BrianGarst.com

Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem.

federalism Archive

Wednesday

7

October 2009

0

COMMENTS

It's A Trap

Written by , Posted in Health Care, Welfare & Entitlements

Democrats have a brilliant new idea to force on you something you don’t want: pretending you could decline. I say it’s a trap:

Senate Democrats have begun discussions on a compromise approach to health care reform that would establish a robust, national public option for insurance coverage but give individual states the right to opt out of the program.

The proposal is envisioned as a means of getting the necessary support from progressive members of the Democratic Caucus — who have insisted that a government-run insurance option remain in the bill — and conservative Democrats who are worried about what a public plan would mean for insurers in their states.

How such a system would work is still being debated, according to those with knowledge of the proposal. But theoretically, the “opt-out” approach would start with everyone having access to a public plan. What kind of public plan isn’t yet clear. States would then have the right to vote — either by referendum, legislature, or simply a gubernatorial decree — to make the option unavailable in their health care exchanges.

Oh that’s perfectly innocent. We’ll force it on you, then make your politicians have to “deny” you “choice” in order to get rid of it. And even if they do successfully navigate that minefield of demagoguery, you’ll still get taxed for it!

For the states, this is purposely designed as “an offer they can’t refuse.”

Hat tip: HotAir

Tuesday

29

September 2009

0

COMMENTS

Suddenly Unfunded Mandates Are All The Rage

Written by , Posted in Health Care, Welfare & Entitlements

When it came to campaigning against George W. Bush, unfunded mandates were despicable.  Now they’re just a convenient way to hide the costs of annexing health care:

The more we inspect Max Baucus’s health-care bill, the worse it looks. Today’s howler: One reason it allegedly “pays for itself” over 10 years is because it would break all 50 state budgets by permanently expanding Medicaid, the joint state-federal program for the poor.

Democrats want to use Medicaid to cover everyone up to at least 133% of the federal poverty level, or about $30,000 for a family of four. Starting in 2014, Mr. Baucus plans to spend $287 billion through 2019—or about one-third of ObamaCare’s total spending—to add some 11 million new people to the Medicaid rolls.

Not every state is hit equally, though. Some states have politically connected crooks to insulate them from the burdens they place on everyone else.

Monday

3

August 2009

0

COMMENTS

The New Yorker Attacks Federalism

Written by , Posted in Big Government

Given the manner in which statists have seen to the systematic erosion of state sovereignty, it should come as no surprise to see a rag like The New Yorker attacking the principle of federalism.  The cause for complaint this time is the allegation that those pesky states are standing in the way of recovery:

If you came up with a list of obstacles to economic recovery in this country, it would include all the usual suspects—our still weak banking system, falling house prices, overindebted consumers, cautious companies. But here are fifty culprits you might not have thought of: the states. Federalism, often described as one of the great strengths of the American system, has become a serious impediment to reversing the downturn.

The article is filled with the usual Keynesian claptrap, blaming balanced budget requirements because it means statists can’t spend like drunken sailors on the pretense that it will help economic recovery.  Never mind that state budgets, in particular those run by lovers of government, are not insolvent because of the recession, which has instead simply sped up the process.

But even more importantly, federalism is apparently getting in the way of statists who want to plan our energy production from Washington:

This would involve turning the current hodgepodge of regional and state grids into a genuinely national grid, which would detect and respond to problems as they happen, giving users more information about and control over their electricity use, and so on. It could also dramatically reduce our dependence on oil. Wind power could eventually produce as much as twenty per cent of the energy that America consumes. The problem is that the places where most of that wind power can be generated tend to be a long way from the places where most of that power would be consumed. A new grid would enable us to get the power to where it’s needed. But since nobody likes power lines running through his property, building the grid would require overriding or placating the states—and the prospects of that aren’t great.

The federal government can do no wrong and should be in charge of planning everything.  States should get out of the way.  Got it.

