Charles Scaliger
The
New American
October 6, 2013
With the partial government shutdown now in its fifth day, the rhetoric among
Democrats and among the pro-Beltway mainstream media has reached a fever pitch,
with the leaders of the Republican opposition being likened to jihadists and
terrorists, and pilloried for their alleged callous and irresponsible behavior.
The federal government, as a Reuters story observed on October 1 — without a
trace of irony — has had to divide its functions and employees between
“essential” and “non-essential,” and furlough or idle the latter. Thus, we now
have the federal government reduced to discharging only “essential” functions —
which, it turns out, is still roughly 85 percent of what it was doing prior to
October 1.
Forgotten or ignored in all the jockeying for political advantage is the fact
that the Founders limited the federal government in the Constitution to those
functions that they deemed “essential” — that is, those things which only the
Federal government could properly do, like negotiate treaties with foreign
powers, declare and conduct war, run a postal system, and deal with disputes
between the states. And, lest there be any doubt among their posterity of the
limits imposed on their federal creation, the Founders then clarifies in the
final amendment of the Bill of Rights — the Tenth — that powers not expressly
delegated by the Constitution to the federal government were reserved to the
states or to the people. The federal government, in other words, may exercise
only those powers enumerated in the Constitution.
Those enumerated powers were the “essential functions” of the federal
government, though not necessarily of government in general. The Founders left
open the possibility that state or local governments would choose to discharge
functions above and beyond what the federal government was authorized to do. In
the founding era and for generations thereafter, most government was, in fact,
state or local. On the states, the Constitution only imposed the condition that
they enjoy a republican form of government, but the latitude inherent in the
federal system that they created ensured a wide diversity in the types of
functions and services that state and local governments would have the power to
perform.
During the 19th Century, for instance, many states, following the example of
Virginia, decided to create state universities which had as their core
curriculum the agricultural sciences. It was widely believed that encouragement
of agriculture via teaching and research was enough of a public good to warrant
funding at the state level. During that same period, local governments began
setting up schools that were publicly funded, and by the 1870s all states had at
least some publicly-funded elementary schools. Soon thereafter, states began
passing laws making some level of education compulsory, reasoning that it would
be in the public good. In other words, the view developed that providing schools
and universities came to be regarded as an “essential function” of government —
but not of the federal government. In point of fact, America’s public and
private education flourished until well into the 20th Century, when the federal
government became involved in education. Now, public schools are a disaster, and
tuition at colleges and universities is far beyond what most people can afford.
And this, because, at some juncture, Americans allowed themselves to be
persuaded that federal government involvement in public (and private) education
— dictating and standardizing curricula, subsidizing student loans, subsidizing
research, among many other things — is an “essential function” of the Federal
government.
The same could be said for much of what the federal government is now
involved in. Nowhere does the Constitution authorize federal involvement in
education, in health care, in food safety, in environmental regulations, in the
stock markets, in the automobile industry, in the insurance sector, in the
creation and maintenance of national parks, in the regulation of
pharmaceuticals, in the legalization (or illegalization) of drugs, in local law
enforcement, in the regulation of firearms use and ownership, in the providing
of retirement insurance (Social Security), in the stipulation of minimum wages,
or any of a host of other things now deemed “essential.”
The federal government, if reduced to its constitutionally mandated range of
functions, would be only a tiny fraction of the sprawling, grasping monstrosity
that now confronts us. Instead of presuming to run everything, the federal
government would focus on exercising those few powers authorized by the
Constitution. It would correspondingly cost a fraction of what it does now, and
would begin, miraculously, to live within its means.
The current shutdown, involving as it does the elimination of only a small
part of constitutionally non-essential government, is nonetheless a welcome
development. The very fact that Washington has been forced to admit that much of
what it does is “non-essential” is an important wake-up call.
But the terms of the debate are still being framed in terms of prudent public
policy rather than constitutionality, which is why most extra-constitutional
activities of the federal government are in no political jeopardy — yet. We may
hope, however, that the current shutdown, like the sequester earlier this year,
will lead to permanent reductions in the size and cost of the federal
government, and the gradual public awareness that, after all, those services
were not needed, at least at the federal level. Over the longer haul, perhaps,
government shutdowns and cutbacks could become a habit, leading, eventually, to
a much smaller, constitutional federal government that is more of a blessing for
Americans than a burden.
Sunday, October 6, 2013
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