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American
politics is
mostly about the
personalities of
the people who
serve in office
or aspire to
it.
Personalities
make good
theater. They
keep the press
in profits. They
keep people
interested and
entertained.
The people in
politics embody
the best and
worst of our
American system
of government.
But our system
isn’t just about
the people who
serve in the
institutions of
government; it
is also about
the institutions
themselves.
Congress, one of
the pillars of
our political
and governmental
system, the seat
of power in our
democratic
republic, is an
institution
suffering from
age and
neglect. Our
seat of
government is
losing its
legs. In this
Presidential
election year,
public attention
will be riveted
on the
personalities of
the candidates,
but more
attention should
be focused on
the institutions
in which those
elected will
serve.
I spent 40 years
in Congress, and
not in all of
that time did I
ever have the
sense that the
institution
itself was
incapable of
handling the
people’s
business. I
believe that is
the case
now.
Complex issues
such as energy
independence,
long-term health
care, retirement
security,
individual
security, tax
reform, and
homeland
security have
been passed
over, glossed
over and treated
cosmetically for
so long, they
have taken on
gargantuan and
unmanageable
dimensions.
They have become
chronic problems
that defy
comprehensive
solution. The
legislative
process can no
longer handle
the backlog of
issues and
problems that
have building
for years —
Social Security
solvency, to
name just one.
The institution
resists change.
It merely shifts
the demand for
change from one
Congress to
another.
Congress needs
reform. This
venerable, great
parliamentary
institution of
modern times is
suffering from
fatigue and old
age. It is
moving more
slowly into the
21st
Century than
most other
influences on
American life,
from cultural
diversity to
technology. And
it is not
serving that
fundamental
responsibility
envisioned by
the Founding
Fathers to be a
check in a
system of checks
and balances.
Today, there are
too many checks
and not enough
balance.
Congress should
establish a
Joint Committee
on Structural
Reform to
examine the
structural needs
in both Houses
and report
recommendations
to modernize the
Congress as soon
as possible. The
first Article of
our great
Constitution
established the
Congress while
allowing, “each
House to
establish its
own rules of
proceeding.”
From the very
beginning, the
two Houses used
joint committees
to resolve their
differences and
reform their
procedures.
Here are several
areas in the
structure of the
Congress, mostly
internal, that
need immediate
attention:
Committee
Jurisdictions:
The
911 Commission
had it right
when it
recommended
identical
Homeland
Security
Committees in
the House and
Senate. Why not
all the
committees? The
garbled
jurisdictional
overlays breed
jealousy and
protectiveness
so movement is
stopped or
painfully slow.
Authorizations
don’t get done
and conferences
break down.
Executive Branch
officials spend
endless hours on
the Hill running
from committee
to committee to
testify.
Committee staffs
end up in
tedious
disputes,
writing
memoranda of
understanding to
assert
jurisdiction and
control.
The
Appropriations
process:
The
appropriations
process is
broken.
Appropriations
are unauthorized
or contain
authorizations
contrary to
House rules.
Appropriations
are often held
hostage by
ineffective
authorization
and budget
processes. The
result is
mammoth stop gap
continuing
resolutions,
omnibus bills
and bloated
supplementals
that attempt to
solve too many
problems in too
little time,
with too many
players in the
game. As a
former
appropriator I
am willing to at
least discuss
what some would
call unthinkable
– appropriations
folded into
authorizing
committees.
The
Congressional
Budget Process:
The Budget
Process is also
broken. The
scoring of
emergency
spending, the
roles of
enhanced
rescissions and
pay-go
budgeting, all
need a second
look. A two-year
budget cycle
should be
considered, as
election year
budgets have
become mostly
political
documents. The
Budget Process
hasn’t been
thoughtfully and
thoroughly
reviewed since
its inception in
1974, and it
won’t be done
correctly unless
both Houses sit
down together to
do it.
Congressional
Oversight:
Congress can’t
seem to get its
oversight
responsibilities
right. It’s
either not
enough or too
much. At times,
it’s either
political
protectionism or
political
retribution.
Oversight is
best done in
pursuit of a
legitimate
legislative
purpose, not a
political point.
Congress has a
constitutional
and
institutional
obligation to
conduct
oversight of the
government, but
for the sole
purpose of
making the
government
function better.
The
Legislative
Schedule:
The failure of
the committee
system has left
unproductive
gaps in floor
activity, and
without votes on
the floor it is
harder to get a
quorum to enable
the committees
to act. Time is
wasted. There
has to be a
proper balance
between the
needs of the
members to be
back in their
districts as
well as in
Washington. The
two Houses
should explore
options for
meeting times,
possibly two
full consecutive
weeks a month
working, with
Committees or
Subcommittees
meeting all five
days. Two weeks
would be off so
that elected
representatives
could be at home
with their
constituents in
the spirit of
the “citizen
legislator.”
Procedural
Gridlock:
In the House,
the majority
regularly and
consistently
violates the
rights of the
minority. In
the Senate, the
minority
regularly and
consistently
violates the
rights of the
majority. The
result is
undemocratic,
unfair and
unproductive.
The abuse of
procedures, most
notably in the
Senate, stymies
progress and
makes it
difficult to get
legislation to
the President’s
desk. In the
modern Senate,
it takes a
two-thirds vote
to pass
virtually any
piece of
legislation. The
threat of a
filibuster on
every possible
motion has
resulted in
nameless holds
on legislation
and hour after
hour of an empty
chamber
conducting
phantom quorum
calls. For many
Americans, the
Senate on C-Span
has become
nothing more
than a classical
music channel.
These are basic,
inside-baseball
problems that
thwart the
process and
leave the
American people
bewildered as to
why more doesn’t
get done. The
truth is the
American people
have little
knowledge of how
Congress
functions, or
why and how it
evolved over the
past 220 years.
And until the
people
understand their
Congress,
Congress will be
unable to
address the
critical,
complex issues
of our time.
A joint
committee –
comprised of
Republicans and
Democrats,
Members of the
House and
Members of the
Senate – would
go a long way
towards
beginning the
necessary public
dialogue on how
our institutions
should perform.
It
would also be a
good beginning
towards undoing
the structural
gridlock that
confounds our
Congress – and
our Nation.
--###--
The Honorable
Bob Michel
served in the
U.S. House of
Representatives
from 1957 to
1995. He served
as Republican
Whip from 1975
to 1980, and as
Republican
Leader from 1981
to 1995.
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