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The Broken
Branch:
An Unusual Lawsuit
Takes Congress to Task For
Shoddy and Partisan Lawmaking, In Which
A Bill Is Unconstitutionally Being Treated as Law
John W. Dean
Find Law/Legal News & Commentary
March 10, 2006
Two
seasoned non-partisan Congress-watchers have teamed up (again) to
report some bad news about Congress, assessing a decade of
Republican rule. Thomas Mann, a senior fellow at the Brookings
Institute, and Norman Ornstein, a resident scholar at the American
Enterprise Institute, have written a new book,
The Broken Branch: How Congress Is
Failing America and How to Get it Back on Track.
While I am familiar with
the prior work of Mann and Ornstein, which is always distinguished
by its excellence, all that I know about their new book, to be
published in June 2006, is the pre-publication description.
According to the publisher (Oxford Press), this latest work reveals
that after forty years of Democratic control, the House of
Representatives was in need of reform. But that did not happen
Republicans promised reform
in 1994, when they won control of the House for the first time in
four decades. But rather than deliver it, GOP leadership has -
according to Mann and Ornstein - undermined the institution through
"the demise of regular order, the decline of deliberation and the
weakening of our system of checks and balances."
Speaker Dennis
Hastert is described in the pre-publication material, based on his
own words, as more of "a lieutenant of the president than a steward
of the House." Accordingly, Mann and Ornstein's book suggests, "the
legislative process has been bent to serve immediate presidential
interests and have often resulted in poorly crafted and stealthily
passed laws."
Mann and Ornstein could not
be timelier. For shoddy and overly partisan lawmaking has become the
norm in the House, and it is now creeping into the Senate. GOP
leaders are simply ignoring fundamental Constitutional requirements.
A prototypical example is
found in the handling of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 - S.
1932.
The $2 Billion Typo
After months of haggling,
the Senate passed S. 1932, a law that would purportedly reduce the
deficit. (In fact, it has failed to do so. That, however, is not the
subject I wish to address.) The means the bill employed were grim:
It placed much of the financial burden upon the elderly, the poor
and the young, hacking away at benefits previously available under
Medicare, Medicaid and student loan programs. No wonder that to pass
this measure through the Senate required Vice President Dick Cheney
to fly back from the Middle East to cast a tie-breaking vote. S.
1932 passed the Senate 51 to 50 just before Christmas 2005.
In one provision of the
bill, the Senate voted that oxygen equipment used in the home was to
be paid for by Medicare for only up to 36 months. (Previously, the
law had sensibly paid these expenses as long as needed by the
patient.) The Senate placed an even tighter cap of 13 months'
payment for other durable equipment, like wheelchairs, for Medicare
beneficiaries.
Column continues below ?
But when the Senate sent
the bill back to the House, a Senate clerk mistakenly put the 36
months, from the vote on the oxygen provision, in place of the13-
month cap for other equipment -- thus providing up to36 months'
coverage for all such equipment. It was a $2 billion error.
On February 1, 2006, S.
1932 squeaked through the House - after heavy lobbying by Republican
leaders - by a vote of 216 to 214. When this measure was returned to
the Senate, however, the Senate clerk simply changed the provision
that had been mistakenly sent to the House to reflect the
Senate-passed version. That is, the clerk restored the Senate's 13
month cap for the other durable equipment, notwithstanding the fact
the House had voted for a longer 36-month cap.
House Speaker Hastert and
president pro tempore of the Senate Ted Stevens certified the Senate
measure and sent it to the White House, where the President quickly
signed it.
The $2 Billion Typo and Its
"Correction" Are Revealed
When Democratic members of
the House leaned that the Senate and Speaker Hastert had sent the
President legislation that was substantially different that what the
House had passed - different to the tune of $2 billion dollars --
they were understandably upset. They had already been shut out of
the process: The entire legislative package of cuts had largely been
agreed upon behind closed doors, without any Democrats present - now
standard procedure in the GOP controlled Congress -- and the vote in
the House had been taken after midnight, which is another ploy
frequently relied upon by the GOP leaders. But this added injury to
insult: The legislation that had gone to the President, was
materially different from the legislation upon which they had voted!
