As many on this blog know, I often object to those who criticize our Constitution as a way of excusing their circumvention of civil liberties or the separation of powers. Some in the Bush Administration took that position in suggesting that our Constitution was somehow a contributor to the 9-11 attacks — in their push to pass the Patriot Act. President Obama seems to take up a similar lament to rationalize his repeated violation of the separation of powers in recent years. Obama raised the issue with donors to suggest that the Framers got it wrong in their design of Congress and Article I of the Constitution. Indeed, he appears to be a critic of the “Great Compromise” that gave small states an equal voice in the Senate. It is of course not his assuming legislative and judicial powers in the creation of what I have called an “uber presidency” that fundamentally changed our system. There is no real need for compromise of any kind in the new emerging model of executive power so it should not be a surprise that “Great Compromise” would appear particularly precious and unnecessary.
I recently testified (here and here and here) and wrote a column on President Obama’s increasing circumvention of Congress in negating or suspending U.S. laws. Obama has repeatedly suspended provisions of the health care law and made unilateral changes that were previously rejected by Congress. He has also moved hundreds of millions from one part of the Act to other parts without congressional approval. Now, his administration is reportedly changing key provisions of the ACA to potentially make billions of dollars available to the insurance industry in a move that was never debated, let alone approved, by the legislative branch. I just ran another column this month listing such incidents of executive over-reach that ideally would have included this potentially huge commitment under Obama’s claimed discretionary authority.
President Obama is now responding by attacking the Constitution and saying that James Madison and others simply got it wrong by guaranteeing equal voting in the United States Senate. Of course, he has not shared such views with the public. Instead, he discussed them with a small group of Democratic donors who are facing increasing opposition from friends in supporting Obama. Obama met with these donors in a private event in Chicago and put the blame on the Framers: “Obviously, the nature of the Senate means that California has the same number of Senate seats as Wyoming. That puts us at a disadvantage.” These comments also appear on an official transcript. The President does not call to change the Constitution but laments about the structure of the Senate and the equality of small and large states.
Not to spoil the new post hoc spin but I find it less than obvious. The “disadvantage” that the President has been complaining about is the refusal of Congress to do what he has demanded. Ironically, he has faced more consistent opposition in the House, not the Senate. The House is divided according to population, which Obama appears to prefer.
The problem is not the Constitution but the division in the country. We are divided on a great number of issues. Roughly fifty percent of Americans hate Obamacare and want it repealed. Immigration and other issues continue to divide voters in both parties. While we have a representative democracy, it still has democratic elements. Congress reflects the divisions in the country. When we go through periods of division, fewer things get done and really big reforms or changes are particularly difficult. However, such division is no license to “go at it alone” as the President has promised. The Madisonian system is designed to force compromise and to vent the factional pressures that have torn apart other nations. That is precisely why the President’s actions are so dangerous. They are creating a dominant branch in a tripartite system that allows for unilateral action from a president. Such powers will outlast this president and will likely come back to haunt those Democrats and liberals who are remaining silent (or even applauding) this president’s actions.
As for the Senate, the “Great Compromise” in 1787 fit well in the anti-factional design of the Article One — even though Madison himself was once an advocate for proportional distribution and did not agree that large states would join together against small states. Where other constitutions (as in France) tended to allow factional pressures to explode outwardly, the U.S. Constitution allows them to implode within the legislative branch — funneling these pressures into a process where disparate factional disputes can be converted into majoritarian compromises. This happens through the interactions of houses with different constituencies and interests. The House tends to be the most responsive and desirous of the fastest reaction to national problems. After all, the members are elected every two years and represent smaller constituencies. The Senate has longer term and larger constituencies. It tends to put the breaks on legislative impulse. At the same time, the mix of different interests from large and small states changing the dimension of legislative work in the Senate — adding adding pressure for compromise and reevaluation.
