Some Random Political Quick Hits

Too tired to offer up any real substantive content this morning.  So, instead, you get something akin to my own cynical version of Political Cornflakes. :)

John Swallow’s getting away with it.

Wake up Utah GOP.  This guy’s not leaving of his own accord.  You wait for the official results of investigations at your peril.  I hope you’re all still quietly working behind the scenes and haven’t just decided to let the guy finish out his term and lose at convention.  Because that would just be sad.

Caucus system and Mike Lee.

Paul Rolly put out an article today on how Mike Lee is the compelling reason to change Utah’s candidate nominating system.  I’m far from a raving fan of either one.  As to my views on the caucus system, just ask Dan Burton at PubliusOnline — we’ve gone the rounds on this one more than once.  Mike Lee?  Well, he’s been in office almost 3 years now, and what’s he done?  Come on, think of something . . . I dare you.

I’d like to replace Mike Lee.  And I’d like to change the caucus system.  But it’s never a good idea to change a system in response to an electoral result.  In 2012, Tea Partiers learned, much to their distress, that they were not the only ones with power to game the caucus system.  Whatever changes we make to the ways candidates are chosen in Utah should be about voter participation and engagement, not about results.

Tired of the crazy legislature meme.

Our legislature is conservative.  Really conservative.  But count me as one who’s getting tired of hearing that they’re all “bat-s***” crazy.  In fact, if you put aside the constitutional carry bill (HB76, or whatever the number was), this year’s legislature was pretty darn moderate . . . especially by recent standards.  Over and over I hear Utah’s liberals trotting out example after example of legislation that went nowhere as proof of how nutso our representatives are.  Sorry, I just don’t see it right now.  I’ve been as willing as anyone to call out what I see as silly in our elected representatives.  And I haven’t seen much of it lately.  While there’s more I’d like to see them do, of course, our current legislators are, on the whole, doing a fine job.

Obamacare.

Well, we’re coming down to it now.  Or are we?  Will it be fully implemented in 2014?  And what will it do?  Aside from turning the USA into Russia/fulfilling the promises of liberty and justice for all nobody really seems to know.  Though we are all positive that Obamacare will “eliminate pre-existing conditions” . . . which is political-speak for “prevent insurance companies from denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions.”

I think there will be a lot of buyers remorse on Obamacare, which, from what we can tell, seems to be terribly designed and shabbily implemented.  Unfortunately, the GOP has yet to articulate an alternative vision, so it appears we’ll twist in the wind for a time before beginning the debate over full national health.  Ughh.

At least the Obamacare preparation consultants will have their moment in the sun prolonged . . . .

Supreme Court.

There’s lots of cool, important stuff going on up there right now.  And very little intelligent commentary about it.  More to come.  Whether what comes is intelligent or not, well, that’s obviously up to you to decide.

John Roberts and Election 2012

Fiscal cliff . . . blah, blah, blah . . . dysfunctional government . . . blah, blah, blah.

I know it’s important.

But I just can’t bring myself to talk about it, other than to say that the posturing is idiotic and that it is more obvious than ever that everyone who is “serious” about solving [INSERT PET CRISIS HERE] is apparently only serious about doing it on their own terms, which is an approach that always works well.

Blah, blah, blah . . .

Oops, even I slipped into it there for a second — sorry!  You don’t really want to here any more about that, right?

OK . . . how about I talk about Chief Justice John Roberts instead?

I am, after all, a lawyer.  Sigh . . . .

I saw the following headline this morning that got me thinking:  John Roberts is the Person of the Year.

If the approaching new year has you looking about for “most influential” types, then look no further than the Chief Justice, a lawyer’s lawyer, who, intentionally or unintentionally, almost certainly had more influence on Election 2012 then all the millions of dollars in hounds-of-hell SuperPACs he unleashed on the unwitting public via Citizens United (which, interestingly, I haven’t heard a peep about since early November . . .).

While people were awaiting the Court’s decision on Obamacare, both sides were a bit ambivalent on the political consequences.  After all, if conservatives lost at the Supreme Court, they could run against both an unpopular law and activist judges.  As for President Obama, if he lost he could run against both the wealthy and an antiquated, out-of-touch, white male judiciary (+ Clarence Thomas).

In fact, the best political outcome for both sides was probably a loss, right?  Right??!!  Just look at the expanded list of villains!!

Ha ha.

All that ambivalence was just a bunch of posturing.

The reality was that both sides really wanted an Obamacare win.  And President Obama really needed an Obamacare win.

If you can remember all the way back to late June this year, you’ll remember that it wasn’t a great time for the President.  The economy wasn’t doing well . . . for the fourth summer in a row . . . and there were few signs of improvement.  There was the debt ceiling debacle.  His image as a pragmatic compromiser was being, well, compromised.  His list of accomplishments — despressingly short already given (probably unfair, but largely self-inflicted) expectations — was posed to grow even shorter.  Although liberals were still sanguine about the election, Republicans were licking their chops, sure that the President’s signature domestic policy accomplishment was about to be dismantled by the Supreme Court.  ”Just what has he done the last four years?,” they would say.  ”Passed an ineffective stimulus bill and an unconstitutional healthcare law?”  ”Saved Solyndra and wasted all his time trying — unsuccessfully, thanks to us — to subvert the Constitution by undermining the quality of your healthcare?”

And what would President Obama’s response have been?  ”Well, when it comes to jobs, we’re *almost* back to where we started?”  ”Blame it all on the Wall Street, Congressional Republicans, and the Supreme Court?”  Ouch.  Though we might all have been saved some of the rhetoric about birth control . . . or not.

Would the election have turned out differently?  I don’t pretend to know.  But even if the result was the same, the election surely would have been different.  And I think there is a decent chance that things would have turned out differently.

