Thursday Morning - The Front Page Cover

 The Front Page Cover 
"I pray that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened"
 
Featuring:
Why Progressives Mislead
John O. McGinnis
 
"Rise up together as one voice"
"Be careful where you stand"
~~~lll~~~
 
 
 It's Too Easy to Get Guns, nObama Grumbles  
Barack nObama thinks it's way too easy to buy a gun, and he wants to "fix" that. "As long as you can go in some neighborhoods and it is easier for you to buy a firearm than it is for you to buy a book -- there are neighborhoods where it is easier for you to buy a handgun and clips than it is for you to buy a fresh vegetable -- as long as that's the case, we're going to continue to see unnecessary violence," nObama warned at a town hall meeting at Benedict College. Clearly frustrated with Congress for not fully exploiting the murders at Sandy Hook Elementary in 2012 to pass gun control, nObama complained, "I thought ... what happened at Sandy Hook would make us think about it. You would have thought that's got to be enough of a motivator. But we couldn't get it done." Without Congress, he said, "It is difficult to reduce the availability of guns." That is his goal, after all. However, he added, "We've tried to get as much done administratively" as possible.
          Indeed he has. The ATF is considering a ban on M855 ammunition, which is widely used in AR-15s. And "considering" is probably not strong enough a word, as the ATF recently published the new regulation in its 2014 Regulation Guide, released in January. When Townhall's Katie Pavlich called them out, the ATF backtracked and claimed it was a "publishing mistake" -- that the regulation was not finalized. Unfortunately, that doesn't mean the ban won't take effect, just that the ATF announced prematurely. nObama has 700 days, a phone and a pen. He won't stop with green-tip ammo-The Patriot Post 
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 In Selma, nObama Slams 'Voter Suppression' Laws  
Speaking in Selma Saturday for the 50th anniversary of the civil rights march there, Barack nObama told marchers that today's voter ID laws are commensurate with what plagued blacks 50 years ago. "Right now, in 2015, 50 years after Selma, there are laws across this country designed to make it harder for people to vote," nObama complained. "As we speak, more of such laws are being proposed. Meanwhile, the Voting Rights Act -- the culmination of so much blood, so much sweat and tears, the product of so much sacrifice in the face of wanton violence -- the Voting Rights Act stands weakened, its future subject to political rancor. How can that be? The Voting Rights Act was one of the crowning achievements of our democracy, the result of Republican and Democratic efforts. President [Ronald] Reagan signed its renewal when he was in office. President George W. Bush signed its renewal when he was in office. One hundred members of Congress have come here today to honor people who were willing to die for the right to protect it. If we want to honor this day, let that hundred go back to Washington and gather four hundred more, and together pledge to make it their mission to restore that law this year. That's how we honor those on this bridge." Requiring that voting citizens prove who they are -- just as if they were buying alcohol -- is not "suppressing the vote." That's especially true in a nation in which nObama has just legalized nearly five million illegals. He's misrepresenting history for political gain. More...   -The Patriot Post 
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 NY Times Lets nObama Set Agenda for Selma Remembrance  
Read the headline and examine the picture of The New York Times' front cover after political leaders commemorated the 50-year anniversary of the march at Selma, and you'd think the whole event was all about Barack nObama. The Times highlighted his quote, "We know the march is not yet over," in the headline, and the photo of the event featured a white-shirted nObama linking arms with Rep. John Lewis, who was at the original march. nObama's speech linked what happened 50 years ago to the recent unrest in Ferguson, Missouri. Yet the Times' coverage all but ignored the GOP presence at the march. George W. Bush was in the front line of marchers, but The Times cropped him out of the picture. The media lambasted GOP leaders for skipping the march, though Bush and House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy were there. One notable absence was Hilly Clinton, who decided it was more important to attend a Clinton Global Initiative event in Florida than commemorate a seminal moment in the civil rights movement. The Left tried to co-opt the event for two purposes: First, to smear Republicans who stayed home. Second, to mold the civil rights narrative for political ends. And, as always, the New York Times helped them do it. More...  -The Patriot Post 
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 Holder Warns Police: We're Coming After You  
