Posted on 01/05/2019 5:13:44 AM PST by Impy
In 1995, Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan declared, Sometime in the next century the United States is going to have to address the question of apportionment in the Senate. Perhaps that time has come. Today the voting power of a citizen in Wyoming, the smallest state in terms of population, is about 67 times that of a citizen in the largest state of California, and the disparities among the states are only increasing. The situation is untenable.
(Excerpt) Read more at theatlantic.com ...
Where America’s day begins.
I wouldn’t be surprised, once Trump is gone, if the Dhimmicraps revive FDR’s court packing plan: one new justice for every one over 70.
Each state is a sovereign political entity. The equal of every other state. The founding fathers no doubt drew the idea of a bi-cameral legislature from England, the purpose of the Senate was not entirely the same as the House Lords.
Just my thinking on it.
If you broke California in six pieces, probably four would be red states to a greater or lesser degree.
If you separated New York City (or even Greater New York) from the rest of New York State, upstate would be a red-leaning purple. (Albany and Buffalo would keep it from being hardcore red.)
Tell it to West Virginia.
In fairness, that was the system when the famous Lincoln-Douglas debates occurred, and voters chose pro-Douglas or pro-Lincoln legislators, thus indirectly having a popular election to the Senate.
Not nearly as good as the senator he defeated.
Or one District Judge from Hawaii. 😀
You mean Virginia. The people of West Virginia voted to approve their admission into the Union.
Right. By the time the 17th was adopted, only a couple states did not not have indirect popular election of senators anyway, either by linking a US Senate candidate to state legislators, or by holding ‘advisory’ popular votes. Most history glosses over the details.
Yes, but it was Virginia’s territory, and Virginia did not approve. West Virginia may well be illegal.
1. Virginia can't have it both ways. If they seceded from the Union, then they can't cite the U.S. Constitution as a legal argument against the establishment of West Virginia.
2. If Virginia felt they could legitimately secede from the Union, then they must acknowledge that West Virginia could secede from Virginia. Secession works more ways than one, doesn't it?
Point #2 should not be underestimated. It's one of the big factors that has effectively ended the secessionist movement north of the border in Quebec. During their last secession referendum, the leadership of almost every native tribe with a reservation in the province -- and land claims over much of the vast wilderness of northern Quebec -- publicly announced that if Quebec seceded from Canada, their tribes intended to secede from Quebec and remain in Canada.
Again, its not and never was a good idea
No right thinking person approves of non
democratic features in our constitutional
republic
Appointed Senators was a corrupted process
States rights gives blue states all the cover they think
need to behave unConstitutionally
Focus on establishing term limits for SCOTUS and
Congressmen instead of antiquarian whining
“Voting Power” makes no sense in this context. You might as well say that the guy in Vermont has 50 times the voting power for governor as the guy in California.
WHen in fact, each person has exactly the SAME voting power to pick their governor, and their senator. Which is that each person has the chance to be in the majority to pick the winner.
I would not oppose California being broken up into multiple states, it is really way too big, big enough that it can pretend to be it’s own country.
"The framers believed that in electing senators, state legislatures would cement their ties with the national government. They also expected that senators elected by state legislatures would be freed from pressures of public opinion and therefore better able to concentrate on legislative business and serve the needs of each state. In essence, senators would serve as states ambassadors to the federal government.This made me laugh..."state legislatures would cement their ties with the national government." I guess the Founders did not anticipate the Fed government collecting such enormous amounts of our wealth and recycling some back to the various states which thoroughly "cemented the ties."Unfortunately, problems with this system soon arose, particularly when state legislators failed to agree on a Senate candidate, causing frequent Senate vacancies. By 1826 proposals for direct election of senators began appearing, but it took reformers nearly a century to achieve this constitutional change."
There's a good write-up at Wikipedia "Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution."
Thanks Impy.
The problem is that constitutionally ignorant voters don't understand that most of the spending programs that candidates promise to get themselves elected as federal lawmakers are based on constitutionally nonexistent federal powers.More importantly, what they don't understand is that the money being spent belonged to the states. Now it is taken at the federal level via the 16th amendment and spent there or doled back to the states with strings attached.
What if the states never gave that money to the federal government, and instead spent it locally via state legislative authorization? Roads and bridges would get fixed. Jobs would grow locally. It would vary by state based on each state's needs.
Instead, the federal government taxes the money away from state use and then gives it to Egypt and Syria, spends it on failed alternative energy programs, or pays illegal aliens to reside here with food stamps.
Return control of the Senate back to the states, and then give the states a say in how much money is taken from them and how it is spent.
The GOP could block grant a lot of the federal budget back to the states for their use...and leave it open ended. They can spend it on entitlements or pay down debt or reduce state taxes, etc.They could also target redundancy by allowing states to enforce some regulations thereby eliminating centralized, national control and improving federalism - competition between the states.
