Archive for April, 2017

Another Broward Republican leader says party is plagued with dysfunction, personal feuds – Sun Sentinel

Richard DeNapoli, the state Republican Party committeeman from Broward, says the county party is rife with personal disagreements, vendettas and score settling.

The county party organization holds its regular monthly meeting Monday night.

DeNapoli emailed county Republicans with his concerns over the weekend, following Fridays resignation of Dolly Rump, secretary of the county party.

In her resignation, Rump cited major dysfunction, division and disorder between officers. She was elected secretary in December after serving as Broward chairwoman for Donald Trumps presidential campaign.

DeNapoli, a former county Republican chairman who was also an early Trump supporter, was elected as the state Republican committeeman by party voters in the August primary. That makes him a member of the state Republican Executive Committee, which governs the state party, and a leader in the local party.

The local party, run by committeemen and committeewomen throughout the county, is formally known as the Broward Republican Executive Committee.

DeNapoli, in his email, said Rump correctly diagnosed what was going on.

I understand Dolly's reasons and can echo her sentiments. It is true that rather than focusing on critical tasks, certain members of BREC are instead focused on personal disagreements and vendettas, he wrote. You may be shocked by what Im about to write, but its all true and you need to be aware of the situation.

Instead of working together, certain members are bent on expelling other members or making their lives miserable so that they resign, DeNapoli said.

Bob Sutton, chairman of the party, could not be immediately reached on Monday. After Rump resigned on Friday, he said he look[ed] forward to the Broward Republican Executive Committee board getting back to work, explaining that within the party theres always disagreements like there are in any large family.

DeNapoli said the situation is far worse than Rump described. Exhibit A, he said, was a call about him to the police on March 8 when he was speaking the Lauderdale Beach Republican Club.

I was falsely accused of assault. I say falsely accused because the police determined immediately that there was no assault, DeNapoli wrote, adding that he was accused of falsely imprisoning someone.

After he was questioned, deputies determined, of course, that I had committed no crimes and did nothing wrong. The matter was closed and there was no further investigation. They knew that this was just a political disagreement, DeNapoli wrote.

He continued:

I've heard through the grapevine that more fake criminal accusations may be coming my way. From whom I don't know. But here's an example of what might happen an ordinary handshake could be portrayed as a trumped-up battery charge.

Clearly, this is a "witch hunt" orchestrated to intimidate, harass and defame me, and you as BREC members need to be aware of this. This culture of intimidation and using the police for political purposes needs to stop, and I call upon Chairman Sutton to do something to stop this ridiculousness. ...

The bottom line is that no one should treat fellow Republicans in such a manner. No one should falsely accuse a fellow Republican, former chairman, and current state committeeman of committing crimes for their own political purposes. You do not try to ruin someones life simply because they disagree with you or you don't like them. You do not waste the taxpayers' dollars by involving the police to solve your political problems. You do not tie up the police from handling other life-threatening matters in the community by making frivolous and false calls to the police. I am an attorney and former prosecutor who has been falsely accused of assault, the crime of false imprisonment, and being under an imaginary FBI investigation. This is beyond ridiculous for someone volunteering for the Republican cause. But these are just a couple of examples of what has been going on over the last few months.

DeNapoli said he was concerned about the prospect of the county party creating a local Grievance Committee on Monday night, even though the state already has a grievance process. He said a local committee could be used to perform witch hunts against BREC members.

aman@sunsentinel.com, 954-356-4550

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Another Broward Republican leader says party is plagued with dysfunction, personal feuds - Sun Sentinel

Republicans in position to reshape federal bench – ABC News

Republicans have put President Donald Trump's Supreme Court nominee on the bench, and they're now in a position to fill dozens more federal judgeships and reshape some of the nation's highest courts.

Democrats have few ways to stop them.

The Republican opportunity comes with the GOP in control of Congress and the White House, about 120 vacancies in federal district and appeals courts to be filled and after years of partisan fights over judicial nominations.

Frustrated by Republican obstruction in 2013, then-majority Democrats changed Senate rules so judicial nominations for those trial and appeals courts are filibuster-proof, meaning it takes only 51 votes, a simple majority in the 100-member Senate, for confirmation.

Today, Senate Republicans hold 52 seats.

The Democratic rules change did not apply to Supreme Court nominations. But Senate Republicans are now in the majority, and they changed the rules in similar fashion this month to confirm federal Judge Neil Gorsuch to the high court over Democratic opposition. As a result, the GOP can almost guarantee confirmation of future Supreme Court justices, as well, if there are more openings with Trump in office and Republicans are in the majority.

"The Trump administration does have an opportunity to really put its mark on the future of the federal judiciary," says Leonard Leo, the executive vice president of the conservative Federalist Society and an adviser to Trump on the Gorsuch nomination.

Reflecting a conservative judicial philosophy, Leo says the unusual number of vacancies that Trump is inheriting could reorient the courts of appeals, in particular, "in a way that better reflects the traditional judicial role, which is interpreting the law according to its text and placing a premium on the Constitution's limits on government power."

