I think it's time to let Congress feel our election fury this
November. As reflected in the latest Rasmussen Reports, "Just 9 percent (of
Americans) say Congress is doing a good or excellent job." It is the first
single-digit approval rating for Congress in Rasmussen's history, and it
makes Bush's 30 percent approval rating seem like a stat to boast. The study
went on to explain: "Just 12 percent of voters think Congress has passed any
legislation to improve life in this country over the past six months. That
number has ranged from 11 percent to 13 percent throughout 2008."
Even The Associated Press reported last week, in the story
"Congress mostly going through the motions for now," that "some fights of
the 110th Congress have lost their oomph in the waning months before the
November elections, with both parties content to run out the clock on messy
matters."
If members of Congress are not relevant or improving Americans'
lives, why do we elect and re-elect them into office?!
If you ever have heard the saying "too many cooks in the
kitchen," then you know how I feel about Congress. We have more
representatives than we need and even many more than the Constitution
requires. What many might not realize is that there is nothing ultimately
sacred about the present number of people we have in the House of
Representatives. Actually, the proper number of representatives from each
state has been debated since our Founders' time. The Constitution endeavors
to assure fairness and equity by requiring each state to have at least one
representative, two senators and representation in the Electoral College.
(At the other extreme, it states, "The number of Representatives shall not
exceed one for every thirty Thousand.") So why not go with the fewest number
allowed? It seems to me that in our day, in both House and Senate, fewer
representatives by area would be more reasonable and effective than more
representatives by population.
The current numbers in the House are stacked in discriminatory
ways. For example, California has a large liberal voice with its 53
representatives. How fair is that for smaller, more conservative states that
have between one and five representatives in the House? I believe just as we
have one governor per state, we should consider reducing Congress to one
representative and two senators per state (the minimum the Constitution
requires). If one representative works for Alaska, Delaware, Montana, North
Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont and Wyoming, why can't it work for the rest of
the states? Here's a movie we all can star in: "Honey, I Shrunk the
Congress!"
I agree with the rationale of James Madison, a member of the
Continental Congress and our fourth president, who advocated keeping the
number of representatives within limits:
"Nothing can be more fallacious, than to found our political
calculations on arithmetical principles. Sixty or seventy men, may be more
properly trusted with a given degree of power, than six or seven. But it
does not follow, that six or seven hundred would be proportionally a better
depositary. And if we carry on the supposition to six or seven thousand, the
whole reasoning ought to be reversed."
If we follow Madison's advice and have fewer representatives,
then they couldn't put the blame for their incompetence upon other members
of Congress. There would be less gridlock. They probably would get more
done. Plus financially speaking, reducing Congress would save us at least
$200 million, if you consider all their staff, overhead, travel, pension
plans and other perks. And if we didn't like how the few represented us, we
would have an easier time correcting their voices or disposing of them. Just
a thought.
Bottom line: It is "we the People" who have power over the
government, not them over us. They are called to protect our pursuit of
life, liberty and happiness, not vice versa. And if they don't, the
Declaration of Independence states, in no uncertain terms, that we are "to
throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for (our) future
Security." It's time to replace most members of Congress with "new Guards"
who do the following:
-- Uphold the Constitution and Bill of Rights.
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