When such mistakes occur,
they are usually corrected with appropriate legislation. Often, this
is done by unanimous consent of both the House and the Senate. But
this time, House Democrats refused to roll over. They decided they
would demand a record vote - the kind that, for good reason,
frightens Republicans in an election year - and they wanted the vote
to be taken on the entire bill, not merely on corrective
legislation, because they believed that Republicans might not have a
majority again for these harsh measures.
But that was not what
happened. Instead, Senate GOP leaders simply changed the bill, and
Speaker Hastert rolled over, on behalf of the House.
Was this constitutional?
It's very doubtful. Will they get away with it? Very possible.
The Unconstitutionality Of
This Slap Dash Procedures
California Democratic
Congressman Henry Waxman solicited the views of a number of
Constitutional experts on this very question.
FindLaw's Michael Dorf advised the Congressman
that "Article
I, Section 7 of the Constitution specifies that a
bill becomes a law when passed by both house of Congress and signed
by the President. S. 1932 was not passed by the House of
Representatives. Thus, it is not a law."
University of North
Carolina School of Law professor Michael Gerhardt similarly said,
"This legislation is question does not satisfy the requirements of
the Bicameral Clause of the Constitution." And American University
law professor Jamin Raskin reported, "The 'Deficit Reduction Omnibus
Reconciliation Act of 2005' may be something but it is not law
within the meaning of the Constitution."
George Washington
University law professor Jonathan Turley noted, "Obviously, the
Speaker cannot certify a different bill as the will of the House of
Representatives. If he could do that, he cold become a House unto
himself." And Georgetown University law professor David Vladeck told
Congressman Waxman that these actions violated "one of the most
fundamental guarantees in the Constitution."
Remarkably, the White House
said nothing. The President has been prolific in attaching signing
statements to legislation lately - for instance, to try to limit the
effect of the McCain anti-torture amendment - but it seem the While
House has little interest in signing statements (or vetoes) when
they like the law, even if it was enacted contrary to the
Constitution.
Testing Whether Congress
Must Follow The Constitution
This is rather cavalier
behavior for federal officials who demand "strict constructions"
from federal judges. Many Republicans are offended by this activity,
however, and one of them has decided to test the legality of this
behavior.
Mobile, Alabama attorney
Jim Zeigler has filed a lawsuit seeking a declaratory judgment that
the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 violates Article I, Section 7 of
the Constitution. Zeigler, who served as a Bush delegate to the
Republican National Conventions in 200 and 2004, has sued the
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and the Unites States Attorney for
the Southern District of Alabama, where he filed his lawsuit.
Zeigler's complaint
alleges that he represents senior citizens who seek coverage under
the provisions of the law amended by the Deficit Reduction Act of
2005. But given the conspicuous failure of Congress to honor the
Constitution, he alleges, he is "unable to counsel his clients"
whether they should comply with the old law or the new law, which he
believes to be unconstitutional.
No action has yet been
taken on Zeigler's lawsuit. But if the court finds he has standing
to bring the claim, he should prevail. The provision on which he
suit depends is not a technicality, but rather, a linchpin of our
constitutional system.
Some may claim that this is
a political question, but such rhetoric ought not mislead the court;
this constitutional provision is black-letter clear, and so is its
violation here. Either both houses have passed on a given bill, or
they have not. Passing on two different versions of the same bill is
surely not enough.
The requirement of
bicameralism is as crucial as it is simple. During the debates of
the Constitutional Convention, the need for a bicameral
(two-chamber) legislature was specifically addressed by James
Wilson, who later to became a Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court,
known for his scholarship. At the nation's founding, Wilson
observed: "Despotism comes on mankind in different shapes. . . If
the Legislative authority be not restrained, there can be neither
liberty nor stability; and it can only be restrained by dividing it
within itself, into distinct and independent branches. In a single
house there is no check, but the inadequate one, of the virtue &
good sense of those who compose it."
In short, ignoring the
Constitution's requirement that legislation pass if, and only if, it
commands the votes of concurrent majorities of both houses of
Congress is nothing short of GOP despotism. The broken branch needs
fixing so we must all hope that the federal courts step in to halt
what the President failed to put an end to: self-styled lawmaking
outside the rules of the Constitution.
John W. Dean, a FindLaw columnist, is a former
counsel to the president.
http://writ.findlaw.com/dean/20060310.html
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