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Rethinking the 17th

I started out to write a piece that defended the 17th Amendment as a necessary to giving the people a greater voice in the running of their national affairs. Why, if electing the members of the House of Representatives and the President are good enough for the people, then why not Senate positions? These folks are supposed to represent us just like the rest of them, right? I also have long been perplexed by the animosity that conservatives had for the direct election of Senators, because direct election just seems like a conservative ideal; let the people decide for themselves who gets to represent them, and leave them alone!
 
What I had not stopped to consider was that while there were problems with legislative elections of senators, with some internal state battles leaving some states unrepresented, or under-represented, there was no political class culture like we have now. It seems that the era of longtime membership in the Senate club, ramapant corruption, and influence peddling only became edemic to the political class after the ratification of the 17th amendment. It was then that demagoguery became part and parcel of Senate elections, it was then that "special interests" became the power brokers in DC, and it was then that Senate members began to simultaneously court their constituency and ignore that same constituency.
 
The system as it stands now is a broken down, rusted out wreck when compared to what it should have been. Legislative selection of Senators generally brought the best of the best to Washington, and they did their best to marry the needs of the nation to the expectations of their state populations. They were in many ways ambassadors of their states to Washington; they made sure that the needs, wishes, and desires of their home states were represented and taken into account when votes were being cast. It may have made for a rough time in passing presidential agendas, but isn't that supposed to be the role of the Senate? Aren't they supposed to be the place where passions are cooled and logic reigns?
 
The direct elections of Senators has basically destroyed that paradigm, and has turned the Senate into possibly the most partisan place in DC. Russ Feingold, Chuck Schumer, Lindsey Graham, and John Kyl are not exactly interested in representing their states, but in pushing their particular political agendas and ensuring that they are able to hoodwink enough of their voting populace to get re-elected. It is not about making sure that legislation will benefit the communites that sent them the Senate, because if it were would Kay Hagin be all for cap and trade, when she represents a state that is already bleeding the bedrock manufacturing jobs that cap and trade will ultimately destroy? Would a John McCain be a proponent of illegal immigration amnesty if he were honestly representing the people of Arizona who are uder seige by illegal immigrants, and the Mexican drug cartels whose wars have spilled over into their state? However, since they do not have to truly represent the interests of their states because they simply have to convince a 51% majority (in some cases a plurality) to vote for them, they are more inclined to do the bidding of their parties and their egos before considering the people they "represent". That is also why a person like me in North Carolina has a real and abiding interest in the outcome of a Senate race in Pennsylvania; the Senate has gone from a deliberative body made up of people chosen by their state legislatures to a body that can help move the country either left or right by its very makeup. Moreover, the Senate has become the instrument of the President's will more than a reflection of the state that sends them to Washington. I mean, does anyone really think that Virginia is as liberal as Mark Warner, or that New York subscribes to all the crackpot utterances of Chuck Schumer? However, that is what direct election has wrought: if Schumer can carry NYC and its liberal suburbs, he won't have to leave the Senate until he decides to.
 
So, while I understand why so many states intially were in favor of direct election, and I understand the momentum of getting the amendment passed, I have had to move from my intial idea that the 17th was a good idea. In the warm light of day, it is just what Thomas DiLorenzo said it is, "one of the last nails to be pounded into the coffin of federalism in America."
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Turn Out the Lights

Back when Monday Night Football was new "Dandy" Don Meredith, one of the three man crew along with Frank Gifford and Howard Cosell, would often start to sing "Turn out the lights, the party's over" when the game was pretty much in hand and one team was about to earn a victory. Well, when I began to look at what our government is doing with the "stimulus" legislation, I realized that the song needed to be dusted off to say goodbye to the quaint notion of federalism.
 
I am sure that most of you know exactly what federalism is, but for the unitiated here's a quick thumbnail explanation: federalism is the constitutional concept of the Founders of this Republic of ours that separated the powers of the federal and state governments. In short, there were supposed to be areas where the states reigned supreme, areas that were the province of the national government alone, and ultimately the federal government was to have as little interaction with the various state governments as possible. That's it: simple and brilliant.
 
But this recent "stimulus" legislation has totally blown that concept to shreds, putting the notion of federalism out of its misery. To be sure, the idea of federalism has been steadily weakened in this nation, with the federal government continually creeping into the picture and sticking its dirty fingers into the pies of the states. The federal government has stuck its nose into so many different state matters, from education to road maintainence, that most people figured the concept was already dead. But the fact is, even with the increase of federal creep into the private affairs of the states the concept was at least paid lip service by our elected leaders. But no more! The "stimulus" bill has finally disabused us of the notion that the states are willing or able to make it on their own without federal intervention.
 
This abomination of a bill has the effect, outside of being the jumping off point for the open practice of creating a socialistic economy, of making the various states simply clients of the government in Washington. Far too many of the states have taken budget surpluses and turned them into deficits because of poor fiscal management and profligate spending. I mean really, how else does a state manage to run up a 40 plus BILLION dollar deficit? As they so succintly stated on an episode of The Simpson's "tax and spend, tax and spend!" Now the bill for all of the spending has come due, the federal government has offered them a Faustian bargain, and the states are tripping over each other to get a spot at the trough. Hell, my esteemed governor Beverly Perdue was just saying that she would drive a truck to South Carolina to collect any money that their governor, Mark Sanford did not want! Yes, I know it was a "joke"...but that is not the kind of "joke" a sitting governor should be making. And the sad part is that the governors, the state legislators, and the national representatives for the various states, especially the Democrats, seem to be more than willing to give away state autonomy for a few billion dollars to bail them out of their self made messes. Futher, the few governors out there that would rather not become simple sattelites for the DC government are being attacked and derided for not lining up with the rest of the beggars to get their share of the governmental alms!
 
And that is why we can say R-I-P to our notion of federalism. We have changed from a nation that looked at government as a helper of LAST resort to a nation that demands that government fix our personal problems for us. We have become a nation that thinks the President can, or should care to, get us a better job than we have at McDonald's, or that he can provide us with a home when we can't afford one. And our states have become the latest victims of the welfare mentality that has broken so many homes in this country; they have decided that they won't do the work to provide for themselves because Big Daddy Government is there to fix all that ails us. So I just have one thing to say to the concept of federalism....
 
Turn out the lights, the party's over!
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