conlawprof  

RE: Outsourcing Legislation from WH to the House of Representatives

Crowley, Donald
Fri, 29 Jan 2010 15:09:24 -0800

I'm not sure what the point of Martin's post was.  It sounds angry but
about what?  That someone earlier called Cantor's comments "incredibly
dumb?"  I didn't call it that-I just agreed that is was cynical.

 

The specifics of the post are puzzling.   I don't know that Obama
"ceded" control of the legislation to the House.  They just finished
first.  Their  version was  more popular (and better legislation) than
the eventual Senate version.

The 60 vote super majority is not a requirement.  As you know the Senate
has a long tradition of allowing filibusters but that privilege has been
grossly abused in this Senate and essentially has made the Senate
dysfunctional.  The House is now in a position where it either has to
accept the Senate version (because of the continual filibuster) or let
it die.   Thus it seems like the Senate has held the cards all along.
The Republican position from the very beginning was to not accept
anything that amounted to real reform of the system.  Sometimes they
even voted against things they had proposed.   If they really believe
the public opposes this then why not let it come to a vote and then the
Democrats will have to live with the results of what they think is bad
legislation.  

 

For the record I actually agree that Obama should have played a more
active role in the process.  Some aspects of the bill are redistributive
and getting redistributive legislation through Congress usually takes
strong Presidential leadership.  Somehow I don't think this was Cantor's
point.

 

Don

 

From: Martin J Sweet [mailto:mswe...@fau.edu] 
Sent: Friday, January 29, 2010 2:43 PM
To: Crowley, Donald; 'Rosenthal, Lawrence'; 'Steven Jamar'
Cc: Conlawprof@lists.ucla.edu
Subject: RE: Outsourcing Legislation from WH to the House of
Representatives

 

It's polisci 101 that the President wears more than one hat. Con Law
says "Commander in Chief" and maybe "Executive in Chief" - but polisci
101 says 1. President as head of state; 2. Chief Executive; 3. Commander
in chief, chief diplomat; 4. Chief legislator; and 5. Chief of party.
Um, yes, Presidents have agendas. Somewhere in the recesses of my mind
come those phrases "New Deal," "Fair Deal," "Great Society," etc. I
think that might have something to do with the President actually taking
charge of legislation (especially in times of unified government;
polisci calls "divided government" - in the original post - when
different parties control the WH, S, and H).

 

Cantor's idea merely suggests that the Obama ideal point estimation is
to the right of the House ideal point - and by ceding control to the
House on health care that we wound up with a proposal not acceptable to
the Senate (with and ideal point to the right of the House and Obama
because of the super-majority requirement).

 

The polemics that this is "incredibly dumb" are just that.

 

 

******************************

Martin J. Sweet

Honors College

Florida Atlantic University

******************************

 

From: conlawprof-boun...@lists.ucla.edu
[mailto:conlawprof-boun...@lists.ucla.edu] On Behalf Of Crowley, Donald
Sent: Friday, January 29, 2010 4:50 PM
To: Rosenthal, Lawrence; Steven Jamar
Cc: Conlawprof@lists.ucla.edu
Subject: RE: Outsourcing Legislation from WH to the House of
Representatives

 

It is hard to know what the public knows about the health care
legislation.  The House bill which included a public option polled much
better than the version the Senate passed.  Thus Cantor's point about
"outsourcing" the bill to the "left wing" agenda of the House which is
supposedly outside the mainstream is pretty clearly untrue.  Larry seems
to implicitly notice this by acknowledging the main "deal cutting"
occurred in the Senate and was an attempt to get "centrist" Democrats on
board.  These deals (necessary to break the Republican filibuster) made
the bill worse. The last time we were here (1993) the Republican
complaint was the White House tried to write the legislation instead of
letting Congress do it.  Now the complaint is that Obama outsourced the
legislation to the House.  I'm with Steve---Cantor is just engaging in
cynical posturing.