Maybe that’s all wishful thinking. :)

But I struggle to think of anyone else as politically influential in 2012 than our Chief Justice.

In his own version of the Switch in Time that Saved Nine, John Roberts fundamentally changed the anticipated direction of the electoral conversation and, I think, had more influence on Election 2012 than anyone else.

I don’t think John Roberts is an activist judge (if that phrase has any meaning at all).  I don’t think he aspires to be a political power player.  I think he’s pretty much the ultimate lawyer’s lawyer.

In fact, I’ve been pretty open about the fact that I think our Chief Justice’s Obamacare decision was motivated primarily by a desire to keep the Supreme Court out of politics rather than to inject it into the middle of another Presidential election — whether you think that’s a legitimate judicial consideration or not.

But that’s the long-game, and sometimes you have to take some short term hits to get where you ultimately want to be.

So, whether he wanted it or not, John Roberts has my vote for most politically influential of 2012.

Now that he’s no longer kept in suspense, he can get back to scheming over how to incense half the country over affirmative action.

And with that, I return you to the fiscal cliff . . . .

Judicial Retention: Utah’s Forgotten Elections

Folks, for those of you (like me) who haven’t yet voted, either because you want to stick it out to the bitter end or you just like going to the polls on election day, let me raise an important issue that gets almost no publicity — judicial retention.

In Utah, our judges are appointed to their positions.  But to remain in their positions, they must be re-elected in periodic, unopposed retention elections.

It’s in the Utah Constitution:

Article VIII, Section 9.   [Judicial retention elections.]
Each appointee to a court of record shall be subject to an unopposed retention election at the first general election held more than three years after appointment. Following initial voter approval, each Supreme Court justice every tenth year, and each judge of other courts of record every sixth year, shall be subject to an unopposed retention election at the corresponding general election. Judicial retention elections shall be held on a nonpartisan ballot in a manner provided by statute. If geographic divisions are provided for any court of record, the judges of those courts shall stand for retention election only in the geographic division to which they are selected.

If you’ve voted before, you’ve probably seen the questions on the ballot: “Should Judge X be retained?”  At which point you probably thought to yourself something like, “Crap, I’ve never even heard of Judge X and there’s not even a party affiliation for me to go by,” and then either: “Throw them all out,” or, “I’ll just vote yes.”

I offer it as my personal opinion that retention elections are a bad idea.  I much prefer the federal model of life tenure subject to impeachment.  By and large the judges that we have in our state do a fine job.  There are some that are exceptional.  But regardless of whether a judge is exceptional, or less than so, it is not helpful to a judge’s work to be concerned about retention when making rulings.  Judges have it hard enough, and no judge should be thrown out just for getting a ruling wrong, or, heaven forbid, getting an unpopular ruling right.  Remember, every decision that a judge makes alienates someone, or some large, influential public interest group.  Often, decisions alienate everyone involved.  And retention elections invite punishment for a judge just doing the job we sent him or her to do.  A judge who abuses his or her office is more likely to be punished via impeachment than through a retention election.  The retention mechanism is unnecessary and invites problems.

To those who would say “throw them all out, every time,” I really don’t know what to say to you.  If you believe that the best thing for Utah’s judicial system is the regular destruction of institutional memory and indiscriminate punishment for public service . . . well, we probably just don’t have much to say to each other.

Commentary and unsolicited opinion aside, we have these elections in Utah and their continuation is mandated by our Constitution.  So, we should at least try to do this all intelligently, right?

In an effort to try and provide voters some basis for casting their retention votes, Utah has created a Judicial Performance Evaluation Commission, which “rates” judges on the basis of interview questionnaires filled out by attorneys and litigants.  You can access the information at http://judges.utah.gov.

Take some time to read through it before heading out to vote.

On Corporate Personhood, Balanced Budgets, and Constitutional Amendments

In the 220+ years since it was drafted and ratified, the United States Constitution has been amended 27 times.  The first 10 amendments were actually adopted prior to Vermont’s ratification of the Constitution itself (Vermont was the last of the 13 colonies to ratify), as part of a strategic concession by Federalists to secure ratification.  Two of the remaining 17 amendments cancel each other out, as the 21st Amendment was adopted specifically to repeal the nationwide prohibition of alcohol established by the 18th.  Another 3 amendments — the 13th, 14th, and 15th — are direct results of the Union victory in the Civil War, while the 16th (authorizing a national income tax) and the 26th (lowering the voting age to 18) are quite clearly the indirect results of two other wars — World War I and the Vietnam War, respectively.  Finally, the 27th Amendment, ratified in 1992, was actually proposed in 1789 and is therefore best viewed as part of the initial pre-1804 amendments.

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Foreign Policy and Election 2012

One thing that becomes clear when reading the Constitution and the minutes from the Constitutional Convention is that our Founding Fathers didn’t really know what to make of the American President.

Article II generally speaks in vague terms about the President, unless it’s referring to primarily procedural matters outlining the method of election, length of term, oath of office, criteria for impeachment, and obligation to provide Congress information regarding the state of the union.

Even by the standards of our intentionally sparse Constitution, there’s not much to go on when it comes to the President’s substantive authority.  Indeed, in comparison, the authority of Congress is spelled out in great detail.  The President?  He has “the executive Power,” is the Commander in Chief, can grant pardons, make treaties, appoint ambassadors, and must faithfully execute the law.

But as vague as Article II is, it makes one thing clear: the President has a substantial role to play when it comes to the foreign affairs of the United States.  Indeed, one of the primary embarassments of the Articles of Confederation was the utter inability of the United States to prosecute a coherent foreign policy.  Everything that Congress did (or tried to do) was subject to the whims of individual states, and, as a result, the “United States” (when they could negotiate treaties) weren’t able to fulfill their obligations.

