Salon
 
Monday, Jul 28, 2014 11:35 AM PDT  
Break up the states! The case for the United Statelets of America 
Here's how Wyoming, Vermont and North Dakota are exercising tyranny over 
the  rest of us -- and how to stop them 
_Michael  Lind_ (http://www.salon.com/writer/michael_lind/)  
 
A ballot initiative that would support _breaking  California into six 
smaller and more coherent states_ (http://www.npr.org/blogs/thet
wo-way/2014/07/15/331694432/plan-to-make-6-states-out-of-california-may-head-to-ballot)
  is 
being backed by  Timothy Draper, a tech investor.  It’s a great idea.  But 
why stop  with California?  Breaking up all of the too-large states would 
increase  both the accountability and efficiency of the U.S. government. 
America’s state governments are too big to be democratic and too small to 
be  efficient.  Given an adequate tax base, public services like public 
schools  and hospitals, utilities and first responders are best carried out by 
cities and  counties.  Most infrastructure is either local or regional or  
national.  Civil rights, including workers’ rights, should be handled at  the 
federal level, to eliminate local pockets of tyranny and exploitation.   
Social insurance systems are most efficient and equitable when they are purely  
national, like Social Security and Medicare, and inefficient and inequitable 
 when they are clumsily divided among the federal government and the 
states, like  unemployment insurance, Medicaid and Obamacare.
 
So what are state governments particularly good at?  Nothing,  really.  
They interfere in local government, cripple the federal  government, shake down 
lobbyists and waste taxpayer money. 
Few if any state borders correspond to the boundaries of actual social  
communities with a sense of shared identity.  A look at county-level voting  
maps shows that, in terms of politics, rural Americans everywhere generally 
have  more in common with their fellow hinterlanders than with their urban 
fellow  citizens in their own states — and vice versa.  Arbitrary state 
boundaries  merely insure that state legislatures will be the scenes of endless 
battles  between country mice and city mice, resulting in stalemates that don’t 
serve the  interests or reflect the values of either mouse species. 
Not only is the state level of government a mostly useless layer of 
politics  and bureaucracy between the city or county and the federal 
government, it’
s also  more dominated than local government by the well-financed and the  
well-organized.  Nearly a century ago John Nance “Cactus Jack” Garner of  
Texas, FDR’s first vice-president, proposed that Texas be divided into 
multiple  states because of the high cost of statewide campaigns.  Expensive  
statewide campaigns tend to result in a state political system dominated by 
rich 
 donors, corporations and banks, or powerful lobbies like public sector  
unions.
 
Fortunately, the U.S. Constitution provides the answer.  Let’s turn to  
Article IV, Section 3, Clause 1: 
New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new  
States shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State;  
nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or parts of  
States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as  
well as of the Congress.

 
No state has been formed from part of another state since West Virginia 
broke  off from Virginia during the Civil War — but not for want of 
constitutional  authority.  The constitution authorizes states to divide into 
smaller  
states or fuse into larger states, with the permission of both the state  
legislatures and Congress. 
Among other things, this dormant constitutional provision provides a 
solution  to the malapportionment of the U.S. Senate that does not require a  
constitutional amendment — merely approval by the relevant state legislatures  
and a majority in Congress.  America’s upper house is _the most 
malapportioned  in the world_ 
(http://prospect.org/article/senatorial-privilege) .  By 
2025, the population difference between California  and Wyoming will be 
70-to-1 — and yet both California and Wyoming will have two  senators.  In 
theory, 
a micro-minority of 17 percent of American voters can  elect a majority in 
the Senate. 
If we assume that microstates like Wyoming are not going to give up their 
two  U.S. senators, then macrostates like California, Texas, Florida and New 
York  should voluntarily divide themselves, in order to boost their 
representation in  America’s upper house.  Under the Six Californias plan, for 
example,  residents of present-day California would send 12 senators to 
Washington, not  two.
 