 

Don

 

From: conlawprof-boun...@lists.ucla.edu
[mailto:conlawprof-boun...@lists.ucla.edu] On Behalf Of Rosenthal,
Lawrence
Sent: Friday, January 29, 2010 12:58 PM
To: Steven Jamar
Cc: Conlawprof@lists.ucla.edu
Subject: RE: Outsourcing Legislation from WH to the House of
Representatives

 

This strikes me as quite unfair criticism of Rep. Cantor.   In context,
it seems clear to me that his point is not that President Obama did
something improper by leaving the crafting of the health care
legislation to Congress, but that he took a course of action that was
politically imprudent, and which reflects poorly on the President's
judgment.  Surely he is correct on that point.  Congressional support
for any major piece of legislation is sure to collapse if it becomes
sufficiently unpopular, and in that respect, if the President chose to
embrace health care reform as his own political priority (as he did), it
would have been politically prudent to ensure that the bill did not
become so laden with special interest provisions that it would become a
political liability.  That, of course, is precisely what happened to the
bill (although the deal-cutting actually seems to have been much more
problematic in the Senate than the House).  In retrospect, this seems to
me to be an entirely fair criticism of the President's approach.  

 

Larry Rosenthal

Chapman University School of Law 

 

From: conlawprof-boun...@lists.ucla.edu
[mailto:conlawprof-boun...@lists.ucla.edu] On Behalf Of Steven Jamar
Sent: Friday, January 29, 2010 12:37 PM
Cc: Conlawprof@lists.ucla.edu
Subject: Re: Outsourcing Legislation from WH to the House of
Representatives

 

Paul,

 

I'm sure Cantor knows -- and that Darrell's point is correct -- Cantor
is engaging in cynical campaigning (is there any other kind?) to
undermine Obama.  If Cantor were Majority Whip, I'm sure we'd find him
complaining about Obama trying to usurp the proper constitutional
function of the House by being too involved in the legislation process.

 

It is just substantively nonsense, cynically done for political gain.

 

Of course the President has a huge role to play in legislation --
including directing it.  And some Presidents (e.g., Bush II, Lyndon
Johnson) play that role much more vigorously than others (Eisenhower,
Carter, even Reagan).

 

No.  He understands what he is saying, why he is saying it, and is
clearly doing what has become (and has been in the past) the norm for
some politicians -- make points, not policy.

 

Steve

 

 

On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 3:19 PM, Paul Finkelman
<paul.finkel...@yahoo.com> wrote:

Last time I knew the job of the House of Representatives WAS to write
legislation.  I guess Cantor does not understand Article I of the US
Constitution.  It is partisan, but sadly, it is also incredibly dumb

 

----
Paul Finkelman
President William McKinley Distinguished Professor of Law
Albany Law School
80 New Scotland Avenue
Albany, NY 12208

518-445-3386 (p)
518-445-3363 (f)

 

paul.finkel...@albanylaw.edu

 

www.paulfinkelman.com

 

 

________________________________

From: "Miller, Darrell (mille2di)" <mille...@ucmail.uc.edu>
To: "Conlawprof@lists.ucla.edu" <Conlawprof@lists.ucla.edu>
Sent: Fri, January 29, 2010 2:43:38 PM
Subject: Outsourcing Legislation from WH to the House of Representatives

 

>From Politico, full link here:
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0110/32192_Page2.html

 

Cantor criticized Obama for last year's "outsourcing of the legislative
activity from the White House to Nancy Pelosi here in this House," which
he said has resulted in "a bill shift and an agenda shift way to the
left and outside the mainstream of this country."

 

To me, this seems like a fairly gross exploitation of people's ignorance
of our system of divided government, and an indictment of partisan
gerrymandering which makes this kind of statement politically resonant. 

 

Darrell A.H. Miller 

Assistant Professor of Law

University of Cincinnati College of Law

PO Box 210040

Clifton Avenue & Calhoun Street

Cincinnati, OH 45221-0040
v: 513-556-0133
f: 513-556-1236
e: darrell.mil...@uc.edu <mailto:darrell.mil...@uc.edu>  

 

faculty page:

http://www.law.uc.edu/faculty/profiles/miller.php

 

SSRN:  

http://ssrn.com/author=1107305 <http://ssrn.com/author=1107305>  

 

 


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-- 
Prof. Steven Jamar
Howard University School of Law
Associate Director, Institute of Intellectual Property and Social
Justice (IIPSJ) Inc.

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