Of all the objectionable
quotes of 2010, I think my favorite is Nancy Pelosi’s where she declared
in March that we have to pass the health care "reform" bill in order to
find out what is in it.
That’s not just bad legislating,
it’s bad business.
But that approach
not only defies common sense, it defies a good attitude toward the Constitution.
When she was asked about the constitutionality of the health care bill
(I would say the health care takeover), she didn’t really answer except
to ask: "Are you serious? Are you serious?"
Officials of the government
swear an oath to uphold and defend the Constitution. Thankfully, it seems
that the new leadership in Congress will be taking that old musty, dusty
document more seriously. For example, Rep. John Boehner, the Speaker of
the House-elect, and other Republican lawmakers in the House wrote up a
Pledge to America in September, committing themselves to "require every
bill to cite its specific constitutional authority."
This makes me think
of a political cartoon (in a slightly different vain) I saw long ago by
Wayne Stayskal, longtime cartoonist of the Chicago Tribune and later
Tampa Tribune. The cartoon showed the inside of a legislative hall
with the tablet of the Ten Commandments hanging on the wall---behind a
glass case, similar to that which houses a fire hose. The inscription by
the glass encasement read "In case of emergency, break glass." Stayskal
was talking about the Ten Commandments, which ultimately are the basis
of our laws.
But what he says about
the decalogue could be said about the Constitution. In case of emergency,
go back to what the Constitution actually says.
If the lame duck session
is any indication, we’re still in trouble in this country.
However, there are
some who are trying to get back to core constitutional principles in our
government. In particular, I’m excited about the plans of Rep. Michele
Bachmann of Minnesota. Elected to Congress in 2006, she has now become
the Chairman of the Tea Party Caucus in Congress. I had the opportunity
to interview her for Coral Ridge Ministries-TV, shortly after the midterm
election.
She announced that
she has decided to introduce some classes for the legislators. The goal
is to get the lawmakers more familiar with the Constitution itself. The
Constitution is one of those things that everybody gives lip-service to,
but in reality few know what it actually says. Rep. Bachmann told our audience,
"I’m starting a series of classes on our Constitution, on the Declaration
of Independence, and on the Bill of Rights. And so, I’m inviting in our
Chief Justice Roberts, Justice Scalia, Justice Thomas, Justice Alito, and
also legal experts, Jay Sekulow from American Center for Law and Justice,
and Mark Levin---different experts on the Constitution to come in every
week." This may end up being the first time some of these lawmakers hear
what the Constitution actually says.
Her classes will help
remind lawmakers of what the founding fathers did and did not intend. She
is planning on having these educational sessions before the week starts---before
the first vote is cast, "so that members of Congress can get their minds
around our duties as members of Congress from a constitutional perspective.
And I think that’ll set the tone for the week. I don’t know that that’s
ever happened here before in Congress and I think it’s a great turnaround
and a great result from this election."
I have often heard it said that every time Congress meets, we lose
a little bit of our liberty. I think that has proven true over and over
in recent years. Part of the problem is just the nature of the system.
Each lawmaker wants to make a name for himself. He wants to bring home
the bacon for his district, while decrying the bridge to nowhere in the
other lawmaker’s state. Perhaps, Michele Bachmann’s new classes on the
Constitution and Boehner’s commitment to Constitutional ties to legislation
will help curb the runaway government bureaucracy that has plagued us the
last couple of decades.
This way lawmakers can know
what is in a bill before they decide to pass it.
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