POLICE STATE / MILITARY - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Bush's Most Radical Plan Yet |
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by Osha Gray Davidson Rolling Stone Entered into the database on Monday, April 25th, 2005 @ 14:50:27 MST |
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If you've got something to hide in Washington, the best place to bury it is
in the federal budget. The spending plan that President Bush submitted to Congress
this year contains 2,000 pages that outline funding to safeguard the environment,
protect workers from injury and death, crack down on securities fraud and ensure
the safety of prescription drugs. But almost unnoticed in the budget, tucked
away in a single paragraph, is a provision that could make every one of those
protections a thing of the past. The proposal, spelled out in three short sentences, would give the president
the power to appoint an eight-member panel called the "Sunset Commission,"
which would systematically review federal programs every ten years and decide
whether they should be eliminated. Any programs that are not "producing
results," in the eyes of the commission, would "automatically terminate
unless the Congress took action to continue them." The administration portrays the commission as a well-intentioned effort to
make sure that federal agencies are actually doing their job. "We just
think it makes sense," says Clay Johnson, deputy director for management
at the Office of Management and Budget, which crafted the provision. "The
goal isn't to get rid of a program -- it's to make it work better." In practice, however, the commission would enable the Bush administration to
achieve what Ronald Reagan only dreamed of: the end of government regulation
as we know it. With a simple vote of five commissioners -- many of them likely
to be lobbyists and executives from major corporations currently subject to
federal oversight -- the president could terminate any program or agency he
dislikes. No more Environmental Protection Agency. No more Food and Drug Administration.
No more Securities and Exchange Commission. "Ronald Reagan once observed, 'The closest thing to immortality on this
earth is a federal government program,' " says Rep. Kevin Brady, a Republican
from Texas who has been working for the past nine years to establish a sunset
commission. "We need it to clear out the deadwood." Without many of those programs, however, American consumers, workers and investors
would be left to the mercy of business. "This is potentially devastating,"
says Wesley Warren, who served as a senior OMB official in the Clinton administration.
"In short order, this could knock out protections that have been built
up over a generation." Others note that the provision goes beyond anything attempted by conservatives
in the past. "When you look at this," says Marchant Wentworth, a lobbyist
for the Union of Concerned Scientists, "it's almost like the Reagan administration
was a trial run." The man behind the sunset commission is Clay Johnson, the most influential
member of Bush's inner circle whom you've never heard of. The two Texans have
been close friends since 1961, when they met as fifteen-year-olds at Andover
prep school and later roomed together for four years at Yale. When Bush was
elected governor of Texas in 1994, he put the buddy he calls "Big Man"
-- Johnson is six feet four -- in charge of all state appointments. Johnson,
a former executive at Neiman Marcus and Frito-Lay, refers to Americans as "customers"
and is partial to Chamber of Commerce bromides such as "We're in the results
business." He is also partial to giving corporate lobbyists a direct role
in gutting regulatory protections. One of his first acts in Texas was to remove
all three members of the state environmental-protection commission and replace
them with a former Monsanto executive, an official with the Texas Beef Council
and a lawyer for the oil industry. Overnight, a commission widely respected
for its impartiality became a "revolving door between the industry lobby
and government," says Jim Marston, the senior attorney in Texas for the
nonprofit organization Environmental Defense. Johnson continued his anti-regulatory efforts in the early days of the Bush
presidency, when he helped place industry champions in positions throughout
the government. As director of OMB, an obscure but powerful arm of the White
House, he has implemented a "Program Assessment Rating Tool" to evaluate
federal programs and cut funding to those that are "not getting results."
In reality, though, Johnson uses PART to slash government efforts that don't
fit the administration's political agenda. This year's budget eliminates twenty
percent of the programs that were rated most effective, including efforts to
improve the environment and education, and increases funding for programs that
received the lowest possible rating -- including an attempt to reduce the number
of poor people claiming a low-income tax credit. The evaluations "are based on the whims of White House budget bean counters,"
says Gary Bass, executive director of the nonpartisan OMB Watch. "These
are meaningless numbers that do nothing but back up preordained political conclusions." The Sunset Commission would go even further. The panel -- which will likely
be composed of "experts in management issues," according to one senior
OMB official -- will enable the administration to terminate entire government
programs that protect citizens against injury and death. Consider what America
might look like if Reagan had wielded such an anti-regulatory ax twenty years
ago. Abolishing the EPA would have increased air pollution, causing tens of
thousands of children to develop chronic respiratory diseases. Terminating the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration would have eliminated many protections
we now take for granted -- including air bags, child safety seats and automatic
seat belts. And getting rid of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration
would have forestalled workplace regulations that have prevented illnesses among
millions of farmworkers. Even if such regulations remain on the books, eliminating entire agencies would
leave no one to enforce them. "And if there's no cop on the beat, who's
going to follow the law?" says J. Robert Shull, senior policy analyst at
OMB Watch. The first hint of Bush's plan to create a commission surfaced only weeks after
he won re-election last November. At an economic conference convened by Treasury
Secretary John Snow, one panel member made the case for inserting a sunset provision
into existing regulations. Such a move would "shift the burden of proof
onto the regulations and require us to demonstrate that they're still needed,"
said Susan Dudley, director of regulatory studies at the Mercatus Center, a
free-market think tank based in Washington, D.C. It's fitting that the first public mention of Bush's plan came from Mercatus.
The center's "regulatory studies program" was founded by Wendy Gramm,
the wife of former Texas Sen. Phil Gramm and the woman Reagan called "my
favorite economist." As a senior official at OMB under the Gipper, Gramm
fought hard to eliminate federal regulations. Her most notorious victory came
in 1992 when, as chair of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, she
pushed through a measure exempting companies that trade in energy derivatives
from regulation, following an intense lobbying campaign by Enron. Gramm resigned
from the commission and accepted a seat on the Enron board of directors, where
she was paid $1.85 million and received donations from the company to support
Mercatus. Enron, meanwhile, used its exemption from federal oversight to engage
in its infamous accounting fraud that destroyed the company and bankrupted investors. But such dangers of eliminating regulations have done nothing to slow Bush's
drive for a sunset commission. Given its political gains last November, the
administration is optimistic about winning approval in Congress. "The stars
and the planets are aligned," Johnson recently declared, citing the solid
Republican majority in Congress and the need to curb the soaring federal deficit. But there may be a stumbling block. The commission not only threatens the environment
and public health -- it would also violate the constitutional separation of
power between Congress and the executive branch, enabling the president to dismantle
programs created by lawmakers. "Under the administration's proposal, Congress
would relinquish its constitutional power to legislate," says Rep. Henry
Waxman, a Democrat from California who has been the commission's most vocal
opponent. "Power would be consolidated in the executive branch, and the
legislative role would be emasculated." Republicans already have a plan to counter such concerns. Under a bill expected
to be introduced soon, the power to appoint the commission would be given to
Congress rather than to the president -- simply transferring the authority from
Bush to his GOP allies on the Hill. And if the commission is challenged in court,
the administration is likely to drag out the fight until it has firmly established
a conservative majority on the Supreme Court. Either way, opponents consider the commission a serious threat. "The end
result," says Waxman, "would be a field day for corporate lobbyists." |