And so the Founders, with all their intentional vagueness about the President made clear that he would *the guy* (even if not the sole guy) when it came to foreign affairs.

And the area when individual Presidents have most clearly impacted the history and development of the United States (things domestically are usually much more fuzzy when it comes to attributing responsibility) is in foreign policy.

But Presidential elections don’t often turn on questions of foreign policy, even if they should.

And this election doesn’t appear to be an exception to the rule.  Despite all the obfuscation and intentional vagueness, the domestic policy positions of President Obama and Mitt Romney are relatively well-defined.

Not so when it comes to foreign affairs.

With President Obama, we know a few things: (1) he killed Osama bin Laden, (2) he pulled American forces out of Iraq, (3) he put more troops in Afghanistan, (4) he favors greater diplomatic engagement, (5) his administration panicked about the recent terrorist attack in Libiya and latched onto a storyline that just wasn’t credible, (6) the whole thing about the NDAA, and (7) he will pull American forces out of Afghanistan by 2014.  We don’t know much about what he’d do when push comes to shove with a nuclear Iran.

But with Mitt Romney we know almost nothing.  And, while this is a relatively common complaint from Democrats when it comes all aspects of the Romney/Ryan ticket, the vagueness about foreign policy is the only vagueness concerns me a bit.  When it comes to the economy, when it comes to healthcare reform, when it comes to balancing budgets and bipartisanship, Mitt Romney has a strong record of accomplishment.

But when it comes to foreign affairs, he stands where President Obama did four years ago (minus one anti-Iraq War vote — which was all that candidate Obama had to recommend him).

Romney’s tried to differentiate himself from the President when it comes to military spending, on free trade, talking tough with China, on Israel, and on the Benghazi debacle.  And in advance of the upcoming foreign policy debate, he gave a speech that didn’t say much, striking a different tone instead of drawing many significant substantive contrasts.

My opinion is that the reason we haven’t heard much about the details of a Romney/Ryan foreign policy is because it would likely mimic much of what President Obama has done and has promised to do.  Foreign policy, like everything else, suffers in an intensely political climate (witness both campaigns’ dismal responses to Benghazi:  Mitt with a press conference to condemn the President, with the President, in a moment of political panic, starts peddling an unbelievable story and then persists in the error long after it’s utterly discredited), and I think Romney’s not saying much because the President has done a much better job when it comes to foreign affairs than he has to the United States’ domestic challenges.  And, frankly, it’s difficult to give details about complex international issues when the precise contours are still developing.

But still, the area where the President can most clearly affect the immediate direction of the United States is foreign policy, and I’d like to see both candidates pressed and provide some details (to the extent they can).  It’s probably too much to expect them in the upcoming debates, but anytime prior to November 6 is good enough for me.

Some Follow-up Thoughts on the Significance of the Tenth Amendment and National Government

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* This post is a follow-up to a brief post on the Tenth Amendment from last summer.

In the months between Abraham Lincoln’s election and the start of the Civil War on April 12, 1861, Americans became embroiled in something of a philosophical conversation about their relationship to their own national government.  Was the American Union nothing more than a collection of states — a “club,” so to speak, that states voluntarily joined and could leave at any time and for any reason?  Or was it something more — a creation of the people designed to perpetuate intact despite the desires of the people of any one state?

Abraham Lincoln addressed this issue in his First Inaugural Address as follows:

It is seventy-two years since the first inauguration of a President under our National Constitution. During that period fifteen different and greatly distinguished citizens have in succession administered the executive branch of the Government. They have conducted it through many perils, and generally with great success. Yet, with all this scope of precedent, I now enter upon the same task for the brief constitutional term of four years under great and peculiar difficulty. A disruption of the Federal Union, heretofore only menaced, is now formidably attempted.

I hold that in contemplation of universal law and of the Constitution the Union of these States is perpetual. Perpetuity is implied, if not expressed, in the fundamental law of all national governments. It is safe to assert that no government proper ever had a provision in its organic law for its own termination. Continue to execute all the express provisions of our National Constitution, and the Union will endure forever, it being impossible to destroy it except by some action not provided for in the instrument itself.

Again: If the United States be not a government proper, but an association of States in the nature of contract merely, can it, as a contract, be peaceably unmade by less than all the parties who made it? One party to a contract may violate it—break it, so to speak—but does it not require all to lawfully rescind it?

Descending from these general principles, we find the proposition that in legal contemplation the Union is perpetual confirmed by the history of the Union itself. The Union is much older than the Constitution. It was formed, in fact, by the Articles of Association in 1774. It was matured and continued by the Declaration of Independence in 1776. It was further matured, and the faith of all the then thirteen States expressly plighted and engaged that it should be perpetual, by the Articles of Confederation in 1778. And finally, in 1787, one of the declared objects for ordaining and establishing the Constitution was “to form a more perfect Union.”

But if destruction of the Union by one or by a part only of the States be lawfully possible, the Union is less perfect than before the Constitution, having lost the vital element of perpetuity.

It follows from these views that no State upon its own mere motion can lawfully get out of the Union; that resolves and ordinances to that effect are legally void, and that acts of violence within any State or States against the authority of the United States are insurrectionary or revolutionary, according to circumstances.

And going back approximately four score and seven years, James Madison, in Federalist 45, spoke on the subject in response to Antifederalist concerns about how adoption of the Constitution would affect the rights of states:

Was, then, the American Revolution effected, was the American Confederacy formed, was the precious blood of thousands spilt, and the hard-earned substance of millions lavished, not that the people of America should enjoy peace, liberty, and safety, but that the governments of the individual States, that particular municipal establishments, might enjoy a certain extent of power and be arrayed with certain dignities and attributes of sovereignty? We have heard of the impious doctrine in the old world, that the people were made for kings, not kings for the people. Is the same doctrine to be revived in the new, in another shape — that the solid happiness of the people is to be sacrificed to the views of political institutions of a different form? It is too early for politicians to presume on our forgetting that the public good, the real welfare of the great body of the people, is the supreme object to be pursued; and that no form of government whatever has any other value than as it may be fitted for the attainment of this object.

