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he
punditocracy appears to have reached a consensus that Trent Lott
and Tom DeLay were very wrong to pounce on Tom Daschle over his
remarks on the war two weeks ago. Lott attacked Daschle for "criticiz[ing]
President Bush. . . when we have troops in the field" and DeLay
called his remarks "disgusting." Then the punditocracy
pounced on them, saying that 1) Daschle had not in fact criticized
the president, 2) Daschle's critics were unfairly questioning his
patriotism, and 3) they were trying to use political intimidation
to block an open debate on foreign policy. Even quite hawkish commentators
Michael
Kelly and the editors of the Weekly
Standard, for example have made some of these claims.
I defended
Lott and DeLay on the first two points: In fact, Lott and DeLay
had said nothing about Daschle's patriotism; and it was certainly
more of a stretch to infer that they had than to infer that Daschle
was criticizing the president. The notion that they were trying
to shut down an argument,
meanwhile, assumes that Daschle had actually made one. I thought
his remarks had about one part of substance for every three of weaselly
political maneuvering as John
Podhoretz nicely demonstrated so I wasn't scandalized
when Lott and DeLay made an equally political response. But maybe
I was wrong to defend them on point 3.
I will, however,
repeat one observation: People who say that it's ok for the Democrats
to criticize the administration on the war can't then profess shock
and outrage when Karl Rove says the war will be a partisan issue
in the fall elections.
Silencing
Dissent, II
Whether or not Tom Daschle has a legitimate complaint about his
critics, Bradley Smith and David Mason are getting rougher treatment
for expressing their opinions than he ever did. Smith sits on, and
Mason is chairman of, the Federal Election Commission. They were
sharply critical of the campaign-finance legislation sponsored by
Chris Shays and Marty Meehan (in the House) and John McCain and
Russ Feingold (in the Senate). Smith wrote an op-ed for the Wall
Street Journal and a cover story for National Review
on the legislation as a threat to free speech, and Mason gave a
speech to the Heritage Foundation saying it would be unworkable
in practice.
The commissioners'
critics are saying not only that they were wrong about the legislation,
but that they shouldn't have said anything at all. Larry Noble,
the executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, wrote
a letter to NR complaining that Smith has "engaged in
lobbying members of Congress against pending legislation that he
will have to administer if enacted, and has used a magazine article
to publicly attack organizations that, no doubt, will continue to
appear before his agency." Roll Call quoted Noble, Common
Cause lobbyist Matt Keller, and Brennan Center president E. Joshua
Rosenkranz calling Smith and Mason's behavior "inappropriate"
and "unprecedented." The Hill reports that the
commissioners' position has moved McCain to "seek to overhaul
or replace" the FEC.
The commissioners'
critics talk vaguely of possible illegality on the duo's part. That's
a stretch. As long as Mason and Smith didn't use government funds
to organize opposition to the bill and nobody suggests that
they did they didn't break the anti-lobbying law. Nobody
blinks when the Justice Department supports, opposes, or even proposes
legislation that it will then enforce. True, the FEC is, unlike
Justice, an "independent agency," but it's hard to see
how that would strengthen the case for a gag rule on the commissioners.
Is there then
a rule of political propriety that commissioners shouldn't talk
about legislation the way Smith and Mason did? If there is such
an unwritten rule, it ought to be abandoned. Few people are better
positioned to know if legislation is unworkable than the people
charged with enforcing it, and it's useful for Congress to know
when considering a bill whether well-informed people think it's
unworkable. Everyone knew that Smith and Mason were skeptical of
McCain-Feingold-style "reform" when they joined the FEC.
Nobody has any more reason to worry about their enforcement of it
now that they've spoken than they did beforehand. And nobody's made
a case that they have failed to enforce laws simply because they
disagreed with them.
The opponents
of Shays-Meehan/McCain-Feingold portray its supporters as authoritarian
enemies of free speech. You would think that the reform crowd would
avoid acting in ways that confirm the charge. Their attempts to
silence Mason and Smith may not raise First Amendment issues, but
they're certainly thuggish.
The more defensible
criticism of Mason and Smith concerns what The Hill calls
the FEC's "weak enforcement record in recent years." Peter
Beinart takes up this claim in the latest New Republic, saying
that Mason and Smith have made a weak agency weaker. The trouble
with this argument is that it ignores the FEC's lousy record in
court when it was more activist. Says Mason, "I simply won't
accept the [contention] that the most aggressive enforcement stance
is the wisest enforcment stance. . . . The commission for a long
period of time pursued expansive theories of the law and when those
theories were challenged, it consistently lost in court."
Now Beinart
et al could argue that the courts were wrong, and that the FEC should
be pushing the envelope. The reformers then run the risk that by
promoting dubious cases, they provoke court rulings that leave the
system worse, from their point of view, then when they started.
And what about cases where an aggressive FEC would be wrong? In
those cases, the FEC would have forced people to undertake prolonged
litigation in defense of perfectly legal activity and the
prospect of such litigation would have a "chilling effect,"
to use the jargon of First Amendment jurisprudence, on other people
considering the exercise of their freedoms. But perhaps the campaign-finance
reformers do not worry about that.
In any case,
one hopes that the folks whose sensibilities were offended by the
Republican campaign against Daschle will speak up against the attempt
to silence or punish Smith and Mason, who after all have rather
less ability to defend themselves than does the senator.
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