The Great Compromise was forged after various plans from Virginia, New Jersey, and other states were debated. There was considerable support for bicameralism though William Paterson of the New Jersey suggested a single house system (with equal voting for the states). Some like Roger Sherman sought proportional representation in the “lower” house while guaranteeing equal representation in the “upper” house. Virginia delegates like Edmund Randolph and James Madison (as well as Alexander Hamilton) thought it should all be proportional in a bicameral system.
The conference rejected the New Jersey plan which would have created an unicameral legislature with one vote per state. However, the convention deadlocked on the Virginia plan. The issue was referred to committee and out emerged the Great Compromise or what was known as the Connecticut or Sherman compromise. The proposal was put forward by Roger Sherman and Oliver Ellsworth of Connecticut to blend the Virginia (large-state) and New Jersey (small-state) proposals. Sherman called for “That the proportion of suffrage in the 1st. branch [house] should be according to the respective numbers of free inhabitants; and that in the second branch or Senate, each State should have one vote and no more.”
There is a moderating influence that has come from the additional constituency factor of small versus large states in the Senate. In fairness to Obama, the division does appear more driven by party politics than geographics today. I am not convinced that the large versus small states are a defining political line in today’s politics and Madison may have been right about that point. However, some of the divisions between the parties reflect such geographic elements. Western and Southern politicians tend to be less supportive of environmental issues, national parks and other areas that reflect their interests of their states and citizens. In the end, however, the “disadvantage” faced by Obama is found in both houses, not just the Senate. Moreover, polls show considerable opposition in the areas where Obama is acting unilaterally like immigration.
As for the House, Obama complained that he is also at a disadvantage because “Democrats tend to congregate a little more densely, which puts us at a disadvantage in the House.” That is a perfectly valid call for political action. The Senate comments tend to reflect a growing criticism among some supporters that the Congress is rigged against the Democrats due to the equality of state voting.
Ironically, if there is one provision that could clearly be changed as outmoded it is the electoral college, which has consistently dysfunctional effects on our system. Rather than change the fundamental structure of Congress, that would be a change worthy of presidential advocacy. The changes that have occurred in the Constitution makes this relatively small provision a growing anomaly in our elections. The equality of states in the Senate is neither the cause of the current deadlock (given the role of the House) nor does it excuse the President’s circumvention. It seems to be an obvious post-rationalization for acts of circumvention.
So here is my only request. This is not the first veiled criticism of the Constitution by leaders of both parties. I have long ago stopped hoping that our leaders would maintain a logical and efficient approach to taxes, the environment, education, and other areas. I have come to accept that the executive and legislative branches will continue to waste hundreds of billions and harass trends toward growth. However, I continue to believe that our system can carry the huge costs of both branches and still benefit our citizens. The only limited request is that the two parties with a stranglehold on this nation leave the basic principles of the Constitution alone. That is all. They can destroy the economy, the educational system, and even global stability. However, the Constitutional structure was given to us by the Framers and has served us well. It has certainly served us better than our leaders.
In other words, what is “obvious” Mr. President is that it is not the Constitution that is the problem.
Why would anyone punch hippies? They are all senior citizens now.
Paul: “you do know that the amendments to the Constitution are considered part of the Constitution.”
Indeed I do. But you didn’t answer my questions:
Are you saying we get our rights from the constitution?
If so, please name one right conferred upon you by the constitution.
Bob, Esq. – I am currently exercising one of my rights, right now. Guess which one?
Annie: “Chess with a chicken” an insult. “Pissing” is profanity. “You are tedious and intellectually dishonest” two personal insults. Professor Turley?
That’s just embarrassing.
Paul, It’s just baiting, but thanks for a sane response to insane accusations.
Annie – unless you have changed your gender, you are the goose, the gander is male.
I have had to delete some comments on this thread by Nick and I previously deleted comments from others. Please comply with our rule against personal attacks.
More insults @5:22.
Oh no, not Barney Fife. He was the only reason I watched that show.