It took a bloody Civil War over the extension of slavery to enshrine Lincoln’s vision of a Constitution that created a perpetual union and placed the states in a position clearly inferior to the national government of the people.  But though you might think the issue was conclusively settled in 1865, if you listen carefully, you’ll hear echos — some subtle, some not so subtle — of the controversy persisting today.

Arguments about states rights, federalism, and even overregulation, have roots in the ongoing debate over the nature of the Union created by the Constitution.  So is the (somehow) revived debate about the merits of state nullification of federal law.

Ultimately, the Constitutional language and the history are ambiguous enough on this matter (as on many others) that it’s impossible to know exactly what the Framers intended when they created the Constitution.  Almost certainly, they collectively had a number of intentions, and even more certainly, some of them changed their minds over time about just what it was they had done.  And whatever intentions were for America at the start, the whole American experiment was substantially redone in the 5 years following the end of the Civil War.

But despite the general ambiguity, we do have some clues.  And, one of those clues is, I think, the 10th Amendment.

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

The 10th Amendment speaks conclusively about the reservation of powers not delegated to the national government–but it speaks ambiguously about to whom the non-delegated powers are reserved:  ”to the states respectively, or to the people.”

The Articles of Confederation contained a similar provision to the 10th Amendment, which stated:

Each state retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and every power, jurisdiction, and right, which is not by this Confederation expressly delegated to the United States, in Congress assembled.

While its Articles of Confederation equivalent is written in the active voice, from the perspective of a state, the 10th Amendment is fully passive.  The 10th Amendment is also less agressive in that it does not expressly declare each state’s independence and sovereignty, and omits the word “expressly” when referring to delegated powers (presumably to comport with the existence of the Necessary and Proper Clause in the Constitution).  Finally, the 10th Amendment speaks about “the people,” whereas the Articles of Confederation provision referred only to states.

As an aside, Wikipedia — citing an article by Henry Rollins (!) describing his visit to the National Archives in Washington D.C. – asserts that the phrase (“to the people”) was added to the 10th Amendment as a handwritten edition as the draft amendment circulated between houses of Congress . . . suggesting, I’m not sure what, exactly.  But it is fascinating.

I’ve long been puzzled by the existence of the “or to the people” clause of the 10th Amendment.  What should we make of it?

If it was the states that formed the Constitution, and therefore the states that delegated power to the national government, why mention the people at all?  If it was the people, as a national whole, who formed the national government and delegated its powers, why mention the states?  Maybe the drafters and ratifiers of the 10th Amendment (and we should remember, we’re technically talking Congress in 1791, not the Constitutional Convention) conceived of the national government is a creation of the people, who have delegated some power to their state and local governments and some power to their national government, and, as a result, retain whatever powers they have not delegated.  Therefore, to the extent people have not already delegated power to any particular level of government, that power resides in the people.  Or maybe the phrase “or to the people” was added simply to make it clear that the 10th Amendment encompassed all rights — rights that the people could delegate to their government (i.e., rights involving the exercise of coercive authority) and rights that they really couldn’t because they are conceived of as residing in individuals (e.g., the rights to speak and worship).  Of course, the ambiguity could always be a matter of political expediency — perhaps the ratifiers couldn’t agree on what to put in the 10th Amendment and therefore comprised by including both the states and the people as the beneficiaries of reserved powers?

But — to me — the fact that the 10th Amendment mentions both the states and the people counts for something.

How much significance does this all have?  I’m not sure.  But it seems to me that the 10th Amendment’s ambiguity lends support Lincoln’s conception of the American Union (even pre-Civil War) and whatever consequences that may have.

Thoughts on Nullification: A Response to Thomas Woods

Lately, I’ve seen some outspoken support for the resurrection of the doctrine of nullification — the idea that a state (or, most accurately, it’s legislature) should be able to declare unconstitutional (in its view) laws null and void within the state’s geographic boundaries.  Nullification is, and always has been, a misguided attempt at trying to preserve an eviscerated Union through a poor man’s secession.

Nullification is a bad idea, for so many reasons.  As a result, it died (at least as a practical matter) 150 years ago.  Thanks heavens for that.

Yet, the notion that states can continually execute their own mini, bloodless rebellions against tyrannical (in their view) authority without adverse consequence persists with near romantic appeal for some today, and has found its newest champion in Thomas Woods, a historian and author of Nullification: How to Resist Federal Tyranny in the 21st Century (note: I haven’t read the book, and likely will not since it’s *way* down on my already too long reading list).  But from what I have read, Woods promotes a revisionist (that this isn’t always a bad word) history of nullification, one that focuses on its use by Founding Fathers like Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, as well as its (more) noble employment against the Alien and Sedition Acts and by northern states in opposition to fugitive slave laws.

Woods says that those who oppose nullification do so based on only a superficial knowledge of the doctrine — equating it with John C. Calhoun and a convenient justification for the continuation and expansion of slavery.  Woods calls his opponents zombies who mindlessly repeat platitudes while refusing to confront the question of nullification on its merits.  In particular, Woods suggests that you can script how an opponent will respond to the idea of nullification — with a parade of horribles about slavery, segregation, neo-confederacy.