Hat tip: Moonbattery

Tuesday

7

July 2009

0

COMMENTS

Rhode Island Considers Marijuana Legalization

Written by , Posted in The Nanny State & A Regulated Society

Warning: this article contains federalism at work.  Any nannies who want the federal government to dictate policy to the states should proceed with extreme caution.

Weeks after legalizing the sale of marijuana to sick people, lawmakers have voted to explore how much Rhode Island might collect in revenue if it were to make all sales of marijuana legal and impose a “sin tax” of $35 per ounce.

During the General Assembly’s aborted rush to adjournment Friday, the Senate approved a resolution — introduced earlier the same day — to create a nine-member special commission to study a swath of issues surrounding marijuana. Among them: “The experience of individuals and families sentenced for violating marijuana laws … The experience of states and European countries, such as California, Massachusetts and the Netherlands, which have decriminalized the sale and use of marijuana.”

$35 sin tax per ounce?! Talk about price gouging!

Monday

18

May 2009

1

COMMENTS

Tax Competition Shows Why Federalism Matters

Written by , Posted in Taxes

I have previously written about the diminishing influence of the principle of federalism in America.  From Arthur Laffer and Stephen Moore, we today see an excellent example of why this principle is so important.  In their Opinion Journal piece, the two economists describe the consequences faced by state governments that seek to soak the rich: the loss of rich people.

Here’s the problem for states that want to pry more money out of the wallets of rich people. It never works because people, investment capital and businesses are mobile: They can leave tax-unfriendly states and move to tax-friendly states.

…Updating some research from Richard Vedder of Ohio University, we found that from 1998 to 2007, more than 1,100 people every day including Sundays and holidays moved from the nine highest income-tax states such as California, New Jersey, New York and Ohio and relocated mostly to the nine tax-haven states with no income tax, including Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire and Texas. We also found that over these same years the no-income tax states created 89% more jobs and had 32% faster personal income growth than their high-tax counterparts.

Whether it be the USSR, Cuba or California, it seems that fleeing from statism is universal.  The ability to vote with one’s feet is an important check on the abusive growth of government.  Unfortunately, there’s no reason to believe the collectivist will stop there.  When faced with the reality that people choose not to accept their forms of government, the typical statist response is to eliminate anything else as a choice.  In Europe, the  high tax nations have pushed to make tax competition illegal.  That is, they want to make it so that their neighbors can’t offer anything lower than their own oppressive rates.

It’s unlikely we’ll see a similar push here, as that’s probably too illegal even for our constitutionally oblivious government.  But the same thing can be accomplished by different means.  By federalizing government roles, they can remove the benefits of moving from state to state.  The more functions of government that are funded by the federal government, the fewer oppressive taxes you can escape by relocating.  They can’t redistribute money within states, because the rich can just leave before they get fleeced, but they can do it between all states.  If state governments get their money from Washington, which can tax across all states, rather than their own constituents, then there is no where left to run.  That’s why it is imperative to oppose this trend of federal infringement on state sovereignty and to reject the infusion of federal dollars into state coffers.  It’s not the rights of state bureaucrats that are important and in need of protection, but our own.

Friday

8

May 2009

0

COMMENTS

Federal Government Bullies California On Behalf Of Unions

Written by , Posted in Labor Unions

The union investment in Barack Obama continues to pay dividends:

The Obama administration is threatening to rescind billions of dollars in federal stimulus money if Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and state lawmakers do not restore wage cuts to unionized home healthcare workers approved in February as part of the budget.

Schwarzenegger’s office was advised this week by federal health officials that the wage reduction, which will save California $74 million, violates provisions of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Failure to revoke the scheduled wage cut before it takes effect July 1 could cost California $6.8 billion in stimulus money, according to state officials.

This kind of federal government bullying against the states was entirely predictable, and is why many governors said “thanks, but no thanks” to federal dollars.  Gov. Schwarzenegger was not one of them.  In fact, he stabbed these principled conservatives in the back when he defended the porkulus and joked that if they didn’t want the money, he would take it for them.

Who’s laughing now, Arnold?

