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McCain and 'the Constitution'
Real Clear Politics ^ | 5/11/2006 | George Will

Posted on 05/10/2006 9:27:31 PM PDT by Unam Sanctam

WASHINGTON -- Presidents swear to ``protect and defend the Constitution.'' The Constitution says: ``Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech.'' On April 28, on Don Imus' radio program, discussing the charge that the McCain-Feingold law abridges freedom of speech by regulating the quantity, content and timing of political speech, John McCain did not really reject the charge:

``I work in Washington and I know that money corrupts. And I and a lot of other people were trying to stop that corruption. Obviously, from what we've been seeing lately, we didn't complete the job. But I would rather have a clean government than one where quote First Amendment rights are being respected that has become corrupt. If I had my choice, I'd rather have the clean government.''

Question: Were McCain to take the presidential oath, what would he mean?

In his words to Imus, note the obvious disparagement he communicates by putting verbal quotation marks around ``First Amendment rights.'' Those nuisances.

Then ponder his implicit promise to ``complete the job'' of cleansing Washington of corruption, as McCain understands that. Unfortunately, although McCain is loquacious about corruption, he is too busy deploring it to define it. Mister Straight Talk is rarely reticent about anything, but is remarkably so about specifics: He says corruption is pandemic among incumbent politicians, yet he has never identified any corrupt fellow senator.

Anyway, he vows to ``complete the job'' of extirpating corruption, regardless of the cost to freedom of speech. Regardless, that is, of how much more the government must supervise political advocacy. President McCain would, it is reasonable to assume, favor increasingly stringent limits on what can be contributed to, or spent by, campaigns. Furthermore, McCain seems to regard unregulated political speech as an inherent invitation to corruption. And he seems to believe that anything done in the name of ``leveling the playing field'' for political competition is immune from First Amendment challenges.

The logic of his doctrine would cause him to put the power of the presidency behind efforts to clamp government controls on Internet advocacy. This is because the speech regulators' impulse is increasingly untethered from concern with corruption. It is extending to regulation in the name of ``fairness.'' Bob Bauer, a Democratic lawyer, says this about the metastasizing government regulation of campaigns:

``More and more, it is meant to regulate any money with the potential of influencing elections; and so any unregulated but influential money, in whichever way its influence is felt or achieved, is unfair. This explains the hand-wringing horror with which the reform community approached the Internet's fast-growing use and limitless potential.''

This is why the banner of ``campaign reform'' is no longer waved only by insurgents from outside the political establishment. Washington's most powerful people carry the banner: Led by Speaker Dennis Hastert, and with the president's approval, the Republican-controlled House recently voted to cripple the ability of citizens' groups called 527s (named after the provision of the tax code under which they are organized) to conduct independent advocacy that Washington's ruling class considers ``unfair.''

Which highlights the stark contradiction in McCain's doctrine and the media's applause of it. He and they assume, simultaneously, the following two propositions:

Proof that incumbent politicians are highly susceptible to corruption is the fact that the government they control is shot through with it. Yet that government should be regarded as a disinterested arbiter, untainted by politics and therefore qualified to regulate the content, quantity and timing of speech in campaigns that determine who controls the government. In the language of McCain's Imus appearance, the government is very much not ``clean,'' but is so clean it can be trusted to regulate speech about itself.

McCain hopes that in 2008 pro-life Republicans will remember his pro-life record. But they will know that, regarding presidents and abortion, what matters are Supreme Court nominees. McCain favors judges who think the Constitution is so radically elastic that government regulation of speech about itself is compatible with the First Amendment. So Republican primary voters will wonder: Can President McCain be counted on to nominate justices who would correct such constitutional elasticities as the court's discovery of a virtually unlimited right -- one unnoticed between 1787 and 1973 -- to abortion?

McCain told Imus that he would, if necessary, sacrifice ``quote First Amendment rights'' to achieve ``clean'' government. If on Jan. 20, 2009, he were to swear to defend the Constitution, would he be thinking that the oath refers only to ``the quote Constitution''? And what would that mean?


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government
KEYWORDS: mccainfeingold
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To: paul51

Tell me about it!


21 posted on 05/10/2006 11:41:01 PM PDT by AZ_Cowboy ("I didn't come here for a barfight, but if you insist....")
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To: isthisnickcool

It would be a perfect world if there were no special interest lobbyists. But that will never happen in this lifetime.


22 posted on 05/11/2006 3:38:47 AM PDT by stopem (To allow a bunch of third world country nationals to divide Americans is unconscionable!)
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To: Arizona Carolyn
" he hardly ever sets foot in the state.. was here a few days during Easter break and managed to get red in the face (from anger) when he made it to Sun City and started talking open borders. "

Ah Yes the infamous mcCain temper.

He's gonna blow and make dean look like the amatuer he is, seriously mc cain will self destruct. The real question is will it be during the primaries or will he make to the general election and explode ruining the general election.

I hope some one pushes his buttons in the primaries and he eliminates himself.

23 posted on 05/11/2006 3:59:01 AM PDT by Kakaze (I'm now a single issue voter.....exterminate Al Quaida)
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To: Kakaze
I hope some one pushes his buttons in the primaries and he eliminates himself.

So do I. Apparently his handlers are well aware and most of his venues this time in AZ were friendly invitees -- until he got to Sun City where they were not allowed as much control and someone really got to him there and he showed his true colors.

24 posted on 05/11/2006 10:31:42 AM PDT by Arizona Carolyn
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To: Jim Robinson


I don't want you to miss this George Will column on McCain!


25 posted on 05/12/2006 11:39:39 AM PDT by onyx (Deport the trolls --- send them back to DU)
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