So, allow me to take up the challenge and give 5 more abstract reasons why nullification would still be a really bad idea, even if it were only employed in noble causes:

(1) It lessens the incentive for compromise and fixing bad laws.  Don’t like a law?  Lost a political battle in Congress?  Don’t worry about correcting and adjusting it —  nullify!  Go your own way.  Congress passed an unconstitutional law?  Who cares?  Not your problem — nullify!.  Leave it on the books for New York and California to deal with.  You can just nullify and ignore it, because it doesn’t affect you.

(2) It would destroy the Union.  There has been nothing more beneficial to the American people than the strong Union of the states created by the Constitution.  Nullification would, unquestionably, destroy the American Union.  Those who believe otherwise are indulging in a fantasy.  Under a regime of nullification, states become a law unto themselves.  They cannot be coerced.  At most, the Union would persist as little more than a shifting compact held together by nothing more than mutually perceived self-interest, little different than than the EU or ASEAN.

(3) It has no limiting principle.  While theoretically nullification could only be employed when the federal government oversteps its constitutional bounds, the premise of the doctrine swallows the theoretical limit.  The premise of nullification is that the federal government cannot be the sole arbiter of the extent of its own power, and that political checks through Congress and an elected executive are insufficient.  Are we really expected to believe that a state legislature that nullifies a federal law because it believes the law is unconstitutional will be persuaded simply because the Supreme Court says otherwise?  Of course not, and, indeed, that is the whole point.  The Supreme Court is also the federal government, and just as capable of sanctioning an overreach as Congress is.  Under a regime accepting of the doctrine of nullification, you would have no fewer than 51 “supreme” courts, all but one of them comprised of politically-ambitious elected officials, and none of which are accountable to any other.

(4) It would create a regulatory nightmare.  Think we live under oppressive regulation right now?  Try it when two-thirds of the states have a major federal regulatory regime, while one-third have opted out through nullification, and, as a result, almost every regulation is under meaningless judicial challenge.

(5) It would make a coherent foreign policy impossible.  The United States could not speak with a single voice when it comes to foreign policy.  This would be true when it comes to wars, but also for diplomatic recognition, economic sanctions, and other soft-power methods of exerting pressure on other states.

Now, a libertarian who likes the idea of nullification may look favorably on this list of consequences.  After all, the idea of rendering Congress largely ineffectual, practical prevention of U.S. coercive power abroad, and an America in which sub-national free agents negotiate and deal with each other on the basis of immediate mutual interest appeals to their philosophical core.

But even if this picture of America is attractive to some, it’s not an America that a devotee of our Constitution should recognize.  This is the America of the Articles of Confederation, the America the Constitutional Convention was called to change.

And why should we be surprised that this would be the end result of nullification, since the doctrine is, at its core, anti-constitutional — in the sense that’s its purpose it to enforce a conception of proper government by undermining constituted government itself, when necessary.  In short, nullification is antithetical to America — not because of the causes in which it might be employed — but because what it would do to the American Union and the government created by the Constitution.

Obamacare and Chief Justice Roberts

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Who is Chief Justice Roberts?

Is he the methodic, calculating, conservative revolutionary, that Obama had the foresight to oppose for confirmation to the Court based on his inability to discern what was in the now-Chief Justice’s heart?  Is he the pragmatic conservator of the Court’s institutional capital at the expense of the Court’s obligation to make authoritative constitutional pronouncements?  Or is he yet another conservative appointee driven ever left by mysterious unidentifiable substances in the Washington D.C. water supply?

And what to make of the Court’s decision today upholding Obamacare as a valid exercise of Congress’ taxing power?

Is it an unmitigated disaster that spells inevitable socialistic decline for America — assuming of course Mitt Romney and Orrin Hatch can’t team up on Democrats using the Senate Finance Committee and Oval Office? ;)  Is it a secret long-game win for conservatives masterminded by the Chief Justice at the expense of the unwitting liberals now praising his name?

So many questions to answer, so little time.

Rather than bore you with a treatise, I’ll just give you a few of my thoughts after reviewing the opinions (and trust me, this will be long enough).

1.  This decision is an unqualified loss for conservatives.  Though Roberts may have something of a long game in mind here (see point 4 below), it’s really hard to spin this as a win for conservatives.  Overall, the thrust of the opinion is, “you can find a way to uphold congressional action, even when it’s an unprecedented extension of federal power.”

To be fair, Roberts did throw conservatives some bones in his opinion. For example, it’s clear that he purposefully reached the Commerce Clause issue unnecessarily, in order to send a message about mandates.  His explanation to the contrary was unpersuasive (to me, anyway):

JUSTICE GINSBURG questions the necessity of rejecting the Government’s commerce power argument, given that § 5000A can be upheld under the taxing power. Post, at 37.  But the statute reads more naturally as a command to buy insurance than as a tax, and I would uphold it as a command if the Constitution allowed it. It is only because the Commerce Clause does not authorize such a command  that it is necessary to reach the taxing power question.  And it is only because we have a duty to construe a statute to save it, if fairly possible, that § 5000A can be interpreted as a tax. Without deciding the Commerce Clause question, I would find no basis to adopt such a saving construction.

So it’s a tax only because it’s not a penalty?  Pretty weak . . . and that means he reached the issue to send a message.  Whatever his reasons for upholding, he obviously wanted to make clear that federal efforts to mandate conduct as a way of bootstrapping in to Commerce Clause authority are non-starters.

And one has to acknowledge that Roberts did refuse to countenance an extension of Congress’ spending/commandeering power.  Ultimately, however, it’s hard to see how that does much for federalist types when the practical thrust of his opinion is that even statutes that are written as exercises of the Commerce Clause authority, and exceed that authority, are nonetheless constitutional taxes (even when not denominated that way and denied publicly).  This allows Congress to avoid the political consequences of enacting taxes while pretty much giving Congress the type of unbridled legislative authority rejected under the Commerce Clause.