In the wake of the Justice Department's predictable findings of racist police in Ferguson, Attorney General Eric Holder fired a shot across the bow. "We are prepared to use all the powers that we have, all the power that we have, to ensure that the situation changes there," Holder said Friday. "That means everything from working with them to coming up with an entirely new structure." In other words, the Ferguson Police Department is on notice. But not just Ferguson. "I hope [police departments around the nation are] listening to these comments, and understand the intensity with which the feelings are felt at the federal government level to ensure that we use all the tools that we can to make sure that what happened in Ferguson is uncovered and simply does not happen in any other part of the country," Holder added. "But I also want to make people understand, there are 18,000 police departments in this country, and I think what we saw in Ferguson was an anomaly." We'd say that's a pretty clear sign of what will be on incoming AG Loretta Lynch's agenda.  -The Patriot Post 
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 Hilly Clinton Has Always Avoided a Paper Trail  
Hilly Clinton borders on paranoia when it comes to documenting her work, as if she considers transparency and oversight the enemy. In 1994, she said she didn't even keep a diary. "It could get subpoenaed! I don't write anything down," she said. Recently, a video surfaced of a 2001 ABC report that shows Clinton saying she didn't use email: "As much as I've been investigated and all of that, you know, why would I -- I don't even want -- why would I ever want to do email?" But now, it turns out that crafty grandma was running her own email server -- which can permanently delete emails. Head of the House committee investigating the attack on the Benghazi consulate in 2012, Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-SC), said Clinton has kept emails from his committee's investigation. "There are gaps of months of months of months," he said. "If you think to that iconic picture of her on a C-17 flying to Libya … we have no emails from that day. In fact we have no emails from that trip." Unlike Lois Lerner's emails, Clinton's may be gone for good. As "clueless" as ever, Barack nObama distanced himself from the former secretary of state, trotting out his tired old excuse that he learned about the scandal "through news reports." Sure thing. 
-The Patriot Post 
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1.
 What Did They Know, and When Did They Know It?  
(Roger Aronoff) - The latest revelations about Hilly Clinton’s use of private emails while Secretary of State for the nObama administration have proven “politically problematic,” and invited discomfort by some of her fellow Democrats...possibly encouraging other ambitious Democratic hopefuls to contend for the presidential primary, according to some in the media. By defining the problem as just “political,” these reporters can cast the issue as one dividing political parties to distract from the pressing issues of the day. This media frenzy works in the nObama administration’s favor. “…why did Hilly Clinton become the nObama administration’s bête noire this very week…? questions Lee Smith writing for Tablet Magazine. Perhaps because Benjamin Netanyahu’s recent speech before Congress reflected badly on the administration’s plan for an Iran deal. “This week’s tarring of Hilly Clinton is part of the White House’s political campaign to shut off debate about its hoped-for deal,” he asserts.       http://www.aim.org/aim-column/obama-and-hillary-what-did-they-know-and-when-did-they-know-it/?utm_source=AIM+-+Daily+Email&utm_campaign=email031015&utm_medium=email
2.
Hilly Clinton – Trust You Cannot Verify
clinton emails
 The U.N. – Venue Selected For Heavy Clinton Control… 
(theconservativetreehouse.com) - Former Secretary of State Hilly Clinton is expected to give a “press conference”  (as it is described) TODAY at 2:20pm at the United Nations in New York...The format of how she will address the controversy is still sketchy and seems highly “Clintonian”. It is obvious that Hilly Clinton is trying to avoid the crushing full court media scrutiny who are heavily interested in getting answers to the myriad of controversial questions. Control seems to be the operative word. However, this level of avoidance could backfire given the justifiable interest in the scandal.     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0ap9FPu5dk
3.
 Is nObama really as clueless as he claims? 
(
David Limbaugh) - I don’t know which is more maddening, President nObama’s repeatedly claiming he finds out about important matters only after reading the newspapers, his expectation that we’ll swallow that..the even scarier prospect that it could be true, or that the media continue to give him a pass on it. nObama told CBS News senior White House correspondent Bill Plante that he learned of Hilly Clinton’s use of her private email address for official State Department business after a New York Times report. With no apparent self-consciousness or embarrassment, nObama said he learned about it at “the same time everybody else learned it through news reports.” Then he followed with the equally preposterous and oft-repeated assurance, “The policy of my administration is to encourage transparency.”       http://www.wnd.com/2015/03/is-obama-really-as-clueless-as-he-claims/
4.
