Every
so often, the political news gets so rich in misinformation or
distorted facts, that it becomes time to expose some myths.
Myth 1: President Trump deserves our respect, because he was
elected president.
In
fact, it’s the presidency that merits our respect. The U.S. is
unusual in combining the head of state, the person representing the
entire country, with the head of government, the leader of a
political party. For example, in the United Kingdom, the queen is
the head of state and the prime minister is the head of government.
As
for Trump or any president, he or she must earn our respect. But we
also respect the presidency. The officeholder has the responsibility
of conducting the office to maintain that respect. The American
people can then easily rally to support a unifying president in time
of crisis.
If
the president’s conduct is disrespectful of the office by ignoring
his or her responsibility as chief of state, our unusual American
approach to government is threatened.
Myth 2: The American president runs the government.
Unlike a
corporation run by a single person, who may give orders to
subordinates and fire them at will, government agencies have powers
independent of management by the president.
To
protect the administration of justice from political manipulation,
laws have been passed by Congress and signed by presidents that
shield many Justice Department functions from political control.
Presidents
propose laws and carry out policies consistent with the law. They
also appoint people to head government agencies. By their broad
policies and appointments, they set the course of government and must
take responsibility for it, but they cannot run the agencies or
instruct agency heads on carrying out their jobs.
For
one thing, government, even if it were trimmed down, would be too
large to manage centrally. A president may order military action,
but he or she will not designate the specific unit assigned to the
job. That’s up to the Defense Department.
President
Trump appears to have thought he could control Attorney General Jeff
Session’s decision to take himself out of Russian election
tampering investigations. He was reportedly angry when Sessions did
just that. But, in fact, he has no control over such a decision.
In
the end, if there is a real conflict, the subordinate may have to
leave office. But too many firings or heated resignations could
undermine the president’s authority in other matters. Richard
Nixon learned that in the Watergate scandal.
Myth
3: Oaths matter.
In his confirmation hearing, Sessions swore he
would tell “the truth, whole truth, and nothing but the truth.”
The term “the whole truth” ought to mean he left nothing out.
But
in denying he had talked with Russians during the presidential
campaign, he omitted two meetings with the Russian ambassador.
Later, he said those meetings had nothing to do with the campaign but
only with his job as senator. Fair enough, if true, but still his
answer was not “the whole truth.”
He
might have avoided subsequent controversy if instead of telling “the
truth,” he had revealed “the whole truth.” As a lawyer, he
should have known better.
Myth
4: The majority seeks bipartisanship.
President Trump received much
credit for the restrained tone of his first speech to Congress. At
times, he called for the two parties to work together. But his
dismissive hand gestures toward the Democrats belied his words,
indicating they simply ought to fall in line.
Both
parties talk about a willingness to come up with a bipartisan
approach. But the majority invariably means the minority should cave
in and agree with it and, surely enough, we’d have a bipartisan
approach.
If
we ever see them sit down and negotiate with each side making
concessions, that will be bipartisanship.
For
Maine Gov. LePage there’s no spirit of compromise. He blames any
lack of agreement on the “faulty ideology” of “liberals,”
meaning Democrats. Fortunately, legislators of both parties still
know how to compromise.
Myth
5: The people are sovereign.
Under our system, all political power
flows from the people. Every bill passed by the Maine Legislature
begins with the words, “Be it enacted by the People of the State of
Maine.”
Maine
voters, like people in 22 other states, can pass laws on their own or
veto laws passed by the Legislature. The laws they pass are
unquestionably adopted by the sovereign people. But LePage and some
legislators tinker with the just-passed minimum wage law, claiming
they know better than the sovereign “People of the State of Maine.”