2.  Robert’s opinion will not make it procedurally easier to repeal Obamacare politically.  Today’s decision may very well have the effect of galvanizing conservatives for the upcoming elections (apparently it’s been a monetary windfall for Mitt), but those claiming (and I’ve seen a few posts on this today) that Justice Roberts judicially declared Obamacare a tax in order to ensure that, under the Democrats own congressional rules, efforts to repeal would be immune from filibuster (that captures the substance if not the precise form of the argument), clearly didn’t read Justice Roberts careful parsing of the difference between statutory and constitutional tax status:

Congress’s decision to label this exaction a “penalty” rather than a “tax” is significant because the Affordable Care Act describes many other exactions it creates as “taxes.”  Where Congress uses certain language in one part of a statute and different language in another, it is generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally.

Amicus argues that even though Congress did not label the shared responsibility payment a tax, we should treat it as such under the Anti-Injunction Act because it functions like a tax. It is true that Congress cannot change whether an exaction is a tax or a penalty for constitutional purposes simply by describing it as one or the other. Congress may not, for example, expand its power under the Taxing Clause, or escape the Double Jeopardy Clause’s constraint on criminal sanctions, by labeling a severe financial punishment a “tax.”

The Anti-Injunction Act and the Affordable Care Act, however, are creatures of Congress’s own creation. How they relate to each other is up to Congress, and the best evidence of Congress’s intent is the statutory text. We have thus applied the Anti-Injunction Act to statutorily described “taxes” even where that label was inaccurate.

The desperate efforts of conservatives to label this decision a “win” for them remind me of Democrats attempts to rationalize President Obama caving to Republicans on the debt ceiling as grand liberal strategy.

3.  Roberts tax opinion is more persuasive than conservatives want to admit.  Although all the focus leading up to the case was on the Commerce Clause, Roberts’ opinion boils down to this:  constitutional authority to legislate depends on the substance of the legislation and not congressional magic words.  That’s a familiar principle, and persuasive in a number of contexts.  The effect of my contract depends on the written language and the intent of the contracting parties, not on the use of precise words to accomplish specific functions.

Should this be any different?  Well, we do have this sense that Congress should be allowed to use the tax designation as both a sword (justification for enacting authority) and a shield (insulation for political consequences of raising taxes).  But since when has Congress been estopped from legislating?  It’s also a bit surprising that Roberts went different ways on the Anti-Injunction Act and Taxing Power (see quote language above) . . . one felt that if the Court reached the merits of the case it would do so based on the finding that Obamacare was not a tax and therefore would be forced to decide the issue on Commerce Clause grounds alone.  But Roberts neatly worked around that dilemma by  holding that the individual mandate was indeed a tax, just not a tax to which Congress intended the Anti-Injunction Act would apply.

4.  Even though this is a loss for conservatives, there is something of a silver lining.  Between Roberts’ opinion and the Joint Dissent, there is a 5-member majority in support of unusually strong language on Commerce Clause federalism.  The language is so strong, in fact, that it likely forecloses any attempt at “compelled commerce” regulation in the near future.  This means that, if, down the line, conservatives are able to chip away at the rather deferential constitutional construction of a tax and/or expand on the Chief Justice’s anti-commandeering rationale, the field for Congressional action will have been limited.  It seems like Roberts’ opinion might also spawn some new Republican political strategy, like citing judicial authority to justify characterizing every regulation as a tax, or inserting punitive penalties into regulatory laws to sabotage them constitutionally . . . maybe I’m just reaching here, but no question congressional Republicans are committed and creative :)

5.  Roberts v. Scalia.  In case anyone doubted the sincerity of his commitment to judicial restraint (especially after Citizens United), Roberts’ opinion should allay that doubt (for now).  While Scalia’s commitment is, first and foremost, to originalist interpretation, Roberts’ jurisprudence is (in my opinion) guided to a significant extent by his beliefs about the role of the Court vis-a-vis the political branches and, to a lesser extent, preservation of its institutional capital.  I really think that this is the best way to look at his decision.  Which is the better approach?  I’ll leave that for you to decide . . . . ;)

6.  Another “switch in time”?  Although there is already a healthy ongoing debate over this, it does look (to me) as though Chief Justice Roberts changed his vote relatively late in the process.  It is hard for me to avoid the conclusion that the Joint Dissent (Scalia, Thomas, Kennedy, and Alito) was written by Scalia as a majority opinion.  It contains numerous references to “the dissent,” despite itself being a dissent.  It is also written, like a majority opinion, using the plural “we,” as opposed to the singular “I.”  Here’s an example:

The dissent claims that we “fai[l] to explain why the individual mandate threatens our constitutional order.” Ante, at 35. But we have done so. It threatens that order because it gives such an expansive meaning to the Commerce Clause that all private conduct (including failure to act) becomes subject to federal control, effectively destroying the Constitution’s division of governmental powers. Thus the dissent, on the theories proposed for the validity of the Mandate, would alter the accepted constitutional relation between the individual and the National Government. The dissent protests that the Necessary and Proper Clause has been held to include “the power to enact criminal laws, . . . the power to imprison, . . . and the power to create a national bank.”  Is not the power to compel purchase of health insurance much lesser? No, not if (unlike those other dispositions) its application rests upon a theory that everything is within federal control simply because it exists.

Why were these references left in?  It could because of a last minute switch . . . but I doubt it.  Justice Roberts had to have time to write his opinion, and the Justices and clerks who write Supreme Court opinions are some of the very brightest people around — these edits could have been made no matter how late the change.  So, were they left in purposefully, as a signal to the world of a betrayal by the Chief Justice?  Well, I kind of doubt that as well . . . .  But whatever the explanation, it’s certainly interesting.

