January 01, 2002
Democrats Entrench With Supermajority Rule – And Immigration
By Paul Craig Roberts
The most important headline of 2001 came on the last
day. It was in the Washington Times and read:
“Daschle defends 60-vote majority.” Thus did Tom
Daschle, Senate Majority Leader and Democrat from South
Dakota, raise the ugly head of tyranny.
Daschle has decided that Republican issues along with
President Bush’s nominees to executive branch positions,
unlike Democratic ones, are “controversial” and cannot
be accepted on the basis of majority vote. A
supermajority vote of 60 in the Senate is required for
Bush to staff his government and pursue a legislative
agenda.
The Democrats cannot yet declare the overthrow of
majority rule. Daschle’s mechanism for requiring
supermajorities to confirm Bush appointees and to pass
Republican bills is the filibuster. The Democrats will
talk nominees and bills to death unless 60 votes can be
mustered to break their filibuster.
A Republican who said Democrat issues and appointees
are too controversial to be passed by majority vote
would be excoriated until he resigned from office. He
would be labeled with every known epithet and henceforth
be the bogyman invoked to drive Republicans
out of politics.
But Daschle can say it without fear, because the
Cultural Marxists who control the
universities, the
media, the
bureaucracies and Hollywood agree with him. As the
case of Bill Clinton made clear, anyone who stands on
the issues with the Cultural Marxists cannot be held
accountable no matter what the transgression.
Filibusters have been used when organized interests
or regions of the country are strongly opposed to a
piece of legislation. But they have never before been
used by one party as a means of rendering a President
unable to staff his offices and advance a legislative
agenda.
When
asked on Meet the Press (NBC, 12-30) if President
Bush would be justified to make recess appointments, as
the Senate has not voted on his appointees and Bush is
beginning the second year of his presidency with his
government’s offices unfilled, Daschle replied: “That
isn’t the way it ought to be addressed.”
This from the leader of the party that not only made
recess appointments, but made them after the
nominee had been rejected by the Senate and, illegally,
made the temporary recess appointment permanent for the
duration of the Clinton administration.
For example, Bill Lan Lee, an ideological
true-believer in special privileges for “people of
color” who abused the power of his Justice Dept.
position to coerce unconstitutional racial quotas
throughout the country, served a full term unconfirmed
in office.
To Democrats, of course,
Bill Lan Lee is not the least bit controversial. But
the son of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia opposed
some ergonomic regulations that Clinton issued and
Congress repealed. Such a controversial person as Eugene
Scalia requires a supermajority to be
appointed solicitor at the Dept. of Labor.
Once again Daschle has shown Republicans--and the
country--that Democrats are not loath to use power
illegitimately if it advances their agenda and renders
Republicans impotent. Daschle has no fear that such
extremism as imposing a supermajority on the rival
political party’s agenda will cause any defection from
the Democrats’ political base.
For Democrats, their ends justify any means. In
contrast, Republicans lack sufficient confidence in what
they supposedly stand for to effectively govern even
when they are in a majority. As the distinguished
British economist, Lord Peter Bauer put it, “Republicans
are in office, but not in power.”
The U.S. is on the verge of one party rule. Democrats
believe fervently in their agenda and are willing to
take risks in its behalf. Republicans believe in
scarcely anything but compromise. Obviously, the
stronger will of the Democrats gives them the edge.
Republicans are willing to stand up to Democrats only
when Republicans have supermajorities behind them.
Republicans will never again have a supermajority.
The Democrats have imported an electorate that supports
them. Our country has been flooded with tens of millions
of poor uneducated immigrants from Third World countries
who
vote Democrat because of the
income support programs the party champions.
Republicans represent taxpayers who are now
outvoted by poor immigrants and special interest
groups dependent on tax revenues.
Republicans stood aside for 35 years while Democrats
used immigration to refurbish their political base for
class warfare. Only next time around the warfare will be
much
nastier as the class differences are now racial
differences.
Republicans will collapse, because whites have been
demonized. In the demonology of Cultural Marxists who
dictate the agenda of the Democratic Party, the “white
race” is the real world equivalent to the Dark Lord
Sauron in J.R.R. Tolkien’s
The Lord of the Rings.
And, unlike Gandalf, Democrats don’t believe that
power corrupts.
Paul
Craig Roberts is the author (with Lawrence M. Stratton)
of The
New Color
Line : How Quotas and Privilege Destroy Democracy
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