“Tater Tot Ron” for Defense?

Ron DeSantis would, I’m sure, be an outstanding Secretary of Defense. He’d be a better President. I don’t think he can be both.

He needs independence if he wants to make a run in 2028. Working for Donald Trump wouldn’t work. He needs to be his own man, not subject to the caprice of an impulsive authoritarian. Vice President Vance has the inside track to be the Donald’s designated successor, and he will resent anyone competing in his lane.

DeSantis needs his own lane, and I think one is available – Reform Republican. The reforms which are needed are all understood and supported by large majorities of voters, both Republican and Democrat. But the needed congressional action will never happen, because these reforms are of Congress itself.

First, and most obvious, is fiscal reform. To have any teeth, it needs to go into the Constitution. It could be as simple and obvious as a line-item veto. 44 Governors have it, people are familiar with it, and it works. If the President had this power, he would be responsible and politically accountable for deficit spending. There are other fiscal reforms which work in other countries, like the Swiss debt break.

Next is congressional term limits. Want to drain the swamp? Keep recycling the swamp creatures. Don’t let them get too comfortable. The American people understand this issue, and they dearly desire that someone takes up this cause.

Third is campaign finance reform. Using the powers granted to it in Article 1, sec. 4 of the Constitution, Congress has created a web of federal campaign finance laws suited perfectly to the incumbent. This power needs to be taken away from Congress, and returned to the states, and the people. Let each state decide on how it wants congressional campaigns financed within its borders. Kansas will do it one way, Rhode Island another. In states with an initiative available, the voters can decide, directly, how they want to regulate campaign financing. Every state already does it, but only for state elections. Give them the power to regulate congressional races as well. Simply remove that part of Article 1, sec. 4 which was inserted at the last minute by James Madison.

In 1787 state legislatures were the center of the anti-federalists. These people didn’t want the Constitution, which would mean the central government taking away their power. Madison was afraid that if the state legislatures controlled elections to Congress, they would abuse that power and somehow sabotage the first Congress.

It made sense at the time, but that concern is no longer a problem. Congress is the problem.

These three reforms must all be achieved using Article V of the Constitution. The states, acting together, can propose these amendments themselves, bypassing Congress. This provision was inserted because the delegates to the Convention knew that Congress, itself, could be the problem, which could not be relied on to reform itself. Article V was written specifically as a means of reforming Congress.

The effort to achieve these reforms began in 1975 with two blue dog southern Democrats. It’s had fits and starts along the way. But it has never gone away. It has never succeeded because it’s never had a leader.

Gov. Ron DeSantis could be that leader, and if the effort succeeds it would be as significant as the progressive reforms enacted at the beginning of the 20th century: direct election of Senators, the income tax, and women’s emancipation.

There were Progressive Republicans and Progressive Democrats, and there need to be Reform Republicans and Reform Democrats. It’s the on ly way it can work. Which is why anyone associated with Donald Trump cannot lead it.

Kash Patel, fanatically loyal to Trump, liked to call DeSantis “Tater Tot Ron” for having the temerity to challenge Trump. That’s the kind of loyalty Trump wants. It’s too much.

DeSantis is better off staying away from Washington. Instead, he should travel the states to gather support for the Reform Republican agenda.

It’s a Pardon-palooza!

Now Senate Democrats are saying Biden should issue preemptive pardons to potential victims of Trump’s wrath.

Where will it all end, this pardon barrage?

It ends with President Harris putting the whole sorry mess behind us. Let’s have a do-over.

Let it be. Let it be.

Pardon me for Livin’

Now Democratic wise man Rep. James Clyburn supports a pardon for Trump. This is the man who decided, on behalf of the Democratic party, to overlook all of Biden’s inadequacies and give him the 2020 nomination. When he speaks, Democrats listen.

A Trump pardon would set the stage for Kamala to pardon Joe. Let’s put all the lawfare behind us. Let’s stop criminalizing our political opponents. Let’s make a clean break from the tawdry past, and turn the page to a better, more tolerant political culture.

Turning the page is not excusing or justifying malfeasance in office. The Department of Justice, and the FBI need a thorough overhaul. But don’t start trying to throw everyone in jail. Take their pensions, their power, and their reputations, for sure. But let’s not descend into the banana republics where losing an election means going to jail.

Lyndon Johnson was as crooked as they come. He and Chicago Mayor Richard Daley probably stole the 1960 Presidential election from Nixon. But when Nixon succeeded Johnson in the presidency, he didn’t try to have him prosecuted. That may have served justice, but it wouldn’t have been in the national interest.

