agreement to limit outlays.
Republicans have attacked Democrats for
“tax and spend” policies. The Dems supposedly kept inventing new
programs, paying for them with more taxes. The GOP say it wants to
tax less and spend less.
But what has happened is even less
economically responsible. Both parties are behind what amounts to
“cut and spend.” Taxes have been cut as spending sharply
increased. This approach is obviously aimed at pleasing voters, who
get programs they like without paying for them.
Some economists even invented a
justification for the policy. Piling on new debt was all right, so
long as the economy kept growing. That way, the growth of the
national debt could remain about the same share of the total economy
over time.
The theory simply does not work,
because the growth of the economy and of government spending are not
as directly linked as expected.
The national debt is growing faster
than the economy. By 2030, the Congressional Budget Office forecasts
national debt will be at 98 percent of the total economy that year.
In other words, it would take just about all of the national output
to pay off the debt.
This is the ultimate “pay me later”
approach. Eventually, the U.S. will have to deal with debt service
payments that could swallow the underfunded federal budget. The only
solution will be massive tax increases. The people who will pay the
sharply higher taxes will include many who did not benefit from the
spending spree.
In effect, it will amount to “you can
pay me now or your children can pay me later.” That's current
American budget policy.
In Maine, however, people pay now. Like
almost all other states, it cannot run annual deficits, so the impact
of borrowing must be covered by real revenues. If there are tax
cuts, there will be borrowing cuts as well.
Gov. Paul LePage liked tax cuts,
ensuring that insufficient revenue was raised to meet the cost of
maintaining the state's roads and bridges. State funding for roads
was essential for tapping matching federal funds.
His solution was to boost borrowing,
but legislators, especially his fellow Republicans dislike increasing
the state debt. Maine's public debt, equaling 12.66 per cent of the
state's annual economy, is lower than in most other states.
LePage went so far as to oppose any
increase in the 18 cents per gallon gas tax. In effect for a quarter
of a century, it has not kept pace with the increasing costs of
maintaining the roads.
The result is a network of roads and
bridges that falls far below the standard of safety and comfort that
Mainers should expect. Dangerous conditions may occur. But the best
DOT can do is spread coating on many roads rather than maintaining
them. Municipalities are told if they want better roads, they need
to come up with some of the money.
LePage cut taxes. New bonding was slow
and inadequate. With the prohibition of deficits, people get to pay
now, not later. They pay daily in the form of badly maintained roads.
Borrowing, with its multi-year payoff,
makes sense for roads and bridges that are used not only by the
current population but well into the future. Later taxpayers get to
use what they are funding.
But borrowing alone cannot be the
solution. Its fate, subject to voter approval almost yearly, makes
it difficult for DOT to have a long-term plan. Roads are an
essential function of government, making reliable tax funding a
reasonable way of supporting that function.
In the end, the issue of the public
debt, either at the federal or state level, is a matter of taxes. If
people oppose taxes now, they either pay the cost now in lost
services or later when a higher tax bill must be paid.
Friday, January 31, 2020
Older presidential candidates should make V.P. choices now
Gordon L. Weil
The caucuses and primaries are on the way. Votes now matter more than debate ratings.
The seriousness of the moment became more evident when the New York Times announced its endorsements for the Democratic nomination. It supports two candidates, both senators, Amy Klobuchar and Elizabeth Warren.
Its endorsement editorial is unusually frank about what it sees as one drawback of a couple of others.
On Bernie Sanders: "Mr. Sanders would be 79 when he assumed office, and after an October heart attack, his health is a serious concern."
On Joe Biden: "Mr. Biden is 77. It is time for him to pass the torch to a new generation of political leaders."
The Times editorial covers only Democrats, and did not mention that Donald Trump is 73.
The oldest U.S. president at the end of his term was Ronald Reagan, who was almost 78. Sanders and Biden are now both older than Reagan when he left the White House.
Older people remain in reasonably good health well into old age. But aging takes a toll, reducing and changing some abilities and raising the prospect of the onset of serious illness.
Many people seek to avoid any hint of age discrimination, so they choose to ignore the possible impact of aging on a candidate's ability to carry out the heavy duties of president and commander-in-chief.
But, just as a voter might conclude that a candidate was too young to have gained enough experience to take on the presidency, a voter might take a candidate's advanced age into account. The relationship between age and health makes that a reasonable concern.
Presidents Woodrow Wilson and Reagan were considered to have lost some of their abilities due to declining health by the end of their terms in office. Four other presidents died in office for health-related reasons. These were six of the 44 people who served as president, a high enough percentage to cause people to take age into account.
