Liberals
seem to be doubling down on unpopular policies, while hoping they get
lucky and the economy turns around. Time will tell if Members of
Congress are listening to the voters or gambling away their jobs.
Obamacare's First Big Test
The
voters told Washington, D.C. to change its ways. Yet Speaker of the
House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) still pushed for her version of an unpopular
Obamacare bill. Pelosi's proposal would destroy up to 5.5 million jobs,
according to the House Republican Conference chaired by Congressman
Mike Pence (R-IN). Pence argues that this bill would raise taxes by
$729.5 billion, expand spending by $1.06 trillion, may drive 114
million people off private health insurance and create or expand 43
entitlement programs.
If you like big government, you'd love
Pelosi's version of Obamacare. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
continues to hide his health care bill. We won't know for a few weeks
what Reid's version of Obamacare would do to raise taxes, destroy jobs
and expand government. Reid announced last week that the Senate isn't
prepared to debate health care reform. In fact, that debate may not
happen until next year.
Judge David Hamilton is No Alexander Hamilton
Senator
Jeff Sessions (R-AL) has circulated a letter to all Senators expressing
deep concerns about the nomination of David Hamilton, a U.S. District
Judge in Indiana, to be promoted to the Seventh Circuit Court of
Appeals. Sessions wrote, "in more than a few instances, Judge Hamilton
has used his position as a district court judge to drive a political
agenda." Senators will be voting on this nomination as early as next
week and this will be another test of whether the elites in the Senate
care about the will of the voters, as expressed last week.
Hamilton
says that evolving case law and empathy are good ways to read new
rights into the Constitution for political purposes. Hamilton wrote the
Senate Judiciary Committee that, "federal judges take an oath to
administer justice without respect to persons, and to do equal right to
the poor and to the rich. Empathy -- to be distinguished from sympathy
-- is important in fulfilling that oath." If you agree with Supreme
Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor (she says the Second Amendment to the
Constitution is not a fundamental right), then you'll love Hamilton. As
a former vice president for litigation and a board member of the
Indiana branch of the ACLU, he's demonstrated empathy to liberal causes
and distain for conservatism.
Senator Barbara Boxer (D-Copenhagen)
Seems
like some Senators are more worried about approval ratings among
Europeans than among Americans. Last week, Sen. Boxer (D-CA) ignored
long standing precedent in the Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee and reported out the Kerry-Boxer cap-and-tax bill out of
committee without the participation of Republicans. Senator Jim Inhofe
(R-OK) accused Boxer of "decid(ing) to ignore the entreaties of all 6
ranking members from Senate committees with some share of jurisdiction
over climate change legislation, as well as leading moderates in the
Senate." Boxer is attempting to deliver a victory for President Obama
to a global warming conference of world leaders in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Capitalism Under Attack
According
to Politico, the financial reform legislation being pushed by liberals
in the House may include a provision to give the federal government the
power to break up or shrink banks and other financial firms that are
deemed by bureaucrats to be "to big to fail." The legislation would
give bureaucrats the power to declare that a bank in good financial
standing is a future systemic risk. The House is also working on
several other financial regulatory bills, including one that would
establish a consumer financial protection agency, and will combine them
all together into one huge package at a later date.
Senator
Chris Dodd (D-CT) unveils his version a new regulatory scheme for
financial companies next week and is working on securing Senate floor
time for after Thanksgiving. Dodd's bill may merge several of the
existing regulators into one agency, and is expected to fold the Fed's
existing bank regulatory powers into the new bureaucracy.
The
voters were on the record last week saying no to big government. Yet
elites in Washington, D.C. are still acting as if only government can
solve the ills of America. They just don't get it.
Brian Darling is director of U.S. Senate Relations at The Heritage Foundation.