Bob, Esq. – you do know that the amendments to the Constitution are considered part of the Constitution.
What’s good for the goose is good for the gander. In the spirit of equity.
“Barney Fife” is an insult.
For anyone interested in the truth about Holder and how that 2009 advisory letter was a lie, I offer a few articles that can be found easily online. I don’t do links for personal reasons.
The San Diego Reader has been on this story since the beginning. A 8/31/12 article penned by Dorian Hargrove titled: San Diego County’s Last Legal Marijuana Dispensary Forced Out of Business by US Attorney. So, I was incorrect. I though Holder’s US Atty. Laura Duffy had whittled it down to 3 dispensaries. I am not there in the summer. Actually, Holder’s errand girl closed down ALL the dispensaries.
A Voice of San Diego article by Scott Lewis on 1/28/13 titled: US Attorney Backs Off Absolutist Pot Stance shows that sanity finally began to prevail after the attacks by Holder for 2 or so years.
Paul: “Please point out the ‘inalienable right to self-ownership’ in the Constitution.”
Are you saying we get our rights from the constitution?
If so, please name one right conferred upon you by the constitution.
“Chess with a chicken” an insult.
“Pissing” is profanity.
“You are tedious and intellectually dishonest” two personal insults.
Professor Turley?
Schulte:
“Just because someone is in pain does not mean they are being tortured.”
Someone next to you is in pain. You have a magic, inexpensive, all natural medicine their doctor prescribed and their state deemed legal. You refuse to give it to them.
You are guilty of torture if you withhold it. Their continued excess pain is your fault.
I asked if you think water boarding is torture? Your answer might help to clear this matter up for me.
Schulte:
“Please point out the ‘inalienable right to self-ownership’ in the Constitution.”
Why? You refuse to say what the lie is that Roe is based on? Why should Bob Esq have to explain himself if you won’t?
Fact is that in Griswold and Roe, the courts held that both the 9th and the 14th give us a right to privacy. Bob Esq might call it self-ownership, but only rabid authoritarians think we have no right to privacy.
Someone was clever enough to win the prize yesterday. It was not you or Bob, Esq. Still looking for the unalienable right to self-ownership.
“Schulte
http://nypost.com/2014/05/29/we-know-whats-best/
Just for you.”
Just for whom, Schulte? You think I’m going to click through to some Murdochian spin because you posted it?
Schulte:
“You have a very broad definition of torture which I do not think is supported by many others.”
I do? Someone is in agonizing pain and dying, a very simple, natural medicine would help better than any others, and you would deny it to them.
Do you think water boarding is torture?
“The vote is not for or against medical marijuana, but over DEA money for interference.”
Interference with what, Schulte? Your disingenuousness is showing.
Just because someone is in pain does not mean they are being tortured.
Well, professor, if you’re deleting uncivil comments, Spinellis’s keeping you busy:
“Spinelli:
Stupak, I did not “assert” the thuggish AG would ignore the law. I said I “feared” he would. Chess w/ a chicken.”
Of course, he’s talking to someone named Stupak… maybe the Vegas billionaire or the anti-choice Democrat who used to be in the House.
Since I’m also not a chicken and willing to take a bet on the Democrats holding the Senate, he must be talking to someone else.
“I said I “feared” he would.”
And I showed you a store from 2009 that showed they were backing off medicinal pot patients way back then.
Schulte:
“The lowest number was in the 3000s.”
For the sake of argument, let’s say this ridiculously low number is right.
Would you force 3000 women to give birth to rape babies every year?
Do you support parental rights for rapists?
Why do you avoid these questions?
Anybody have any idea which of my comments was deleted?
Good grief.
I just can’t tell if you are deliberately obtuse or if it is too difficult for you to follow.
You aren’t straight about your Hilliary comment and you aren’t straight about the House passage defunding DEA money to interfere with med marijuana in those states that have legalized med mj.
And that’s just today. What a record.
Obtuse sounds fun. 😉