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 Supporters of Deal Are Strengthening Iran's Negotiating Position  
(Alan M. Dershowitz) - Despite repeating the mantra that "no deal is better than a bad deal" with Iran, the United States seems to be negotiating on the basis of a belief that the worst possible outcome of the current negotiations is no deal...Many supporters of the deal that is now apparently on the table are arguing that there is no realistic alternative to this deal. That sort of thinking out loud empowers the Iranian negotiators to demand more and compromise less, because they believe -- and have been told by American supporters of the deal -- that the United States has no alternative but to agree to a deal that is acceptable to the Iranians. A perfect example of this mindset was Fareed Zakaria on his CNN show this past Sunday. He had a loaded panel of two experts and a journalist favoring the deal, and one journalist opposed. This followed Zakaria's opening essay in favor of the deal. All those in favor made the same point: that this deal is better than no deal, and that any new proposal -- for example, to condition the sunset provision on Iran stopping the export of terrorism and threatening to destroy Israel -- is likely to be rejected by Iran, and is therefore, by definition, "irrational" or "unproductive," because it would result in no deal.       http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/5367/iran-negotiating-position
5.
 America Has Been Warned – Now What Will She Do? 
(
Tim Brown) - Men and women of God are the faithful towards God and men because they love God and love mankind. These are those who warn the people of the danger ahead because they have not listened to the commandments of God...Last week on The Sons of Liberty radio show, host Bradlee Dean pointed to the Scriptures and, indeed, raised his voice again to warn the people of more judgment from God because they have failed to repent before a just and holy God. Dean pointed to the text of Ezekiel 33:1-19, which reads:        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tmy2t-Pp6A    
6.
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According to non-Muslim politicians these Taliban members have nothing to do with Islam.

 Why Politicians Pretend Islam Has No Role in Violence  
(Daniel Pipes) - Prominent non-Muslim political figures have embarrassed themselves by denying the self-evident connection of Islam to the Islamic State (ISIS) and to Islamist violence in Paris and Copenhagen, even claiming these are contrary to Islam... What do they hope to achieve through these falsehoods and what is their significance? First, a sampling of the double talk: President Barack nObama tells the world that ISIS "is not Islamic" because its "actions represent no faith, least of all the Muslim faith." He holds "we are not at war with Islam but with people who have perverted Islam." Secretary of State Hanoi John Kerry echoes him: ISIS consists of "coldblooded killers masquerading as a religious movement" who promote a "hateful ideology has nothing do with Islam." His spokesperson, Jen Psaki, goes further: the terrorists "are enemies of Islam." Jeh Johnson, the U.S. secretary of Homeland Security, assents: "ISIL is not Islamic." My favorite: Howard Dean, the former Democrat governor of Vermont, says of the Charlie Hebdo attackers, "They're about as Muslim as I am."       http://www.danielpipes.org/15618/islam-violence
7.
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 Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi speaks to Fox News  
(pamelageller.com) - Asked how el-Sisi and America’s other Arab allies view American nObama’s leadership in the region now, it’s what he didn’t say that spoke volumes...In what is perhaps the deepest sigh, and the most pregnant of pauses, watch Egyptian President el-Sisi: He said the suspension of U.S. equipment and arms to his country has sent a “negative indication to the public opinion that the United States is not standing by the Egyptians.” Nervous deep breath followed by a large gulp. He struggled to be … diplomatic and avoided answering entirely, trying to decide how to phrase the truth without being overly critical and offending the priggish president. Volumes communicated in one very short clip. - See more at:       https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QwU_gHbTfe8
8.