It has become traditional for a major party's presidential nominee to pick a running mate only after having locked up the nomination. The assumption may be that the nominee does not want the vice presidential choice to raise any questions about the nominee's judgment before it is too late to reverse the decision.
Both Democratic Sen. George McGovern and Republican Sen. John McCain, whose choices for running mate caused them almost immediate complications, might have benefited from having made their selections well before the national conventions.
Amid all the campaign promises, the nominee's decision on a running mate is possibly the only binding, public action affecting the presidency they can make during a campaign. That decision may say more about the person than all of the promises, many of which will be impossible to keep.
As I wrote several months ago, those seeking a party's nomination should announce their running mates well in advance.
The media should ask Sanders and Biden about their running mates before people start voting in the caucuses and primaries. If voters had some reassurance that they knew who might be president if a problem arose, it could make them more comfortable voting for an older candidate.
That probably won't happen because the media is so accustomed to waiting until just before the conventions. If Sanders or Biden did not wait to be asked and took the initiative, it could attract favorable attention.
Of course, they may worry that naming a running mate might call attention to their age. Both Democrats are vigorous, so they probably don't want voters to focus on their many decades.
Without the early selection of a running mate, Sanders might improve the chances for Warren. Given the similarity of their views, liberal voters may conclude that it is safer to support Warren. Never has catching a bad cold been more of a threat to the success of leading candidate.
As for Trump, voters and the media assume he will continue with Mike Pence as his running mate. In 2016, Pence served his purpose in reassuring voters of the ticket's political experience. Trump is certainly capable of coming up with a new name even as late as the GOP Convention in August.
A late selection by Trump would get more media attention than sticking with Pence. The age insurance provided by the Vice President might not be lost, though Trump may think he doesn't need it.
In the end, both the candidates and the voters would benefit by an announcement now of a running mate at least by the three oldest candidates – Sanders, Biden and Trump.
Wednesday, January 29, 2020
Governor makes rare move in executive-legislative battles
Gordon L. Weil
The tug of war between the executive
and legislative branches keeps taking new turns.
In theory, the legislative branch is
supposed to set policy through passing laws. Legislators can submit
proposals for consideration and many of their bills are adopted. The
executive branch is assigned the task of carrying out the laws.
In fact, the executive has become the
principal source of legislative proposals. Presidents and governors
serve up a package of proposals to legislatures every year or two.
Lawmakers have become dependent on these bills and expect to focus
much of their effort on reacting to them.
Once laws are passed and given the
complexity of issues, the executive often is assigned responsibility
of adopting detailed rules to apply broad legislation. Rulemaking
has become a major form of legislating
The result has been that the
development of much of new legislation has passed from the
legislative branch to the executive. With that shift has gone much of
the power of Congress.
This transfer of legislative power may
explain why President Trump apparently has seen Congress as his board
of directors, whose job is to review and approve his proposals for
U.S.A., Inc. Surely, Congress is not a branch of government with
equal or greater weight than the executive, in his view.
At the state level, some have developed
“strong” governor systems and others “weak” governor systems.
The decision is made by the state constitution, the legislative body
or by custom over the years.
In Wisconsin, for example, the
incumbent Republican governor lost in an upset to a Democrat. Before
he left office, the GOP legislature adopted and he signed new laws
drastically reducing the governor's powers. In effect, they turned a
strong governor position into a weak one as a way of undermining the
winner..
The new governor challenged some of
those laws in court and lost. The complete reversal of the historic
relationship set back the principle of checks and balances.
An unusual twist on the
governor-legislature relationship has just occurred in Maine.
In her State of the State speech last
week, Gov. Mills openly worried that foreign corporations were
operating electric utilities to put their profits before consumers'
interests. She expressed concern that utility regulation might not
be doing enough to ensure that “utilities are accountable and
answerable to the people of Maine.”
She said to the Legislature, “I ask
your guidance and your help in making sure that these foreign
corporations...are answerable to Maine, not Spain or some other
foreign country.” She was referring to the foreign owners of CMP
(Spain) and Emera Maine (Canada).
An almost immediate reaction from some
in the media was that she had failed to provide a proposal to the
Legislature. Action would have to await more specifics from her.
Here was the odd situation of the
governor asking the Legislature for “guidance,” just as
constitutions expect, and finding herself faced with a reaction that
she should have guided the lawmakers.
There is a menu of options from which
policy makers might choose, and the governor seems to be open to
considering a choice by the Legislature.
It could adopt the bill proposed by
Rep. Seth Berry, which calls for a non-profit utility, owned by its
customers, to buy out the two foreign corporations. That would
exactly meet her requirements.
It could send Berry's bill to a
referendum this year to let the people decide to acquire the system
from the two utilities.
