Super Congress A Gift to K Street
by
Ron Paul
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The Super Congress
created by the recent debt ceiling increase deal is a typical example
of something nefarious attached to a bigger bill that is rushed
through Congress without giving Members ample opportunity to consider
the full ramifications. This commission may turn into an early Christmas
present for the well-heeled lobbyists of K Street. This is because
the commission presents a huge opportunity for lobbying firms to
sneak their client's pet projects and issues into whatever legislation
is created by the commission. The fact that automatic cuts to defense
are named if the committee deadlocks simply signals to the military
industrial complex to bring their A game to the lobbying effort.
One red flag
I am constantly aware of in my position as a Congressman is that
highly complex and convoluted legislation frequently has dangerous
provisions hidden in the fine print. Elaborate legislative packages
force lawmakers to take the bad with the good, and often if they
refuse, they are accused of voting against the positive provision
never mind the blatant Constitutional violations in the bill,
the spending, the waste, and the unchecked expansion of government.
I don't usually have to read too much of a bill like that before
encountering something unconstitutional, or simply unwise. Then
I have to vote no.
That doesn't
seem to be the case with a majority of legislators, unfortunately.
In order to ram through one special interest's favorable treatment
or giveaway, a certain amount of horse-trading is done. The end
result is mammoth bills with myriads of unrelated provisions that
favor those with the best lobbyists at the expense of everyone else.
The creation
of a 12 member committee to preside over $1.5 trillion in spending
decisions, and the exclusion of the rest of Congress also means
lobbying firms can focus their efforts on an anointed few, which
is certainly more manageable for them than having to deal with the
entire Congress. Every cut considered will, of course, have a recipient
on the other end whose livelihood is being threatened. The probable
outcome is that any cuts realized will be more a function of lobbying
prowess than the merits or demerits of the actual programs on the
chopping block.
Make
no mistake I am enthusiastically for cutting government spending.
The goal should be to eventually reduce government down to the size
and scope of its constitutional limitations. However, the process
of getting there must also be constitutional. Concentrating such
special authority to fast track legislation affecting so many special
interests to a small, select committee is nothing more than an unprecedented
power grab. Only fears of an impending catastrophe could have motivated
Members to allow this legislation to be rushed through Congress.
The founding fathers had strong feelings about taxation without
representation and under no circumstances would they have felt excluding
98% of Congress from fiscal decisions was appropriate.
I see nothing
good coming out of this Super Congress. I suspect it will be highly
vulnerable to corruption and special interests. No benefit can come
from such careless disregard of the Founders' design.
See
the Ron Paul File
August
10, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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