Obama Rouhani Selfie
 The Danger of Negotiating with Iran  
(Michael Rubin) - Although the nObama administration considers its negotiations with Iran a bold new strategy of engagement, every presidential administration since Jimmy Carter has had its own diplomatic initiative with the Islamic Republic...and these have consistently failed. Perhaps, write Michael Rubin, something should be learned from prior experience: Too many American diplomats . . . are committed to the belief that talking is a cost-free, risk-free strategy. . . . But [this is] to project American values onto others. Americans may not see willingness to talk as weakness, but other cultures do. . . .     http://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/2015/03/how-not-to-conduct-diplomacy-with-iran/
9.
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 Has nObamacare fixed US health care inflation?  
(Christopher J. Conover) - Here we go again. What is it about nObamacare that inspires its fiercest supporters the cherry-pick evidence as proof it is “working”?...The latest entrant in this never-ending contest is Matt Phillips, who trumpets the news “nObamacare fixed U.S. healthcare inflation.”  If true, this would be no mean feat since as we’ll see, medical inflation has outpaced general inflation rather regularly over the past half century, sometimes by as much as 6 percentage points in a single year.  But as we’ll also see, giving nObamacare credit for the recent slowdown in health prices is quite a stretch for two reasons: first, it fails to account for the fact that this downward trend was clearly visible years before President nObama was even elected president; and second, it fails to account for what was happening to the general economy and general inflation during the same time period.       http://www.aei.org/publication/obamacare-fixed-us-health-care-inflation/?utm_source=today&utm_medium=paramount&utm_campaign=AEIToday031015
10.
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 Hamas Apologist Appointed to High Mideast National Security Post  
(Joseph Klein) - In yet another crass attempt to register its anger at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s courageous and truthful speech on Iran to a joint session of Congress last week...the nObama administration promoted an Israel basher to serve as the Special Assistant to the President and White House Coordinator for the Middle East, North Africa and the Gulf Region. His name is Robert Malley, who most recently has been serving as National Security Council (NSC) Senior Director for Iran, Iraq, Syria and the Gulf States. Effective April 6, 2015, he will, in his new position, have responsibility for an area encompassing Israel, Palestinian territories, North Africa and the Persian Gulf.       http://www.frontpagemag.com/2015/joseph-klein/hamas-apologist-appointed-to-high-mideast-national-security-post/?utm_source=FrontPage+Magazine&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=b81c881bc8-Mailchimp_FrontPageMag&utm_term=0_57e32c1dad-b81c881bc8-156509103
Why Progressives Mislead
John O. McGinnis
 
 

     (city-journal.org) - Barack nObama’s supporters and detractors don’t agree on much, but as the president enters his final two years in office, they have voiced a common complaint: the president lacks competence. They cite multiple management breakdowns, such as the disastrous rollout of the nObamacare health-insurance website, which have eroded public support; his lack of engagement with Congress, which has impeded his legislative agenda; and his chronic inability to address serious problems before they become full-blown crises, undermining Americans’ confidence in his leadership.

     There is no doubt considerable truth to these charges. But nObama’s fundamental problems stem less from incompetence than from his philosophy of governance. In his first presidential campaign, nObama took pains to distinguish his approach from the incrementalism of Bill Clinton and modeled himself instead on the transformational leadership of Franklin Roosevelt and of Ronald Reagan. During the race, and increasingly after the election, it became clear that nObama embraced a theory of dramatic political change—that of progressivism, which dates its American origins to an early-twentieth-century era of social and political reform. And he has adhered to it, despite some of the worst midterm election defeats faced by any two-term president.

     Progressivism’s vision of the role of the state conflicts with the system of government envisioned by America’s Founders. The Founders wanted citizens to be free to pursue their affairs individually and in voluntary association; the powers of the federal state were to be tightly constrained. In contrast, the greatest political theorist of American progressivism, Herbert Croly, said that the nation’s “democracy should be focused on an equal sharing of wealth and responsibilities”—an enterprise that demands a larger and more intrusive federal state to enforce. nObama spoke from this tradition on the campaign trail in 2008—most famously, when he told Joe the Plumber that it was “good to spread the wealth around.”