7.  Let’s get political!  Thus far in the battle over Obamacare, both sides have alternated being overly optimistic.  Prior to oral argument, quite a few Democrats were contemptuous of the merits of the legal challenge.  After oral argument, conservatives were prematurely dancing on Obamacare’s grave.  Liberals rejoicing today should take into account that it looks (if my sense if correct) like Obamacare was headed down to defeat and was saved only by a last minute defection (that was, in all likelihood, not wholly based on the merits of the case).  Furthermore, there is still a long way to go in the war over national health insurance in America, despite today’s decision.  And, while the Supreme Court will have more of a role to play, Roberts’ opinion, consistent with his commitment to circumscribing the judicial role, ensures that, going forward, this battle will be fought primarily politically from here on out.

Anyway, I’d love to hear your thoughts, whether on the opinion or my own commentary.  Type away — I can take it :)

H.B. 351, Opt-Out of Order on White House Rural Council — Rep. Ivory

rural-utah-slider

After a long, work-induced hiatus from blogging, Utah Political Summary returns today with some brief commentary on H.B. 351, a bill sponsored by Representative Ken Ivory.

H.B. 351 is part of our legislature’s ongoing effort to step federal government meddling in local government by preemptive state meddling in local government.  Specifically, it’s a response to Executive Order 13575 (“EO13575″), which was issued by President Obama last June and creates a White House Rural Council (“WHRC”) to “enhance Federal engagement with rural communities.”

EO13575

The WHRC would be chaired by a representative of the Department of Agriculture, comprised of a representative of every other federal department, and tasked with the mission of “coordinat[ing] development of policy recommendations to promote economic prosperity and quality of life in rural America,” and “coordinate[ing] [the Obama] Administration’s engagement with rural communities.”

Specifically, the WHRC will:

  • Make recommendations to President Obama on how to streamline and leverage the impact of federal investment dollars in rural communities;
  • Coordinate and increase the effectiveness of federal engagement with rural America’s stakeholders; and
  • Identify and facilitate rural energy development, outdoor recreation and conservation-related opportunities.

On its face, EO13575 appears to be nothing more than an attempt to coordinate efforts across departments, to make the administration’s “rural policy” more cohesive and effective.

But it’s got Representative Ivory up in arms.  In fact, he refers to it on his Facebook page as an order creating “White House zoning and planning authority over all ‘rural America.’”  So he’s crafted H.B. 351 — a legislative response consistent with his apparent alarm.

H.B. 351

Representative Ivory’s bill, which was passed out of committee on February 27, 2012, would require any “department or agency of the state” that wants to implement a “directive” of the White House Rural Council created by EO13575, to file a report to the legislature’s Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment Interim Committee containing the following information:

(3) (a) The report required under Subsection (1)(a) shall include:

(i) the directive from the White House Rural Council; and

(ii) a description of:

(A) the requirements imposed by the directive and how the agency would implement the directive;

(B) the effect of implementing or not implementing the directive;

(C) the cost to the state or its citizens of implementing the directive; and

(D) the consequences to the state if the state does not comply with the directive.

(b) The report required under Subsection (1) may include an analysis by the agency or department that addresses whether a directive from the White House Rural Council:

(i) affects the distribution of power and responsibility among the state and national government;

(ii) limits the policymaking discretion of the state;

(iii) impacts a power or a right reserved to the state or its citizens by the Ninth or Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution; or

(iv) impacts the sovereignty rights and interest of the state or a political subdivision to provide for the health, safety, and welfare of, and to promote the prosperity of, the state’s or the political subdivision’s citizens.

The required report is designed to give the legislature an opportunity to legislate in opposition to the “directive,” if it so chooses.  In fact, after receiving the report from the “department or agency of the state,” the Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment Interim Committee can recommend to the legislature that it enact legislation that either specifically authorizes or prohibits compliance with the “directive.”

The supreme irony in the whole situation?  Representative Ivory’s bill would be codified  at Utah Code Ann. 63M-1-1607 et seq., as part of Utah’s already existing Rural Development Program, which is operated out of the Governor’s Office of Economic Development through the Office of Rural Development, which in conjunction with the Rural Coordinating Committee, provides support to the Governor’s Rural Partnership Board.

And the mission of the state’s Rural Development Program?  Here’s a bulleted list:

  • Facilitate within the Governor’s Office of Economic Development implementation of the strategic plan;
  • Work to enhance the capacity of the Governor’s Office of Economic Development to address rural economic development, planning, and leadership training challenges and opportunities by establishing partnerships and positive working relationships with appropriate public and private sector entities, individuals, and institutions;
  • Work with the Rural Coordinating Committee to coordinate and focus available resources in ways that address the economic development, planning, and leadership training challenges and priorities in rural Utah; and
  • Coordinate relations between the state, rural governments, public/private groups engaged in rural economic planning and development, and federal agencies.

Some Thoughts

I think it’s pretty clear that Representative Ivory sees the White House Rural Council as another front on the war over western state lands.  Perhaps it is.  I don’t know.  But there’s nothing in EO13575 or the duties set out for the WHRC authorizing it to make “directives” to local governments, and certainly nothing in it that authorizes it to engage in nationwide zoning.

President Obama, like other Presidents before him, undoubtedly has a “plan” for rural America, and will go about implementing his “plan” in whatever way he can, including, presumably, by conditioning the receipt of federal funds on local governments implementing plan objectives.  But it’s questionable whether such “incentives” can fairly be characterized as “directives.”  Thus, to have any effect, it appears that Representative Ivory’s bill would require all “departments or agencies of the state,” any time they want to implement a suggestion or recommendation originating from the WHRC, to first create a burdensome report for the state legislature.  This is turf-war level of micromanagement that would do the most overreaching federal agency proud.