It could instruct the Public Utilities
Commission to deny any profit whatsoever to investors in those
utilities if their management failed to provide reliability at a
specified standard and subject to a cap on rates set by law.
Or, it could tell the governor that she
exaggerates the problem, and nothing needs to be done.
Her request opens the door to a
bipartisan answer, if the two parties can agree. Certainly, it
implies they ought to try.
If the Legislature in unable to respond
favorably and cannot give the governor the guidance she requests, she
must turn the tables and guide the lawmaking. With a Democratic
majority in both houses at least until the end of the year, she would
have an incentive to take clear action with the support of her party.
With her strong statement of concern
about the utilities, Mills has set government on this path. She has
put herself in the position that she cannot walk away from the issue.
The Legislature has been invited to address it through an effort
between legislative and executive branches and between Democrats and
Republicans.
This situation goes beyond the future
of electric utilities in Maine. It marks an unusual opportunity for
the effective operation of American government as it was intended.
Friday, January 24, 2020
Dems want to 'pack' Supreme Court; here's a better idea
Gordon L. Weil
At least five of the Democratic presidential candidates, including Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar, worry a Democratic president would face a hostile Supreme Court and want to add more justices to the Court.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has used his GOP caucus to block judicial nominations by President Obama and open the floodgates for President Trump's conservative choices for lifetime appointments.
The GOP majority sets the Senate rules and has used them to deny Obama's nominations. Then, the GOP approved almost all Trump nominees without any serious review.
Trump likes to flaunt his claimed presidential superiority over Obama, saying his predecessor lacked the skill to get his nominees confirmed, while Trump mastered the process. He ignores McConnell's role.
Republicans want to continue conservative control even if the GOP loses control of Congress and the presidency. This is not new. The Federalists, the party of George Washington, dominated the Supreme Court for decades after that party permanently lost power.
Democrats in power could face an avalanche of lawsuits from opponents against the laws they adopted. The conservatives would hope for a like-minded Supreme Court majority to overturn the new laws.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt faced that situation in the 1930s. Only his threat to add more justices to the Court and his stunning 1936 victory caused a Court reversal, remembered by the saying "a switch in time saves nine."
Democratic candidates now advocate enlarging the Court, if and when the Democrats control the federal government. In that way, the Democrats could frustrate the McConnell strategy by overwhelming the conservative justices by an influx of more liberal justices.
The size of the Supreme Court is set by Congress, so the size of the Court might readily be changed. This has been done. For example, during the 1860s, the size of Court changed from nine to ten and then down to seven before returning to nine. The changes were political.
Roosevelt's so-called "Court packing" plan was not popular, even with Democrats. It seemed to drag a supposedly neutral court into the politics of the day. Would it be different today?
The Court back then was obviously opposed to Roosevelt's New Deal. But many saw the split as a philosophical difference, not partisan warfare.
But since then, the Court literally selected a Republican president in 2000. One justice later admitted her partisanship in joining in the 5-4 majority. Justices are appointed from a list provided by a conservative organization that has never supported a Democrat. They are expected to reverse Democratic-passed laws.
Some Democrats, including Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders, oppose adding justices. They may worry about launching an ever-escalating number of appointments used to achieve partisan advantage.
If there's a sense something short of "packing" is needed, there is a viable alternative. Congress and the president could agree to the appointment of "temporary" justices. Even though federal judges are appointed for life, it's possible.
That has been done more than once, the last in 2013, when a law created 17 temporary federal judges. These are lifetime appointments, added to the existing, "permanent" judges on district or appeals courts. When a vacancy occurs among the permanent judges, no new appointment is made and the "temporary" judge fills the slot.
Using this approach, the Democrats could increase the size of the Supreme Court temporarily. They could ensure the conservative and partisan packing done by McConnell would be replaced by a process allowing for more balance or even a tilt to the liberal side.
Suppose Obama had proposed to fill the last vacancy with Republican favorite Brett Kavanaugh in the permanent slot and Merrick Garland, his choice who was completely blocked by McConnell, to a temporary position. McConnell might have turned the proposal down, but it would have highlighted the issue.
Such a move by Obama would also have set the stage for the president who succeeds Trump. And the possibility alone could influence Republican senators even before then.
The proposal could be tied to the judicial workload, one of the driving forces behind the "temporary" judges. The nine justices now only hand down about 70 decisions a year, far fewer than in the past. More justices could allow it to avoid leaving major national decisions to lower courts and to produce faster results.
The Democratic candidates should focus more on the Supreme Court. Among the decisions made by any president, appointments to the Court may have the longest-lasting effect.
"Temporary" justices, nothing new in U.S. history, could be the way to divert the Court from its current course toward becoming a partisan legislative body.
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