     But nObama and his supporters face a more challenging political landscape than did their progressive forebears. In the early twentieth century, progressives introduced new entitlements against the backdrop of low federal spending and a much smaller federal government. At the beginning of the Progressive Era, federal government spending represented only about 4 percent of GDP; it reached 11 percent when FDR introduced Social Security. (Even that figure was artificially high because the Depression had dramatically reduced GDP.) And progressivism in its early years enjoyed support among the legions of poor, who had little to lose from the rearrangement of rights by government programs.

     Today, the federal government spends more than five times as much, as a percentage of GDP, than it did at the beginning of the last century, and twice as much as when Social Security was introduced. That amount will continue to grow, driven by the rising cost of entitlements for an aging population. The future consequences of past decisions thus constrain the present capacity of the state, even as progressivism’s reach becomes more ambitious: reorganizing health care, as the nObama administration has begun to do with the 2010 passage of the Affordable Care Act, better known as nObamacare, touches everyone’s life in ways that, say, the regulation of railroads did not. Such massive programs are more likely to be complex and to generate popular resistance, as nObamacare has done.

     On top of these structural difficulties, the progressive coalition has also become harder to maintain. Over the course of the twentieth century, free-market capitalism created unprecedented mass affluence. The average income of Americans grew by more than four times in the last century, making the United States the wealthiest nation of any substantial size. Citizens now have more to lose from interventions in the free market, because they are better off. It’s hard to imagine that a progressive party could maintain control of both the House and Senate for 20 consecutive years and the House for 40 years, as did the Democrats earlier in the twentieth century.

     Faced with these constraints, today’s progressives must resort to more misleading and sometimes coercive measures, as they seek to bring about equality through collective responsibility; they must rally support by looking beyond economics, to cultural and social identifications, in a bid to maintain the support of voters with little need for government intervention. They also want to limit the voices of citizens at election time, and thereby magnify the influence of the press and academia, which lean sharply in the progressive direction.

     Nothing shows the progressive dependence on subterfuge more starkly than nObamacare, which, by imposing a personal mandate to buy insurance in an effort to bring health care to all, will restructure one-sixth of the American economy. Single-payer government health insurance has been a dream on the left for decades, but it was never a politically realistic option. This was true even while Democrats controlled both houses of Congress, as they did during the first two years of nObama’s first term. The American public wouldn’t tolerate the level of government funding that a single-payer system would require, so the best that the administration could do was to impose a regulatory structure, while accepting a private-insurance model. In crafting the Affordable Care Act, the administration intentionally avoided describing the individual mandate as a tax—a tacit admission that doing so could have sunk the bill. After the bill became law, however, the administration turned around and argued before the Supreme Court that the mandate was, in fact, a tax. The Court upheld the mandate as an exercise of an enumerated government power to levy taxes. Even then, the administration concealed nObamacare’s taxes on the wealthy, which were not added to the income-tax tables. The recently publicized comments of MIT professor Jonathan Gruber about the deception involved in promoting the Affordable Care Act demonstrate that such chicanery has become intrinsic to modern progressivism.

     American affluence also proved a political obstacle for the law’s drafters. Most Americans already had health insurance and a doctor with whom they felt comfortable. To secure support for the ACA, therefore, nObama had to promise repeatedly that those happy with their current health plans (and doctors) could keep them. But ACA requirements resulted in the cancellation of many insurance plans, causing patients to lose access to their doctors. This proved the most damaging blow to nObama’s credibility.

     Some have labeled the president’s economy with the truth a personal failing, but it’s more like a professional necessity. Modern progressivism’s business model requires obscuring the reality that new programs have winners and losers—and the losers are spread throughout the general population, not confined to members of the so-called 1 percent. As the Affordable Care Act goes fully into effect, the losers will become more visible. If people had known the truth about nObamacare in 2010, the bill would almost certainly have been defeated. If they had known it in 2012, nObama would likely have lost his reelection bid.

