Under
the Constitution, all appropriations bills must originate in the House of
Representatives, where they are given their initial shape and substance. Next, the Senate must concur or amend. If the Senate chooses to amend, the bill goes
back to the House, which can either agree to the Senate amendment, disagree, or
disagree with a further amendment. If
there is disagreement, representatives from House and Senate can meet to
resolve those differences. If they do
and succeed, then each House, first one and then the other, passes the bill,
after which it is sent on to the President.
It
is still not a new law. According to the
Constitution, the President may not amend the bill that has passed both Houses
of the Congress. He can choose to
sign it, making it a law. It does not become a law unless he does. He can choose to veto it.
In the latter case it goes back to the Congress, where it can only
become law if both Houses override the President’s veto.
I
lay this process out in some detail, because to listen to the institutional
media and most of the pundits you might think that they have all forgotten, or
never learned, how the constitutional process of making laws works. It is not an easy process. In fact it was meant to be difficult. Some seem to wish it were easy, at least for
enacting the policies that they favor.
They would wish to make one or more constitutional parties to law making redundant and of no separate account or purpose other than to do the will of their favorite other. They should, instead, take comfort that it is easier to defeat policies that they oppose.
The
genius of the Constitution for making laws is that it requires three separate
parties of people, sometimes with very different views, to come together to
make anything a law. The Founders made
it difficult because they were not very fond of new laws. They knew that an abundance of laws could
mean a scarcity of freedom. And so it is
today, but it has taken over 200 years to build up the awesome pile of laws
that regulate so much of our lives, and yet it still is harder to make a new
law than many would wish.
Our Constitution requires that a lot of people have to work together to make a new law. When they do not, nothing happens. That is why much of the federal government has run out of money and has “shut down.” A new law is needed to appropriate the money for these shuttered parts of the federal government to open.
They
will continue to be without operating money until the elected representatives
in the House and Senate and the President work together to make a new law. The Constitution forces them to work together.
Nothing will happen until they do, whether that takes a day, a week, or longer. The Constitution requires sufficient cooperation for law making. For either House, or Senate, or President to
be able to make laws without the other would impose the tyranny of one set of
views over the rest. The Constitution
will not allow that. The Constitution
forces a meeting of the minds, either by persuasion or by compromise, or in
practice some of both.
The
Constitution is a beautiful thing. I
rejoice in it. I can be patient for a
while as it does its work and forces our elected leaders to come together. The issue is not keeping parks open. The issue is preserving our freedom and our society.
The Constitution still has some power to do that.
1 comment:
What bugs me is that congressional salaries are still being paid while military training is put on hold. I consider myself blessed to still receive a paycheck, but as most government civilian workers are furloughed, our work isn't nearly as effective as it should be. Hey congress – please hurry up and decide how much money to spend on socialism so the rest of us can get back to productive work in this country!
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