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Is Our Government Really Broken?
· Wednesday, February 24, 2010
If you want to see broken government, consider the fall of the constitutional Roman Republic and the rise of Julius Caesar: "Fortune turned against us and brought confusion to all we did. Greed destroyed honor, honesty and every other virtue, and taught men to be arrogant and cruel, to neglect the gods. Ambition made men false. Rome changed: A government which had once surpassed all others in justice and excellence now became cruel and unbearable." So said the historian Sallust at the time.
But in retrospect, while moral decay surely played its part, the more complete explanation for the fall of the Roman Republic lay in the consequences of the successes of Rome's vast Mediterranean conquests. The flow of wealth into Rome from the conquered empire -- which had been built to protect the city-state of Rome -- undercut the republic it was built to protect. The Roman constitution had been designed to govern a city-state, but with the wealth of empire came severe economic inequalities that the Roman Senate would not, or could not, resolve. Demagogues arose, private armies were formed -- and finally force of victorious arms replaced republican government.
Another familiar example of broken government was our Washington government in the 1850s, which failed to peacefully resolve the matter of slavery. Once again, force of arms was required to resolve an existential crisis of a republic. Six hundred thousand Americans died during our Civil War. Although I and most Americans (at least outside the South) think Abraham Lincoln acted wisely and saved the republic -- and we returned to more or less constitutional government in 1865 -- it cannot be denied that America got its first real, sustained taste of authoritarian government under Lincoln.
We had better hope our government isn't broken -- or we are likely to have more to worry about than 10 percent unemployment.
In fact, as many have observed recently, our government is working just fine -- blocking the enactment of unpopular laws by a government that is out of step with the people. There is nothing new in that. I served in the Reagan White House and with Newt Gingrich in the 1990s. I recall feeling both times that government was broken -- the filibuster was blocking our majority rule -- because we couldn't get "vital" legislation enacted. (In fact, both times I was involved, inter alia, in the failed effort to close down the Department of Education, saving only its essential student loan functions.) We overreached. We got a lot done, but only that with which the public was comfortable.
Other administrations, including Jimmy Carter's, complained that government was broken because they generally were incompetent to lead.
However, a form of government and the public are functioning adequately not only when they block bad or unacceptable law (as currently is the case) but when they are able to solve great dangers to the nation. We may soon get a test on that second matter.
There is broad agreement (as close to a universal agreement as we have seen on a great issue) that if we don't get our national debt and deficits to sustainable levels, we may never recover our prosperity -- and will then lose our military strength and our great sovereign freedom.
If, as many expect, the Democrats lose effective or actual control of Congress in the November elections, it is likely to be because the public has risen up and rejected the party that has brought us these intolerable multitrillion-dollar deficits with a budget proposal that fails even to propose a path out of the morass.
Although many hard decisions will have to be made, everyone agrees that at the core, we have to reduce vastly the current estimated $50 trillion of unfunded liability that exists in our entitlement programs -- Social Security and Medicare particularly.
So, should the election play out as described, 2011 will be the year that will test whether our government is broken, because a pretty good definition of a broken government (or more accurately, a broken polity -- a government and its electorate) is one that agrees on a great threat to society, agrees broadly on what needs to be done -- and cannot do it.
While many of us have for years complained of our failure to get entitlement costs under control, in fact, only starting in 2011 will the true test of our polity begin. Because only now is there a strong majority that sees the danger.
Until the 1990s, federal deficits were the concern merely of the green-eye-shade part of the Republican voters. Most Democrats, independents and some Republicans didn't vote based on that issue. Then Ross Perot came along and ran on the deficit issue, thereby expanding the part of the electorate that really cared about deficits. Then in 1994, Newt Gingrich and the new Republican majority championed trying to get to a balanced budget (and succeeded, with Bill Clinton in 1997).
Still, only about half the electorate really cared about deficits. However, during the George W. Bush presidency of 2001-09, most Democratic voters came -- for the first time -- to loudly, emphatically and constantly attack deficits. Thus, in 2009, for the first time since the rise of Franklin D. Roosevelt, a big majority of the public is alive to the dangers of excessive debt and deficit. And just at this moment, we get these staggering multitrillion-dollar-per-year deficits.
Now the danger is manifest. Assuming the November election plays out as suspected and the public manifests its deepest concern -- if the public will not support or the government of 2011 does not enact genuine structural reductions sufficient to honestly project our debt to be under control for the long term -- then we can honestly say that our government is broken. Then we will know that we are in for a hellish future.
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H. D. Schmidt
While Mr. Blankley makes reference to $50 trillion of undfunded liabilities for Social Security and Medicare, it is one more version of several. I have in front of me an article that states the following: "According to Richard W. Fisher, the president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, the unfunded liabilities of the US Social Security and Medicare system stand at $99.2 trillion
today". In essence the true National Debt is actually way over $100 trillion, right? So, unless honesty is restored once again, there in Washington, by telling the real and exact truth to the American citizens as the true National Debt, this nation will continue to be bound for hell indeed, just, and even worse than Rome itself. This monstrosity of National Debt now actually has a life of itself and making the Founding Fathers weep every more in their graves seeing their nation self-destroying like all previous Empires. George Washington in closing my comment: "No pecuniary consideration is more urgent than the regular redemption and discharge of the public debt: on none can delay be more injurious or an economy of time more valuable". Thomas Jefferson: "The principle of spending money to be paid by posterity, in the name of funding, is but swindling futurity on a large scale". So, let truth be told, the only way to preserve freedom, right?
Posted February 24, 2010 at 7:14:55 AM
Steve F.
I believe it is time to step up and force the issue for all of the members of the Senate. There should be a movement to recall any Senator that voted for the Stimulus non-Jobs bill or Obamacare. They have a record of unconsitutional voting so now is the time to push. These incumbents may take notice if they face concequences even after they were elected in 2008 or 2006. I think the laws are different in each state, but there should be recourse for the citizens to stand up against their unconstitutional behavior. What do you think?
Posted February 24, 2010 at 10:57:42 AM
Leonidas
Yeah, in Blankley's view, since Lincoln "saved the union," the ends justified the means. It doesn't matter that Lincoln trampled the Constitution to restore a "more or less constitutional government" (Tony, it was decidedly less). This is hardly a conservative perspective, but one you might expect from a Beltway conservative.
Posted February 24, 2010 at 3:50:55 PM
Free Dame
Speaking as a "Beltway Conservative," I'd like to point out that the Civil War had less to do with slavery than it did with States' Rights. Lincoln did much more to trample the Constitution than suspend Habeas Corpus and impose a form of martial law. IMHO (and that of many historians), Lincoln and the North were absolutely wrong in "saving the Union" by force. The Southern states had every right to secede if they wished, just as Texas, Montana, and the other states that are talking secession today have that moral right. Just as West Virginia had the right to secede from Virginia, and as we, as a new nation, had the moral right to secede from Great Britain.
To Mr. Blankley's point about the Roman Empire falling because of the expanse of conquered territories it had annexed, he misses an important parallel to the USA today. Approximately 535 individuals in Washington are trying to craft one-size-fits-all government to cover 50 states and millions of people. The very idea is ludicrous. What is good for New York is unlikely to be good for North Dakota. This is why States' Rights are so important, and why the Federal Government should - not only by reason of law but by every tenet of good sense - have extremely limited control over the citizens.
Posted February 24, 2010 at 5:40:53 PM