Ford’s pardon of Nixon was in the national intertest. The humiliation of resignation was enough punishment for Nixon’s crimes.

If Biden resigns, he puts himself in the same league with Nixon. It’s a disgrace, a permanent stain on his historical reputation. At his age, that’s enough.

The pardon power is the power of Christian forgiveness. Heading into Christmas, it would be fitting.

Pardon me, Kamala (part 2)

Back in July I thought Biden might resign, and have Kamala pardon the whole Biden crime family after the election. That way, she could campaign from out of the White House, as President Kamala Harris, the first woman President. I could picture her at the debates, being addressed as Madame President. She’d have to appoint her Vice President (remember Vice President Rockefeller?) That would be big news for weeks. Her appointment would require hearings, and a vote in both houses of Congress. Meanwhile Kamala is redecorating the White House, giving it that special “woman”s touch”. New curtains, for sure. There would be portraits of Obama everywhere. I could see it all.

Wrong!

But now Biden can resign, and Kamala can issue him a big blanket pardon, just like Hunter just got from his dad. She owes this to Joe. Just ask Jill Biden. It would look a little fishy, but Ford got away with pardoning Nixon, under similar circumstances. Just read President Ford’s Proclamation Granting Pardon to Richard Nixon.

If Biden resigns soon, the pardon can be issued six weeks from now, on her way out the White House door. That’s the way Clinton pardoned Marc Rich. Clinton did it for Marc Rich’s money, which found its way to the criminal syndicate known as the Clinton Foundation.

Kamala can pardon Joe from purely patriotic motives. Trump is rabidly vindictive, and his minions at DoJ and the FBI will do his bidding. And he wants to have Biden indicted, just like he was. What a circus!

In order to spare the nation this long national nightmare, Kamala will issue the pardon. At great personal sacrifice, she will put the welfare of the nation ahead of her own political self-interest.

Or not. It would probably help her get the 2028 presidential nomination. Everybody’s a winner!

God bless America!

The Great Red Wave and Article V

The inflection point, the moment things really started to turn around, was in October of 2013. That’s when Obamacare was introduced to the American people. Politically, it was catastrophic for the Democrats. A policy they’d been pushing since Truman actually went into effect and began to impact people’s lives. And people were pissed. They’d been told, repeatedly, that if they liked their health insurance, they could keep it. But that was always a lie,

When I saw all this happen, I decided to get back into politics after a 13 break. I figured things were going turn to around, and a lot of things might be possible. A red wave was coming, maybe big enough to enact an Article V amendment!

I was 68 years old, but figured I still had some gas left in the tank. I started a blog at ReaganProject.com, and did an internet search for an Article V movement. Any Article V movement. I found the Convention of States project (CoS), called them up, and they explained their proposal.

I told them that it would never work. You don’t combine three controversial proposals into one package and try to pass them all at one fell swoop. Politics doesn’t work that way. There are different majorities for all three ideas, but they don’t correspond to each other. This isn’t the way majorities are assembled.

So I did a little research, and found out Lew Uhler, an 80-year-old Reagan veteran in Sacramento, was still pushing a balanced budget amendment. I’d last seen Lew in Orlando at an ALEC meeting 24 years earlier, when I was in the Alaska legislature, and was pushing a term limits amendment. Here Lew was, still growing strong.

He had Mark Meckler, the head of CoS, along with his wife, over to his office. They lived just up the road in the foothills. Lew asked him to explain where he came up with the three ideas, (balanced budget, term limits, and cutting back the federal government). Meckler said he just asked the people who came to his Tea Party events, and these were the most popular ideas.

This is a stupid and sloppy way to put together a political initiative. It’s not how you draft a proposal that you try to pass in a state legislature. But it’s a good way to raise money, and that was Meckler’s principal goal. He’d learned how to raise money online for the Tea Party Patriots, which he co-founded. Naturally enough, Meckler has found his three-headed idea a tough sell. He’s raised and spent a fortune (taking a nice bite out for himself, thank you very much) to get around half the states he needs. These are the low hanging fruit, and he has little hope of getting any further.

It’s a waste of money, but it’s worse than that. Meckler actively seeks to undermine and destroy any rival Article V organization. He’s a snake. Other proposals are a threat to his. His whole operation is kept going so that Meckler can continue in the lifestyle to which he has become accustomed.

But things are about to change, fairly quickly. Meckler’s scam will soon be exposed, and he’ll need to find another line of work.

I’ve been at this a long time (since 1983, actually), and I’ve never felt better about our chances. The wave hasn’t crested. An Article V Convention will be called. And I will live to see it.