The Independent Weekly, Durham, N.C., Bob Geary column [The Independent Weekly, Durham, N.C.]
| By Bob Geary, The Independent Weekly, Durham, N.C. | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
But my fellow citizens, I am here to say on this
And by fine, I don't mean what the president was attempting to say: that the private sector is doing better than the public sector. Contrast the steady growth in private-sector employment -- up for 27 consecutive months with a total of 4.2 million jobs added -- with the nearly two years of declining employment in the public sector. That's what he was talking about in his press conference, though you'd never know it from the attack ads.
No, I mean fine as in the corporate interests are playing to win. Unless they're stopped, they will eventually control every aspect of American life, including a federal government that our founders believed would represent We the People.
Meanwhile, the laboring classes -- those of us who work (if we can find a job) for companies we don't own -- are in danger of losing our rights as citizens to curb corporate greed and require that companies serve the public interest.
In the founding documents, these rights were associated with such concepts as the pursuit of happiness, promoting the general welfare, guaranteeing a republican form of government -- not an oligarchy or fascism -- and, above all, with the principle that the laws should serve a common good, not just a fortunate few.
So now consider where we are this
* Corporate profits in the U.S. are at an all-time high, according to data compiled by the Federal Reserve Bank of
* Corporate influence in our national affairs is also at an all-time high. Yes, I realize that an argument can be made for the robber barons of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, but they had nowhere near the reach or resources of today's global capitalists.
* Meanwhile, a five-member majority on the
* The same court majority, however, grants corporations and their wealthy owners and investors the right to spend unlimited sums of money in political and lobbying campaigns, often anonymously. It treats corporations as if they were people entitled to protected speech under the First Amendment.
The
But nowhere was the court's fealty to business more clearly on display than in the decision, handed up Thursday just prior to adjournment, in
In that case, the court by a 5-4 vote upheld the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.
It was a victory for the Obama administration, no doubt. But more than that -- and perhaps more important in the long run -- it was a victory for corporations. In fact, it was a double victory.
First, a five-member majority upheld the idea that citizens can be required to buy health insurance (per the much-disputed individual mandate) from private corporations, including for-profit corporations.
But it was an unusual majority, as you've surely heard. The four moderate-to-liberal justices on the court supported the individual mandate. They found it to be an unremarkable exercise of
If you want health care in American, the four moderate-to-liberal justices said in an opinion written by
However, the five other justices, all solid conservatives, dislike the commerce clause. They consider the notion that
In their zeal to erect a limit on
But the fifth, Chief Justice
A tax? Wait a minute. If that's true, wouldn't any regulation of commerce, if it included penalties for noncompliance -- as they routinely do and as the individual mandate in Obamacare does -- be deemed a tax and therefore constitutional?
Well, sure.
Still, by Roberts' tortured logic this regulation-with-penalties isn't a regulation but a tax. And if you go with that, corporations emerge from the Obamacare debate with the best of both worlds.
The health-care law the corporations wrote was upheld -- and make no mistake, Obamacare wasn't written by the
But five justices, a majority of the court, are now on record as saying that the powers of
Look out below for pro-business judges, unleashed by the Roberts Court, to take a run at laws that protect the public but that corporations find to be -- they love this word -- onerous.
So will Obamacare, the decision, be a watershed in American government? The answer might depend on the Obama-Romney election and whether Republicans, now in control of the House, can take the
As Yale Law School Professor
Remember, Roberts was alone in his opinion. The four other conservative justices wrote an unsigned dissent declaring that Roberts was wrong and that
If Obama is re-elected, Balkin said, he could safeguard the Commerce Clause by appointing a liberal to replace
But, Balkin went on, if Romney is elected, he could appoint a sixth conservative justice if, say, Ginsburg should retire. (She is 79.) Then, he added, "Roberts' seemingly compromised opinion won't be very compromised at all. His apparent flip-flop won't be understood as a change of mind ... [but instead] may turn out to be, in hindsight, the beginning of an important transformation in constitutional law."
The impact of such a transformation on the lives of average Americans is impossible to foretell. But at a minimum, as Ginsburg wrote in her opinion, it "harks back to the era [prior to the New Deal] in which the Court routinely thwarted
That era ended with the Great Depression. Subsequently,
From 1937 until 1995, a half-century during which
Not surprisingly, business pushed back. In 1971,
Powell's memo is remembered as the beginning of a major corporate push to influence judicial appointments to federal and state courts. It also presaged a 1978 opinion issued by Powell, by then a
Powell's ruling, for a 5-4 court, said that private corporations had a First Amendment right to free speech protections -- the same as citizens do -- when they make independent expenditures intended to influence policy outcomes. A
Move the calendar ahead 32 years, and
The open spigot of corporate money pouring into the 2012 campaign, especially by "independent" committees out to take down
That's free speech.
Not only is it free speech, but "independent" committees, organized as nonprofit corporations or Super PACs, can accept unlimited contributions from wealthy individuals and corporations without disclosing the donors. Thus, for example, Crossroads GPS, an attack organization started by former
The deregulation of corporate political spending was one goal of the
The idea, which Georgetown Law School Professor
As a result of the Obamacare ruling, Solum wrote, this alternative view of the Commerce Clause -- "is no longer an outlier, a theory endorsed by a few eccentric professors and one odd justice [Thomas] of the
Instead, it's been endorsed by at least four justices. Therefore, Solum concluded, "things are now 'up for grabs' in a way no one anticipated when the saga of the constitutional challenge to the Affordable Care Act began."
On Saturday, the state chapter of Americans for Prosperity and the
AFP unveiled a new TV attack ad on which it will spend
In a way, the idea of Obamacare as a tax makes it easier for AFP and the
So we circle back. In the first quarter of 2012, after-tax corporate profits in the U.S. totaled
In sum, business is doing fine -- it's the rest of us who aren't. And if
This article appeared in print with the headline "Flip the bird."
___
(c)2012 the Independent Weekly (Durham, N.C.)
Visit the Independent Weekly (Durham, N.C.) at www.indyweek.com
Distributed by MCT Information Services
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