Washington Examiner  home delivery | classifieds | autos | jobs | real estate | home listings | advertise
   
Passport to the Podium
View today's E-Dition

Sunday, August 1, 2010 | Last Update 4:55 EDT
click for forecast
Home News Politics Local Opinion Economy Sports Lifestyle Classified Cars Homes Rentals Remodel
Nation World Beltway Confidential Yeas & Nays Opinion Zone Capital Land Weather Mobile Site RSS Feeds Contact
Nation World Science Education Video Technology
Beltway Confidential Yeas & Nays White House Congress Michael Barone Byron York Chris Stirewalt
Capital Land DC Virginia Maryland Local Opinion Zone Crime Transportation People Education Real Estate
Editorials Beltway Confidential OpinionZone Nate Beeler Columnists Mark Tapscott Dave Freddoso Mark Hemingway
Your Money Real Estate Technology K-Street
Cheers & Jeers Redskins/NFL Wizards/NBA Caps/NHL Nationals/MLB United/MLS Colleges Golf
Yeas & Nays Art Movies Television Health Food Music Scoop Theater Wheels Video Events Calendar
Jobs Buy Stuff Post Free Ad Personals Events
Automotive News New Used Certified Pre-Owned
Real Estate News Rent a Home Buy a Home Home Makeover

Quin Hillyer
[Print]  [Email]         Share    

Quin-Essential Cases: Callous Congress just doesn't care

By: Quin Hillyer
Associate Editorial Page Editor
February 16, 2009

Most Members of Congress don’t care how individual provisions in the bills they pass actually affect individual citizens. They care about how the media portrays them, and about getting credit for items that affect their particular constituencies.

And they care about how their favored lobbyists and campaign donors feel, and about how various interest groups will respond.
But they don’t really care about voiceless individual citizens.

If they did, they would make sure their staffs actually have time to analyze legislation to ward off any jokers in the deck. And they would ensure the public has time to weigh in before Members vote.

But they don’t. Instead, once the backroom deals are made, Members rush to vote so they aren’t forced to know, much less defend, what’s in the bills. That was the method used to pass the gargantuan $787 billion economic “stimulus” package that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO)  says will actually depress long-term economic growth.

The tactics used to strong-arm the stimulus through were par for the course. Republican and Democratic majorities alike have used those tactics repeatedly, like Soviet commissars, to pass controversial bills.

That way, they don’t have to explain, for instance, why they are making innocent third parties subject to state-sponsored jackpot lawsuits over unintentional, technical violations of privacy regulations.

Or why they are, without any debate on the merits, creating a “Comparative Effectiveness” health regulation panel designed to let bureaucrats tell doctors what medicines they can prescribe.

Maybe that’s a good idea, maybe not. But it should be considered on its own, not hidden in an $787 billion monstrosity.

Similarly, how many Americans know that this stimulus bill completely gutted the single most successful, most popular policy change of the past 40 years, the 1996 welfare reform that worked superbly to cut welfare rolls and move people to jobs or school while increasing payments for the truly needy?

Yes, gutted. Completely reversed the rules changes that made welfare reform a “reform.”

Senators who voted for the 1996 bill should answer three simple questions. First, did welfare reform work to help people improve their lives? Second, if that answer was “yes,” then why did they vote to undo that reform?

Third, why do they think it appropriate to undermine that reform without a public debate on that subject alone, rather than as a provision shrouded by a much larger bill?

Here are the senators who voted for welfare reform in 1996 and for the stimulus package last week that ruins welfare reform (Republicans italicized): Max Baucus (Montana), Robert Byrd and Jay Rockefeller (W. Virginia), Kent Conrad and Byron Dorgan (N. Dakota), Russ Feingold and Herb Kohl (Wisconsin), Tom Harkin (Iowa), John Kerry (Massachusetts), Carl Levin (Michigan), Joe Lieberman (Connecticut), Barbara Mikulski (Maryland), Harry Reid (Nevada), Olympia Snowe (Maine), Arlen Specter (Pennsylvania) and Ron Wyden (Oregon).

Oh, and count now-Vice President Joe Biden of Delaware in that number as well.

Meanwhile, because of a bill Congress passed last year that took effect last Tuesday, bookstores all over the country have begun throwing out or destroying children’s books published before 1985. Why? Because some of the bindings or illustrations may contain trace amounts of lead.

Since when did Congress support book burning?

News accounts also confirmed that a number of thrift shops were literally closing their doors because of that same law’s overbroad and overly punitive provisions. These are people losing their livelihoods because of what Congress did.

South Carolina’s Republican Sen. Jim DeMint, to his credit, pays attention. He offered an amendment to the stimulus bill that would have delayed the new anti-lead law for six months so its unintended consequences could be fixed.

His amendment went nowhere. The majority couldn’t be bothered with undoing the damage. They were too busy adding $8 billion for Sen. Harry Reid’s pet project of a rapid train from Las Vegas to Disneyland.

How many real people will actually use such a train is anybody’s guess. Who knows, maybe a dozen or two. You know: people who can no longer buy the old, illustrated Mickey Mouse books that have been destroyed because of the anti-lead law, and who therefore decide to leave the slot machines to see Mickey in person.

Quin Hillyer is associated editorial page editor of The Washington Examiner.

More from Quin Hillyer

  • Life without lawyers?
  • Does the U.S. have too many rules, too many ‘rights’?
  • ‘Bureaucracy Can’t Teach’: Why American schools often fail
  • Money talks: Lawyers’ cash equals legislative power
  • Emanuel’s story line is fishy

Topics

Congress , Democrats , Republicans , Pork Barrel , Economic Stimulus , Welfare Reform , Vice-President Joe Biden , President Barack Obama , Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid , House Speaker Nancy Pelosi , Sen. Jim DeMint , The Washington Examiner



Examiner Opinion Zone
How do bureaucracies work?

One respectable answer is that they don't. Many an op-ed has been written to elaborate the point, but this won't be one of them. Such answer is neither useful nor reassuring...

—Jason Kuznicki

Communist Monarchies

Outside of the Arabian Peninsula, where in the world do you think absolute monarchies still exist? A strong clue is given in this Daily Telegraph story about the fate of the...

—P.J. Gladnick

A different path to regime change in Iran

“The republic has no need of science or of chemistry.” With these words, a French tribunal confirmed its 1794 sentence of death on Antoine Lavoisier, the great...

—Neil Hrab

More Examiner Opinion Zone posts...

To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


Most Popular Headlines
  1. Chris Matthews' daughter tackles the deficit
  2. WaPo buries Dem fundraiser’s fraud, highlights GOP fundraising scandal
  3. To historians, Obama pledged to ’speak less often’ in future
  4. It’s not just Rangel — Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., to be tried on ethics charges
  5. Hapless SEC can now hide its secrets
  6. Obama unemployment news conference featured Va. woman convicted of drug fraud
  7. NYT: ‘No more disputing’ economic recovery has slowed down, jobs outlook ‘discouraging’
  8. Growing ‘independent’ nature of electorate is helping GOP
  9. Top GOP campaign donors charged with $550 million fraud
  10. Obama’s auto policy: All in the Democratic family





 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 200 words. Comments that advocate violence, racism, or libel as well as comments written in ALL CAPS are not permitted.


blog comments powered by Disqus

RSS | Twitter | Facebook | Intern | Video | Maps | Mobile | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Rack Locations | Advertise