What do you think?
I think this decision tree has many branches. Your suggestions accept the notion that that the states give up the money in the first place, and then trust the federal government to repatriate that money back in an honest way. That is the status quo.
Block granting the money back to the states still results in redistribution. I can see the arguments both ways. On the one hand: White flight, Rustbelt flight, Sunbelt flight, urban flight, whatever, is unfair to the people left behind who can't flee. Therefore the federal government must tax the rich states to preserve the poor states. On the other hand: the destination states have pro-growth policies that attract those willing to work, have favorable tax policies that let workers keep more of their earnings, have right to work policies that attract business, have Republican leadership.
The GOP has a terrible time making these arguments.
I can't imagine the federal government ceding redundant powers back to the states to perform locally for two reasons: 1) they would have to cede the funds back as well for the states to afford it, 2) the federal government today is suing states to stop redundant efforts. Redundancy ultimately leads to political conflict.
The radical alternative is to drastically cut federal taxes and let the states increase state taxes, concurrent with a reduction in federal services that would now be assumed by the states. The natural Leftist argument is that it is just tax cuts for the rich. The Right argument should be that is pays for the localization of government services, but the governments providing the services are the states, not the feds.
The Left would then fall back to my first point that states like Michigan with cities like Detroit could never survive on their own without federal aid, while the Right would say that it was Democrat rule that killed the state in the first place and caused its citizens to flee. Again, the GOP would be terrible at making that argument.
Finally, the Left wants "equal protection" in all things, including state character. They want Texas to be like New York, Florida to be like California, Utah to be like Oregon. The thought that someone in Utah some day might not be able to get an abortion without having to travel to Oregon is horrifying to them, even if they never set foot in Utah in their entire lives. The thought that Texans might keep their earnings in Texas to be spent locally by Texas politicians is equally horrifying.
Today, Senators from California, Oregon, and New York can dictate spending in Utah, Texas, and Florida. The poor states are actually stronger when they band together as a national party bloc that can raid the rich states, through the people electing Senators who will toe the party line. I can't imagine states taking a predatory view towards other states if their Senators were appointed by their respective legislatures.
So in the fight by liberals for national uniformity (to their will and vision) what’s more important? Money.Block grant it to the states and starve the federal government. It’s the supposition of liberals that the federal government is better than the state government. That’s not true.
Let redundancies that focus on intrastate issues be resolved within that state. Block grant the funds, ideally without limitation, and federalism thrives.
How else can you undo the federal monster politically? This is feasible and has the political cover necessary - we’re keeping the same funds, moving them closer to the people/issue/problem and therefore the solution.
People don’t trust or believe in DC.
I agree that block granting back to the states is more feasible than cutting off the money flow to the federal government at the start. We'll just have to live with the fact of the feds siphoning off money from the states just to (we hope) give it back to them later.
My original point had to do with party bloc politics as the motive for Senators, not state issues. The point of the Senate spending recklessly was supported by Senators owing fealty to the party because of the necessity of running for elections. They become obligated to endorse the party agenda because of accepting campaign cash.
This is also true regarding the liberal agenda that often conflicts with the wishes of the people of certain individual states. Liberals believe in national uniformity, as you state, whereas Republicans believe in more local control. My point is that I think it would be harder for Senators to fall in line with a liberal national uniformity agenda if they were appointed by their state legislatures. It's the need for campaign funds that pushes them to support the party bloc agenda over their respective state agenda.
In this case, the "money" is campaign money, not crony capitalism money, which is also a problem. My concern is that block granting back to the states is a de facto transfer of power from Congress to the states, which might make it also a difficult task to accomplish. Today, some money goes back to the states via federal programs, but much money also goes offshore as foreign aid. I'm not against foreign aid, but I want wise foreign aid. I don't understand why Obama would bypass a Congressional ban on purchasing Russian helicopters, when he could spend that money here on our own aeronautics industry. The same goes with funding questionable groups or countries, while at the same time claiming hurt with needed domestic services. If states only sent enough money to Washington to fund Constitutional services, and then let the states perform those services in place of the federal government, we wouldn't become the world's ATM machine.
If that vision were to occur, it would fly in the face of liberal national uniformity. They would complain that Rhode Island or Idaho won't be able to offer the same quality of social services as California or Massachusetts, so it won't be fair that the random act of being born there limits one's access to quality services. Then we'd get Obama's favorite strawman argument, which child is more important to you, the sick child in Idaho or the starving child in Rhode Island? Liberals think they need a behemoth federal government to make it fair and equal across the entire country.
Changing the nature of the Senate, first by the 17th amendment to take away state control, and now by packing the Senate with proportional representation like in the House, will totally destroy the purpose of federalism via a bicameral Congress, but will solidify the left's ability to force national uniformity of the liberal vision.
-PJ
Its the “penumbra” of the Constitution.
bump
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