     The architects of nObamacare needed these deceptions, in part, because more people are becoming aware of the financial burden of unfunded liabilities. As a result, it is not as easy to slough off costs on future generations. nObamacare’s ill-fated CLASS (Community Living Assistance Services and Supports) provision, a long-term-care insurance program for the elderly, is a case in point. A voluntary program, CLASS was required by law to be financially self-sustaining, meaning that it would need large numbers of young and healthy people to sign up for it—a dubious prospect. The revenues expected in CLASS’s first years made nObamacare seem more fiscally responsible in the short term than it really was, though the Medicare actuary warned that this was a mirage. “Thirty-six years of actuarial experience,” he wrote in an internal e-mail, “lead me to believe that this program would collapse in short order and require significant federal subsidies to continue.” Less than two years later, HHS secretary Kathleen Sebelius concluded that the program could not be self-sustaining and terminated it.

     Even before nObamacare’s false promises were revealed, the law was not popular with middle-class voters, who felt that nObama was less interested in restarting the stagnant economy than in creating a new welfare program. Riding a wave of dissatisfaction with the new law, Republicans took control of the House of Representatives in 2010. Four years later, with the ACA even more disliked, the Republicans took the Senate, too. Since nObamacare never had bipartisan support, the Democrats would have been hard-pressed to pass amendments to improve it under the best circumstances; their legislative losses made the question academic. This difficulty underscores a key problem with central planning: the world is unpredictable. Just as no military plan survives contact with the enemy, no program of government benefits, and certainly not one as ambitious as nObamacare, can anticipate the changing circumstances in which it will operate.

     Struggling with problems of implementation and public resistance, the administration has held off enforcing inconvenient parts of the law, such as the one requiring businesses to offer health-care insurance to their employees by 2013. That provision was delayed by one year. The law also required uninsured individuals to purchase health plans, but the administration exempted those who would “face hardship.” Since following the law’s required timeline would have had adverse political consequences, the administration claimed the authority to delay and amend these provisions. But the law’s statutory deadlines were clear.

     The Supreme Court will soon determine the legality of yet another nObama administrative action that appears to contradict the plain language of the Affordable Care Act. The statute provides taxpayer subsidies for insurance policies bought on “exchanges established by the states.” But almost half the states have declined to establish such exchanges. When states don’t set up exchanges, the ACA then requires the federal government to do so but provides no parallel authorization for subsidies. Nevertheless, the Treasury Department has adopted regulations offering such subsidies, arguing that they advance the overall purpose of the ACA. Authorizing subsidies for federal exchanges is vital to the future of nObamacare, particularly because sign-up numbers have been disappointing. Should the Supreme Court rule that the administration lacks this authority, though, any attempt to provide authority through legislation will lead to wholesale revision of nObamacare in the Republican Congress.

     Progressivism has long valued executive discretion in domestic affairs because presidents need to make fewer compromises than do legislatures. Not surprisingly, nObama-era progressives argue for maximizing the scope of that discretion. The Democratic Senate’s decision to do away with the filibuster on judicial nominations, for instance, was principally designed to eliminate any roadblocks to confirming nObama’s nominees to the District of Columbia Circuit. That court oversees the exercise of administrative discretion in many important government programs—including nObamacare.

     But today’s progressivism needs more than wide-ranging discretion to adapt its laws to new circumstances when its coalition no longer controls Congress. The examples above suggest that President nObama is exercising unilateral power to decline to enforce laws or even to rewrite them. Such power exceeds the traditional norms of prosecutorial discretion. Indeed, it comes perilously close to the “dispensing power” of the Stuart monarchs, who claimed the authority to disregard laws. The British rejected that power during the Glorious Revolution, and the Founders rejected it, too, by inserting language into the American Constitution requiring that the president “take Care that the law be faithfully executed.”

     Progressives also want to transform the rights provisions of the Constitution to improve their chances of political success. The president was so concerned about the Supreme Court’s protection of free speech in political campaigns that he attacked its Citizens United campaign-finance decision, which abolished restrictions on independent political expenditures by nonprofit groups. In a State of the Union address, nObama claimed that the ruling “reversed a century of law to open the floodgates for special interests—including foreign companies—to spend without limitation.” nObama’s comment about foreign corporations was no truer than his claims about the Affordable Care Act. It was instead an attempt to use xenophobia in support of the suppression of political speech. And the principal beneficiaries of Citizens United, in fact, aren’t for-profit corporations, which don’t want to offend their consumers by taking political positions, but nonprofit corporations that allow citizens to band together to deliver political messages for various causes.

