Presidential Lawlessness: It's So Cool
By
Jon N. Hall
AmericanThinker.com
When the law no longer
commands respect, one can pretty well write off a
nation that pretends to be a constitutional
republic. But how can The People respect the law
when the government doesn't? President Obama seems
to regard the law as a mere inconvenience.
In his must-read August
5 article "The
Front Man"
at National Review, Kevin Williamson sums
up our Harvard Law School president's taste for
lawlessness: "He has spent the past five years
methodically testing the limits of what he can get
away with, like one of those crafty velociraptors
testing the electric fence in Jurassic Park."
With a compliant
Congress in his first two years, and a divided,
gridlocked Congress thereafter, Mr. Obama has been
able to "get away with" an awful lot. One of the
ways the president flouts the law is by not
enforcing it, such as in his recent "decision" to
delay enforcing the employer mandate of ObamaCare.
Where does the president get off thinking he has the
authority to refuse to enforce a law? The president
doesn't seem to understand his job.
Also, under Obama the
executive branch just makes up law, a task generally
reserved for the legislative branch. Williamson
reports that "although the IRS has no statutory
power to collect Affordable Care Act -- related
fines in states that have not voluntarily set up
health-care exchanges, Obama's managers there have
announced that they will do so anyway."
That announcement
brings to mind a provision in the ACA concerning
enforcement of the individual mandate: "In the case
of any failure by a taxpayer to timely pay any
penalty imposed by this section, such taxpayer shall
not be subject to any criminal prosecution or
penalty with respect to such failure. [Sec.
5000A(g)(2)(A), page 249]"
With regard to this
prohibition,
it remains to be seen whether Obama's minions at the
IRS will announce "that they will do so anyway"?
The president might
also conclude that the $95 penalty in 2014 for
noncompliance with the individual mandate isn't
nearly enough to offset what government is going to
be spending on ObamaCare. Obama might then "decide"
to raise the penalty himself, and deliver his usual
spiel: "If Congress won't act, I will."
Along with his
extra-constitutional decisions to ignore or vacate
the law, Obama also unilaterally exempts his friends
from the law. Williamson: "Neither does the law
empower him arbitrarily to exempt millions of his
donors and allies in organized labor from the law,
but he has done that too." Obama has been granting
waivers
from the ACA mandates since 2011. The latest is his
exemption of Congress and its staff from the
mandate. Obama is buying off Congress.
To read more about the
"legal gymnastics" involved in this exemption, read
the August 7 article "Members
Only" in
the Wall Street Journal. Obama is turning
the law upside down in order to bail out Congress.
So the taxpayer will continue to pay for the
Cadillac health insurance plans of Congress.
"Illegal dispensations for the ruling class,
different rules for the hoi polloi."
The law is not the law
if it doesn't apply to everyone. Obama's arbitrary
exceptions from the ACA for his friends are utterly
corrosive; they breed contempt for all law. We
cannot have contempt for law if we are to remain a
constitutional republic. If laws are foisted upon
the citizenry against their wishes, as was the case
with ObamaCare, the government invites massive
noncompliance at the very least.
Congress should give
the president a choice: Either agree to a
postponement of everything in the ACA that was
mandated to go into effect in 2014 (in which case
Congress would pass a quick bill to that effect), or
enforce the ACA in its entirety as written,
including the employer mandate --- either full steam
ahead or a year-long delay of everything. That might
be a better tactic for the GOP than trying to defund
the ACA. In any case, if Obama doesn't find that
choice agreeable and instead chooses to go his merry
way postponing only the employer mandate, then
Congress should impeach and remove him from office.
No president has the authority to pick and choose
which laws he will enforce. The question is: How
likely is it that the Democrat-controlled Senate
would be up for such a showdown?
"If Congress won't act,
I will," the president repeatedly assures us. But
that's not the way it works in a constitutional
republic of laws. Nonetheless, Obama acts, and who's
going to stop him? As he lists the president's
unconstitutional power grabs, Williamson makes an
unflattering comparison:
That President Obama
has adopted President Nixon's approach but limited
himself to health care might be considered progress
if he had not adopted as a general principle one of
Nixon's unfortunate maxims: When the president does
it, it isn't illegal. President Nixon's lawlessness
was sneaky, and he had the decency to be ashamed of
it. President Obama's lawlessness is as bland and
bloodless as the man himself, and practiced openly,
as though it were a virtue. President Nixon
privately kept an enemies list; President Obama
publicly promises that "we're gonna punish our
enemies, and we're gonna reward our friends."
Barack Obama, of
course, is too cool to feel shame. So one wonders
what's next for our oh-so-cool presidente. Perhaps
he'll "decide" to bail out public worker
unions in Detroit.
Bondholders would no doubt again be stiffed, even
though they're supposed to be first in line for the
proceeds of a bankruptcy.
The Supreme Court is
partly responsible for Obama's unconstitutional
power grabs. In salvaging ObamaCare, the Court had
to rewrite the law. Obama might surmise: If you can
legislate from the bench, then you can legislate
from the White House too. If the Supreme Court can
rewrite the law then so can I. After all, I'm the
cool one. In fact, I'm The One.
The Court made a
grievous mistake in not reversing ObamaCare, and
they could have ended it easily, as they had found
it unconstitutional on two counts. Of course, given
our president, had the Court struck down ObamaCare,
Obama might have "decided" to enforce it anyway.
In rewriting the law in
order to save it, the Court ruled that a penalty is
a tax and a command is a choice. That paved the way
for Obama's lawlessness. We must hope that the Court
is beginning to understand what its wretched
ruling
has wrought.
Velociraptors are so
cool. Like all good velociraptors, President Obama
continues to test the perimeter, nudging, poking,
and shoving to see how much he can get away with and
how far he can go. And with an in-the-tank media, an
unmoored Court, and an irrelevant Congress, what's
to stop him?
Jon N. Hall
is a programmer/analyst from
Kansas City.