Now, Representative Ivory may believe that the Constitution grants the state exclusive authority to make recommendations to local governments and rural America.  After all, Article II of the Constitution is pretty sparse . . . .  But at some point, he, and the other members of the Utah GOP’s club of constitutional crusaders need to contemplate the extent to which their near myopic obsession over their own version of constitutional federalism is turning them is seriously undermining their core conservative governing principles.

If President Obama issues an order emanating from the WHRC that unconstitutionally dictates to rural Utahns what they may or may not do, then legislate against it or fight it in court as appropriate.  But why borrow trouble and micromanage just out of antipathy toward one particular administration?  President Obama will eventually leave office, the WHRC he created will be dissolved, and a Republican will be elected President again . . . but legislation persists.  H.B. 351 is unnecessary, misguided, and not worth our legislature’s time.

Paul Rolly’s Ridiculous Hit Piece on Judge Dee Benson

Today I wanted to comment on an unfortunate and irresponsible article by Paul Rolly, an opinion columnist for the Salt Lake Tribune that I normally enjoy reading.  Rolly’s article is titled, “The Two Faces of Judge Dee Benson” and compares Judge Benson, a former United States Attorney for the District of Utah and current Federal District Court judge of 21 years to Mitt Romney (and his flip-flopping) based almost exclusively on Judge Benson’s differential sentencing in two recent cases.

What’s the problem, you ask?  Well, in the game of electoral politics, flip-flopping is opportunism; in the world of judicial sentencing, it’s potentially impeachable misconduct.

The first case used by Rolly is the case of environmental activist Tim DeChristopher, who Judge Benson sentenced to two years in federal prison for sabotaging an oil lease auction by placing fraudulent bids and subsequently open urged his supporters to disobey the law.  The second was the case of Matthew Dahl, the former director of This is the Place Heritage Park, who embezzled $321,000 from the park and who Judge Benson sentenced to six months in prison.

Here’s a relevant snippet from the article:

When Jon Huntsman still was in the Republican presidential race, his campaign ran a TV ad featuring a wind-up toy monkey that did back flips to dramatize Mitt Romney’s notorious flip-flopping on major issues.

That flip-flopping monkey could have a cousin named Judge Dee Benson.

Benson, a U.S. District judge for Utah, caught my attention once again this week when he sentenced former This Is the Place Heritage Park Director Matthew Dahl to six months in prison for stealing $321,000 in park funds. Prosecutors had recommended up to 33 months in prison, but Benson noted Dahl, who comes from a strong Republican, LDS family, was a first-time offender convicted of a nonviolent crime.

Flip.

Bogus oil and gas lease bidder Tim DeChristopher, who does not come from a strong Republican, LDS family and who, instead, became a champion of the liberals, was also a first-time offender convicted of a nonviolent crime. But Benson gave him two years in federal prison because he kept talking publicly about his environmental cause while he was awaiting sentencing.

Flop.

I’ll admit that I don’t know many of the details of these cases, but neither (I suspect) does Rolly.  In fact, I think it’s safe to say that no one does aside from those actively involved in the prosecution and the defense.  But his limited perspective on things didn’t stop Rolly from putting out his story, which is that Judge Benson discriminates favorably in sentencing when the convicted offender is white, Republican, and/or LDS, and discriminates unfavorably in sentencing when the convicted offender is a racial minority, a Democrat, and/or is not a member of the LDS Church.

Now, I don’t like to see white collar criminals get off easy simply because they show up to court in a nice suit with great looking family in tow.  But I don’t know the extent to which the circumstances of Dahl’s case counseled against imposing a harsh sentence.  I’ve already given my thoughts on the DeChristopher sentence, which I view as a somewhat harsh, but warranted.

I strongly suspect that if the sentences were reversed — that is, if DeChristopher got probation while Dahl was given, say, 4 years — we wouldn’t be hearing a peep from Rolly about flip-flopping.  Why?  Because I’m sure that Rolly would then assume that the differing sentences were reasonable, given what he sees as the meaningful distinctions between the two cases.

But, when the sentences run contrary to his own sensibilities, Rolly dashes off an irresponsible hit piece alleging judicial misconduct — an impulsive, irresponsible strategy that would do Newt Gingrich proud.

All Rolly’s piece does is contribute to an attribute of distrust and suspicion regarding the American judicial system.  Judges are placed in the very difficult position of determining the rights and fates of the individuals who appear before them.  They are presented with complex arguments carefully drafted by smart, intelligent, motivated, and persuasive advocates on both sides of the case.  In many cases, one, or both, parties who appear before them aren’t telling them the truth.  They are bound by countless complicated legal rules, and they are forced to become experts on all of them, based on the substance of the case at hand.  Sometimes there are relevant facts they can’t consider in making their rulings.  Other times they are forced to base their rulings on a fact that seem entirely irrelevant to the case at hand.  And half the people who appear before them are guaranteed to lose every time.

In the vast majority of cases, our judges get it right.  But if they ever miss one (which, I understand, does have major effects on the person whose rights are negatively affected — and I can’t say whether Judge Benson missed one in the Dahl case) we’re often not willing to give them the benefit of the doubt, but immediately attribute the worst motives to them, accusing them of misconduct, fraud, or even treason.  And then we wonder at the fact that neither side in a political debate trusts the judiciary, and we shake our heads in amazement when the Utah legislature denies a qualified, distinguished, near-universally admired judge a place on our appellate courts because they disagreed with one of his rulings.

It’s a good thing that our judges are protected from political retribution for their sentences, because, if they weren’t, retribution would, it seems, be all too quick in coming.  Judge Benson is a distinguished judge who has served this state well in multiple capacities.  I suspect he would be the first to admit that he’s probably gotten a few decisions wrong in his 21 years.  But that doesn’t mean he sentences on race, religion, or political affiliation.  And it’s unfortunate that Rolly believes it’s OK to claim that he does.