     The freedom of citizens to pay for political messages poses a threat to progressives because it endangers the control over political and social discourse that the Left otherwise enjoys. The media lean overwhelmingly Democratic, with some studies estimating the imbalance between Democrats and Republicans at more than four to one. Academia is even more lopsidedly left-wing. In the Ivy League, which remains the most powerful educational megaphone for social ideas, nObama attracted 20 times as many contributors as Mitt Romney. This ideological imbalance provides progressivism with one of its most powerful weapons. And here the attack on Citizens United becomes especially practical: restricting independent campaign expenditures will allow the press and the academic world to control the agenda, as they already do for periods between elections.

     It’s worth noting in this light that the single constitutional amendment that nObama has endorsed in office is one overruling Citizens United. Last year, Senate Democrats brought to the floor an even broader amendment that would have permitted Congress to regulate both campaign expenditures and contributions. The amendment would have exempted the press from regulation, suggesting that the political objective is indeed agenda control.

     nObama’s exercise of executive discretion extends further still. Most recently, in a move decried by conservative constitutionalists, he signed an executive order deferring the deportation of some 4 million illegal immigrants, allowing them to work legally in the United States. While his stroke of the pen cannot grant citizenship, it can create a new political reality, making it harder to resist the main political prize for progressives: guaranteeing a path to voting citizenship. These and other moves represent an attempt to create a new political order in which progressivism is more likely to thrive.

     This goal also explains why the new progressivism must enlarge its agenda to include social issues, engaging in the wars of culture as well as class. While the old progressivism focused almost exclusively on economics, the new progressivism seeks a panoply of new entitlements, from on-demand contraception to same-sex marriage. Today’s progressive enthusiasm for creating new constitutional rights out of the latest social cause expands progressivism’s appeal to more affluent, secular voters, for whom bending the arc of history gives meaning to life. To succeed, then, modern progressivism must reconstitute the nature of politics, not merely change the content of policies.

     In response to the progressive agenda, conservatives and libertarians must also focus on the structure of politics. Where the new progressivism would burst the bounds of law to pursue its goals, today’s conservatives must strengthen the rule of law. For instance, the response to modern progressivism’s desire for a dispensing power should be statutory requirements that expressly forbid the president from modifying laws with which he disagrees, together with statutes that widen the ability of citizens to challenge such executive illegality. Moreover, the new Republican Congress should enact amendments to the Administrative Procedure Act that require congressional approval for major exercises of executive discretion. The Right became more enamored of executive discretion when Republicans seemed to have a lock on the presidency. But for reasons of both principle and tactical necessity, conservatives should re-embrace a notion of limited government based in congressional, not presidential, power.

     Countering the progressive drive to reduce the speech rights of those outside the symbolic class, conservatives should emphasize the principle of equality before the law. No class should be given particular privileges to speak about politics. The answer to complaints about the undue influence of campaign money at election time can be found in the principle of neutrality. Congress should commit itself to operate by evenhanded rules of appropriate generality and thus ban earmarks, targeted regulatory relief, and other favors often used to reward political support.

     Devotion to the rule of law can also contain corrosive culture wars. By decentralizing decision making and diffusing debate in this context, federalism lowers the temperature of national politics and allows the national government to focus on defense and other issues to which it is uniquely suited. And decreasing the payoff to victory in the culture wars lessens progressives’ motivation to use social appeals to rally a coalition that might otherwise fracture.

     From its inception, progressivism has posed a threat to constitutional government. It has sought to replace limited and decentralized governance with dynamic, centralized authority in order to force some arrangement of equality on the nation. Because the world has a way of upsetting abstract designs, progressivism depends on empowering administrators to impose its frameworks while disempowering citizens from resisting these coercions. The nObama administration’s push for unilateral presidential authority to disregard the law is thus the logical extension of the progressive program. Opposition to this program requires nothing less than a rededication to our Founding ideals: our nation must be governed by the rule of law, not the rule of an elected monarch or of a legally privileged aristocracy.

http://www.city-journal.org/2015/25_1_progressives.html

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