And because they are smaller, the successor states to the Former California 
 would be more citizen-friendly.  A citizen of Wyoming, Vermont, North  
Dakota or Alaska — the four least populous states — has a much better chance 
of  influencing the legislature or arranging an appointment with the governor 
than  does a citizen of California or Texas who is not backed by an army of 
lobbyists  or hundreds of thousands of dollars. 
Back in 1998 in Mother Jones I speculated about what the political map 
would  look like if the U.S. added 25 states carved out of today’s populous 
states.  Interested readers can find the article _here_ 
(http://www.motherjones.com/politics/1998/01/75-stars)  (warning:  The Mother 
Jones editors came up 
with the silly state names). 
A fifth-generation native of Central Texas who worked in the state  
legislature, I agree with Cactus Jack Garner that the State of Texas is too big 
 
and should be broken up.  When the former republic of Texas was admitted to  
the Union, it should have been admitted as several states, not one.   Another 
missed opportunity came during Reconstruction, when many of the freed  
slaves of East Texas, the German-Americans of Central Texas and the  
Mexican-Americans of South Texas lobbied Washington to divide Texas into 
several  
states to protect them from postwar repression by Anglo-Celtic  Southerners.  
The 
failure to do so allowed the former Confederates of East  Texas and their 
descendants to recapture power in Austin, the state capital, and  lord it 
over minorities in Texas to this day.
 
An independent Central Texas could be a high-tech social democracy, with  
really good music and movies, once liberated forever from the Protestant  
fundamentalist Taliban of East Texas.  Willie Nelson could compete with  Kinky 
Friedman to be the first governor.  To prevent rivalry between Austin  and 
San Antonio, the new state capital of Centex should be located in a neutral  
place — say, _Luckenbach,  Texas_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luckenbach,_Texas_(Back_to_the_Basics_of_Love)) . 
New borders among new and old states would not be a problem.  There are  no 
state tariffs and no border checkpoints at state lines now, and there would 
 not be any if we had more states. 
There are only two plausible practical arguments against the voluntary,  
congressionally approved subdivision of America’s populous states.  One is  
that some of the new states would be poor and no longer subsidized by richer  
regions in the former big state.  This is a valid objection, but the answer  
is to replace state-level revenue sharing with federal revenue sharing.   
The federal government should use income, wealth and consumption taxes to tax 
 the American rich wherever they happen to live, work and consume and 
disburse  the revenues directly among American cities and counties, bypassing 
state  legislatures as much as possible.
 
The other argument is that many infrastructure projects would necessarily  
transcend small-state borders.  But this is true even today.   
Infrastructure systems like regional electric grids and inland waterways are  
regional in 
scope. Multistate compacts or agreements between states to deal with  
shared rivers and infrastructure already exist and are the best way to address  
the problem. 
Nobody should underestimate the power of inertia in American politics.   
But we will never have any progress, if we accept stupid things just because  
they are old. 
At this point, to the tune of “Yankee Doodle” on a fife and drum, somebody 
in  the peanut gallery will object that our system represents the “genius 
of the  Founding Fathers.”  Sorry, peanut gallery patriots — the major 
Founders  hated the overrepresentation of small states in the Senate.  For most 
of  their political careers, Alexander Hamilton favored more centralization, 
while  the “Father of the Constitution,” James Madison (except early in his 
career),  was for states’ rights.  But these two co-authors of the 
Federalist Papers  agreed that states should be represented in the Senate on 
the 
basis of  population and that the compromise in the Constitution that gave each 
state two  senators, no matter its size, was a mistake. 
In the guise of denouncing the Articles of Confederation, Hamilton made his 
 feelings clear in Federalist No. 22:
 
 
The right of equal suffrage among the States is another exceptionable part  
of the Confederation. Every idea of proportion and  every rule of fair 
representation conspire to condemn a principle, which gives  to Rhode Island an 
equal weight in the scale of power with Massachusetts, or  Connecticut, or 
New York; and to Delaware an equal  voice in the national deliberations with 
Pennsylvania, or Virginia, or North  Carolina. Its operation contradicts the 
fundamental maxim of republican  government, which requires that the sense 
of the majority should  prevail…. It may happen that this majority of States 
is a  small minority of the people of America; and two thirds of the people 
of  America could not long be persuaded, upon the credit of artificial  
distinctions and syllogistic subtleties, to submit their interests to the  
management and disposal of one third. The larger States would after a while  
revolt from the idea of receiving the law from the smaller.
The proposal for Six Californias is likely to fail, given all the veto 
points  in the American political system.  But the heroic struggle for 
Splittism 
 must go on.  If America is to be a truly democratic nation, we must end 
the  tyranny of Wyoming, Vermont and North Dakota — and free the dynamic 
statelets  waiting to be born from California, Texas, New York and Florida.  
Viva 
 Centex Libre! 
(http://www.salon.com/2014/07/28/break_up_the_states_the_case_for_the_united_statelets_of_america/)
 

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