Is reading the cap and trade bill tough? Tough. If you’re planning to regulate every industrial process in America, you may have to do some heavy slogging.
True enough, the bills Congress passes have become increasingly impenetrable over the years. In Abraham Lincoln’s first State of the Union, he worried about the growing complexity of federal law, but noted that, with a modest effort at revision, “all the acts of Congress now in force [could fit in] one or two volumes of ordinary and convenient size.” Today, the Senate Finance Committee’s 1,502-page health-care bill would take up more than that much space by itself.
Worse still, most of the actual “law” in this country — the rules that citizens have to follow, at pain of fine or imprisonment — is generated by unelected administrative agencies, which use broad authority delegated by Congress to add over 75,000 new pages to the Federal Register every year.
It’s said that the Roman emperor Caligula posted new laws high on the columns of buildings so citizens couldn’t read them and figure out how to avoid their penalties. He could have achieved the same effect by covering the country with such a dense thicket of rules that no one could tell what the law commands.
Legend has it that Caligula also made his favorite horse a senator. Considering how lightly most of our legislators take their constitutional obligations, you could probably do worse.
In February 2003, the New York Times reported that both parties had hired lawyers to run seminars for congressmen, explaining the requirements of the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law they had just passed. “I didn’t realize what all was in it,” said Rep. Robert Matsui (D.-CA); “A real education process,” echoed Rep. Thomas M. Reynolds (R.-NY).
If congressmen can’t be bothered to read a law that directly affects them, should we be surprised that they’re not planning to read the health care bill, which won’t?
But, even assuming we could force legislators to read the bills, would that lead to better government? Maybe not. Carper had a point when he said that modern legislative language “is so arcane, so confusing…[that] it really doesn’t make much sense.”
If congressmen had to read what they passed, they might draft shorter, more comprehensible bills. But one way to do that is by punting yet more lawmaking authority to the permanent bureaucracy, which can then issue its own mammoth set of unintelligible rules. That hardly solves the problem.
A better idea can be found in a resolution recently introduced by Sen. Jim Bunning, R‑KY, requiring all new legislation to be posted online for 72 hours before consideration. That could put the distributed intelligence of the web to work, ferreting out the many devils in the details of proposed laws.
However, that’s still just treating symptoms. Federal law has become incomprehensible because Congress has inserted itself into every area of American life. As James Madison explained, though, Congress’s constitutional powers are “few and defined…. [to be] exercised principally on external objects,” like foreign policy and international trade.
Read the bills? It’s more important for congressmen to read the Constitution. They’ll be pleased to learn that it’s short and written in plain English.