States’ Wrongs - Conservatives’ illogical, inconsistent effort to repeal the 17th Amendment
States Wrongs
Conservatives illogical, inconsistent effort to repeal the 17th Amendment.
By David Schleicher
Over the past year, an increasingly central plank of conservative and Tea Party rhetoric is that constitutional change is needed and that the 17th Amendment in particular, which gives state residents the power to elect senators directly, should be repealed. (Previously, senators were selected by the state legislatures). Hard-right figures across the country, from Sen. Ted
Cruz (R-Texas) to Georgia Senate candidate Rep.
Paul Broun to
a steady drumbeat of
state officials, have now called for repealing the amendment and giving the power to select senators back to the state legislatures. Radio host Mark Levins book
The Liberty Amendments, calling for repeal, among other constitutional changes, was the best-selling book on constitutional law last year. Clearly this is an idea with legs.
This boomlet of energy for repealing the 17th Amendment is not the first in recent memory. Back in 2010, repeal was similarly endorsed by a bevy of conservative bigwigs from
Justice Antonin Scalia to Gov. Rick Perry to now-Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.). Back then, support for repeal was
mocked in Democratic campaign ads as kooky, but perhaps its time to concede that it is no longer a fringe idea. Given the ascendance of the right flank of the GOP, its worth taking the argument for repeal seriously.
But the real paradox, if you
study the amendments history and effect, is that conservativesall conservatives, moderate or Tea Partyshould
love the 17th Amendment. Why? Because without it, state legislative elections would turn entirely on the identity of U.S. Senate candidates. State legislatures, in effect, would become mini-electoral colleges for choosing senators, except with the residual power to make state law. To love states and federalism, as conservatives claim to, you need to believe that democracy works at the state level, that voters punish badly performing legislators and reward good ones. Repealing the 17th Amendment would ruin state democracy.
The main repeal argumentlaid out in its best form by
my colleague Todd Zywicki and now-
Judge Jay Bybeeis that the power of senatorial selection once gave state governments crucial influence over Washington. Once that power was removed by the 17th Amendment, the argument goes, state governments lost their pull in Washington, leading to a bigger, greedier, and more powerful federal government at the expense of states rights and interests.
more
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/jurisprudence/2014/02/conservatives_17th_amendment_repeal_effort_why_their_plan_will_backfire.html