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Common Sense

The Brewing War Over Earmarks

The Democrats took over Congress, pledging to curb the practice of earmarks.

They didn’t quite succeed. The omnibus spending bill they produced in December was filled with spending projects of a less-​than-​national character, most of which no congressperson but the original politician who placed it in the bill ever saw​.So, just another sad story for fiscal responsibility, eh?

No. Senator Jim DeMint asked Congress’s research organization to prepare a report on the legality of these earmarks, and on the legality of the Executive Branch just ignoring them.

The verdict? Since most earmarks were placed not in the bill itself, but in subsidiary explanatory reports, their status as law falls way short of constitutionality.

So the president could easily issue an Executive Order instructing his underlings simply to ignore the earmarks. They weren’t placed in the omnibus bill as real laws, so it would be just fine to disregard them as the extra-​legal finaglings they are.

This became a big issue in late December. Mark Tapscott, editorial page editor of The Washington Examiner, alerted his readers to the issue repeatedly; there was great Internet buzz. But the buzz didn’t yield an immediate and unequivocal response from the White House.

Though anti-​pork activists hailed the idea, Democrats have described it as all-​out war between the branches of government.

A war on illegal spending? I’m a hawk.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Why We Need Due Process

Overkill. That’s becoming the watchword of modern policework.

Take the case of Laura Elkins and John Robbins’s home-​repair brouhaha four years ago. The couple had begun work on repairing their roof, raising it a bit in the process.  They had gotten the required permits. But a neighbor complained that the repairs weren’t being done according to the historic preservations laws of the section of the District of Columbia, where they lived.

So what did the District government do? Send out a building inspector?

No. The District sent about a dozen police and D.C. Consumer Regulatory Affairs inspectors, who raided the home. With a warrant and all.

The kids were sick and had stayed home from school. And the police ransacked the place, allegedly looking for evidence.

The couple sued, and in mid-​December, the court declared in their favor. Judge Rosemary M. Collyer, of the U.S. District for the District of Columbia, ruled that the raid was an “unreasonable search and seizure,” a violation of the family’s constitutional rights to privacy. Another hearing will determine damages.

So why the overkill in the first place? Prior to the raid, the homeowners did everything by the book. Unfortunately, that wasn’t enough for one neighbor and a head bureaucrat. Or the police, whose behavior ranged from intrusive to frighteningly creepy.

Luckily, we still live in a country with due process, and boy do we need it.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Monumental Folly?

It may take big bucks to produce public art. But it doesn’t require vast tax funding.

The chief example of this is the Statue of Liberty, which was a gift from the French, and the restoration of which, some time back, was paid for by private  (mostly American) funds.

Even Maya Lin’s controversial design for the Vietnam Memorial Wall was mostly funded by privately collected monies.

Of course, the quality of art isn’t determined by the funding. I have friends who tell me I have just “got to see” the statue called “Portlandia” in Portland, Oregon, even though they’re pretty certain it was a taxpayer-​funded project. I keep forgetting to look for it each time I visit the rainy northwest city.

Most modern public art is garbage, of course. And too much public art is paid for not by volunteer donors but by taxpayers. That’s my main criticism: public art should be supported by the public voluntarily, and politicians should stay out of art patronage.

Right now, the city of Phoenix, Arizona, faces a big budget crunch. And yet the city council awarded $2.5 million to a Massachusetts artist to build a very tall public artwork. The proposed look of the project seems science-​fictional to me. It may even become an example of good public art.

What’s bad is spending other people’s money, taxpayers’ money. The people of Phoenix who wanted it should have raised the funds themselves.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Fighting for Freedom in Michigan

Even repressive regimes can have laws granting citizens certain political rights. What matters is the extent to which citizens are actually allowed to use those rights — you know, in real life.

Michigan taxpayers are trying to recall ten state legislators, from both parties, who voted to raise taxes $1.6 billion dollars. Michigan’s constitution provides citizens with a process for recall.

There’s also an effort by a number of elected and appointed government officials to plainly thwart the constitutional rights of these citizens.

State Representative Tim Melton says, “The fight is to keep them off the ballot.” His goal isn’t to win an election, but to prevent the voters from ever getting the opportunity to decide.

State House Democrats plan to use “blockers” against the recall petitioners. One Democrat, unnamed in media reports, says the plan is to “shadow” or “follow” those who circulate the petition and “have a debate with each potential signer in an attempt to convince them not to sign the recalls.”

In other words, a campaign of stalking and voter intimidation.

Those opposing the recalls also plan to tie the effort up in court. One Kent County judge recently felt the need to declare his disdain for the right to recall before ruling that “This [petition] language quite honestly is as clear as any that has come before us.”

You see, elections commissions in Wayne, Macomb and Muskegon counties have all rejected the exact same wording.

Citizens there have had to hire lawyers and appeal.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Just a Dollar

One excuse for imposing ever more controls on political fundraising and political speech is that campaign money is “corrupting.”

But you can get and spend money in a good way or a bad way. Say you steal it. Okay — bad. But suppose people give it to you voluntarily because they like your ideas and character. Also bad? Or just bad when it’s a dollar more than the legal limit?

We supposedly have “out of control” spending on, say, presidential campaigns. An Orlando Sentinel editorial explains how the endless millions yield endless obligations to special interests. Their solution? Lots more public spending on campaigns. Funding by taxpayers. Divorce financial support for campaigns from personal support.

Actually it’s the campaign finance regulation that corrupts. It boosts incumbents who know how to exploit the system, while often hobbling challengers. But let’s stipulate that privately raised money corrupts all by itself. Just get rid of it, then? In a letter to the editor, one Orlando resident suggests Congress could require campaigns to raise and spend “no more than one dollar.” Because “in that case none of the campaigns would be spending any more than a dollar — or two, if you count matching funds.”

Solves everything, right? No money, no corruption? No special interests, no horse trading, no mutual back-scratching?

Absurd you say? That’s my point.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

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Common Sense

Bonusgate

In theory, there’s supposed to be a difference between politics and governance. But in actual practice, there’s rarely much difference at all.

Take Democratic House Majority Leader Rep. Bill DeWeese. Of the several scandals he found himself embroiled in throughout 2007, the biggest was “Bonusgate,” in which employees of the state of Pennsylvania got big bonus payments for their time working on political campaigns.

Eighty of the 100 Democratic House staffers who were awarded big state bonuses in 2006 either donated money to or worked on the campaigns of eternal candidate DeWeese or his right-​hand man, former Rep. Mike Veon.

After the November 2006 election Veon found himself in the private sector. Lucky, in a way, since only after that did the $1.9 million tab for all these election-​year bonuses see light.

Representative DeWeese is in a worse pickle, since he’s still in office, and nearly everyone else in his office is pretty clearly guilty. He says that he was “misled” by his staff, and fired seven aides including his chief of staff.

Emails between top Democratic aides and Pennsylvania state house staffers reveal an interesting rating system. Aides received grades as “OK,” “good,” and “rock stars” for their work. For their work on political campaigns, that is.

Prohibitions on politicking by government workers are age-​old. But sometimes those in power who make the laws, don’t follow them too well.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.