Wednesday

25

February 2009

10

COMMENTS

The Stimulus Marks The Death Of Federalism

Written by , Posted in Liberty & Limited Government

If federalism wasn’t dead already, the “stimulus” killed it. That is, the relationship between the federal government and the states has become so distorted compared to the original conception held by our founders that it would make little practical difference if we just went ahead and abolished the concept of states altogether.

The Constitution designed a system in which the states share sovereignty with a federal government. According to Madison, the powers of the federal government were to be “few and defined,” while those remaining with the states would be “numerous and indefinite.” This is no longer so.

The federal government now has the final say in most areas which used to be the sole responsibility of the states. Criminal law, an area left exclusively to the respective states, is becoming ever more federalized. Obeying the laws of California and growing pot for medical use is no protection from federal agents. Whatever one might think of this behavior, it’s the voters of California who should get the final say.

A fifty-five mph speed limit, promptly ignored by most motorists, was dictated to the states by passage of the 1974 Emergency Highway Energy Conservation Act.  Although the national speed limit was later repealed in 1995, numerous federal standards remain, such as the minimum ages for drinking and smoking. The federal government has largely accomplished this power grab by opening the spigot of federal dollars, then threatening to cut off any state that doesn’t kowtow to Washington’s demands.

So when a number of governors of both parties balked at taking federal money for unemployment insurance, knowing that they would be stuck with the bill of an expanded government welfare mandate when the federal funds expired, it should come as no surprise that the beltway response was to attempt to denigrate and browbeat the rogue states into compliance. Democratic Senator Charles Schumer responded to their rejection of federal funds by admonishing governors for playing “political games,” then boldly declared, “whether the governors want to or not, they can be forced to take the whole thing.” This astonishing declaration strikes at the heart of our federalist system. Even the race card has been played to shame governors into accepting the dictates of Washington, such as when democratic House member James Clyburn shamelessly alleged that any rejection of stimulus money, and the strings that came with it, amounts to “a slap in the face of African-Americans.” Not all states have the foresight to resist such federal encroachments. State financial shortfalls and a narrow view of state interest leads some, such as California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, to turn to Washington hat in hand.

Aside from the eventual subjugation of state authority, funneling federal dollars into the states also leads to significant waste. No longer dependent on their constituents for financial support, the states become rent-seekers looking to game the federal system. This is why 250,000 Washington State residents recently received a $1 check in the mail.  As a reward for this wasteful spending, the federal government will pump into the state millions in new welfare funds. This seemingly irrational and grossly wasteful spending is encouraged by the present system, where states have financial incentives to meet federal bureaucratic rules that allow them to qualify for more funding.  The impact on the taxpayer is simply not important to the state in this calculus.

Alexander Hamilton described the balance between national and state governments as one of “utmost importance” that should be “dwelt on with peculiar attention.” Yet hardly a thought was given by Congress to this fundamental principle when it hastily passed almost $1 trillion in new federal spending, $144 billion of which has been designated for state consumption. And so we must now repeat in vain Thomas Jefferson’s wish “never to see all offices transferred to Washington.”

Sunday

23

November 2008

0

COMMENTS

A Resounding Vote For Federalism

Written by , Posted in Big Government

I recently sent the following letter to the New York Times:

To the Editor:

A Resounding Vote for Open Space,” (editorial, Nov. 18) notes that voters in several states approved large spending proposals for preserving open land.  The editorial wrongly concludes that Congress should follow suit and “grant permanent wilderness protection to two million acres of public land.”

The federal government already owns 650 million acres of land – nearly 30% of the total U.S. territory.  It doesn’t need more. That voters chose to approve open land initiatives at the state level doesn’t amount to “an explicit rebuke to President Bush,” but instead shows the popularity of local control. Approving state money through referendums ensures that those who live near preservation lands – and thus receive most of the benefits – are the ones to bear the costs.

The government should do the opposite of what the editorial suggests: sell as much federal land as it can and help close the federal budget’s record shortfalls.

Sincerely,

Brian Garst