Townhall...
The
Myth of Bi-Partisan
By Rich Galen
7/29/2011
While
waiting for the debt limit vote
…
The
entire near solar system is
begging and pleading for Washington to exercise a concept known as
“bipartisanship.” By “bipartisan” they mean, of course “non-partisan”
as in
“without regard to political party.”
The
two-party system is mentioned
nowhere in the U.S. Constitution, but there is absolutely nothing
non-partisan
about our form of government. In fact, I believe that if the founding
fathers
(there were no founding mothers, back in the day) had known how
formalized -
maybe fossilized - the two-party system was going to become, they would
have
found a way to force at least one of these three organizations: The
U.S. House,
the U.S. Senate or the Executive Branch to be in the control of a party
different from the other two.
In
Washington everything is divided
between two parties - it is muy-partisan. In the very Chambers of the
U.S.
House and Senate, members of the Republican party sit separately from
Democrats. That’s where the phrase “other side of the aisle” comes
from.
Democrats sit on one side of the House or Senate floor, Republicans on
the
other with a central aisle between them.
The
rules of the House and Senate are
specifically designed to recognize the existence of two - and only two
-
parties. There are Majority and Minority Leaders in both the House and
the
Senate. It is understood they represent which party controls the
chamber. In
the 112th Congress the Majority leader is a Republican in the House,
but a
Democrat in the Senate.
In
controlling the chamber they also
control every committee, every officer (Clerk of the House, Secretary
of the
Senate, and so on), the schedule of what bill comes to the floor and
when it
will be considered and just about every other aspect of life in the
Capitol
complex.
If
there were five political parties,
there would still be a majority coalition which would be run by the
Majority
Leader but in the United States Congress, in 2011, there are only two.
There
are the odd (and I do mean odd)
independents. But, they have to choose to caucus with one of the two
existing
parties or they won’t get committee assignments, seniority, office
space or
trips to the Paris Air Show.
The
Executive branch is no less
partisan.
In
the beginning, Presidential
Electors did not vote for President and Vice President; only for
President.
Whoever came in second was named VP. In the pesky election of 1800,
John Adams
won the Presidency, but Aaron “Sure Shot” Burr and Thomas Jefferson
tied for
second in the Electoral College and the matter was thrown into the U.S.
House.
Burr
won, but it led to the 12th
Amendment which states in part that when the Electors meet “they shall
name in
their ballots the person voted for as President, and in distinct
ballots the
person voted for as Vice-President.”
From
that has evolved the concept of
Republican Administrations and Democrat Administrations.
Anyone
who has applied for one of the
3,000 or so jobs as a political appointee in any modern Administration
has had
to prove his or her fealty to the party which won the Presidency (and,
as we
have learned today) the Vice Presidency. These are different from the 2
million
civil service employees who can be of either party.
To
round out the three branches, the
President nominates individuals to the Federal courts; Judges to the
District
and Circuit Courts all the way to Justices of the Supreme Court.
In
the nomination and Senate
confirmation process for federal judges party loyalty is a huge driver
- either
moving someone through the procedure quickly, or stalling their
appointment
depending upon how well the Senate and the President are getting along.
When
you hear cable news anchors
bemoan the inability of the two parties to play nicely one with the
other ask
yourself what we call systems which don’t have two contentious
political
parties.
Dictatorship.
Read
it at Townhall
|