That philosophy was a priority for the late Justice Antonin Scalia, whom Gorsuch replaced, and Trump has said he wants the federal judiciary to reflect those values.

There are currently 20 vacancies in the federal appeals courts, which are one step below the Supreme Court, and roughly 100 more in district courts, where cases are originally tried. Former President Barack Obama had around half that number of vacancies when he took office in 2009. Of the current vacancies, 49 are considered judicial emergencies, a designation based on how many court filings are in the district and how long the seat has been open.

As the White House has focused on the Gorsuch nomination, Trump has so far only nominated one lower-court judge, Amul R. Thapar, a friend of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, for the 6th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals.

Republican senators say they hope to see more nominations soon from the White House.

"We've heard from them and we're talking to them," says Texas Sen. John Cornyn, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee and the No. 2 Republican leader.

The number of vacancies is a monumental opportunity for conservatives looking to exert more influence on a judiciary that they see as too liberal and activist. But it also could work to Republicans' disadvantage. Democrats can't stop the process, but they can delay it, and they still can call for procedural votes that will delay other Senate business when Republicans are trying to confirm each individual judge.

If they do that, says Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, "we'll have more vacancies than we have now."

Democrats haven't signaled a strategy for lower court judges, but partisan tension over the judiciary is at a peak after McConnell blocked Obama's nominee for Scalia's seat, federal Judge Merrick Garland, then changed the Senate rules to avert a Democratic filibuster of Gorsuch this month. They're also frustrated that Senate Republicans confirmed very few of Obama's picks once the GOP regained control of the Senate in 2015.

Also unclear is whether the traditional practice will persist in which both senators from a state, regardless of party, consult with the White House on a nominee and then have to approve of the nominee for the Senate Judiciary Committee to move forward. Grassley said this month he is committed to honoring the practice, but said "there are always some exceptions."

Of Democratic senators working with the White House, Grassley says "it ought to be pretty easy" in states that have at least one Republican senator. But there are multiple vacancies in states with two Democrats, including eight district court openings in New York and six in California.

In Texas, which has two Republican senators, there are two appeals court vacancies and 11 district court vacancies. Sens. John Cornyn and Ted Cruz are continuing their practice of creating and consulting with a bipartisan panel of leading state attorneys to help identify the most qualified candidates for those jobs.

Sen. Lindsay Graham, R-S.C., a committee member, says he thinks the future of the bipartisan process is "the real fight" going forward. He says he hopes it doesn't change.

"I think there's a lot of desire to keep that power within the Senate," he said.

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Republicans in position to reshape federal bench - ABC News

Republican Senator Was Apparent Target Of JCC Hoaxer Calls – Forward

Reuters

The teen arrested for JCC bomb threats covers his face at a hearing.

A Republican senator was a target of the Israeli-American teen charged with making threatening calls to Jewish community centers in the United States, court documents reveal.

Haaretz reported that the indictment, which will be handed down in an Israeli court today, includes details about how the teen called the senator to get him to retract his comments condemning the threatening calls to the JCCs and planned to plant drugs on the lawmaker if he refused to go along.

The teen allegedly said that he would fine the senator in Bitcoin if he didnt retract his comments. He threatened to incriminate the senator online. The teen then sent drugs to the politicians house and threatened to publish photos proving that he had drugs.

The Republican senator was unnamed in the Haaretz report.

The indictment said the teen made 2,000 calls, some of them graphic, to Jewish institutions and individuals. That is far more than the 200 previously revealed.

Contact Naomi Zeveloff at zeveloff@forward.com or on Twitter @naomizeveloff

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Republican Senator Was Apparent Target Of JCC Hoaxer Calls - Forward

Republican Cracks Emerge in Trump’s Coal-Heavy Energy Plan – Bloomberg

For all Donald Trumps efforts to revive coal, market forces and some of his own supporters are vying to write their own version of Americas energy future.

Divisions persist among the presidents supporters -- and even within his own cabinet -- about whether to continue subsidies for wind and solar power, enact a carbon tax, remain party to the Paris climate accord and plenty of other issues that will shape the U.S. energy landscape.

Seventy five percent of Trump supporters like renewables and want to advance renewables,Debbie Dooley, a Tea Party organizer and solar energy activist, said at a Bloomberg New Energy Finance conference in New York on Monday. The conversation has changed. You have to have the right message. Talk about energy freedom and choice. The light bulb will go off.

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Trump may be resolutely committed to fossil fuels, but theeconomic reality is renewables are now among the cheapest sources of electricity. Wind and solar were the biggest sources of power added to U.S. grids three years running, becoming key sources of jobs in rural America. Thats created clean-energy constituencies in North Carolina, Texas and other parts of the country that supported Trump in November.

Still, there are enough members of Trumps cabinet who deny the basic science of global warming that there is little, if any, chance the administration will enthusiastically support clean energy. Instead, the debate is likely to hinge on whether the president will try to actively reverse market forces allowing wind and solar to flourish.

That tug-of-war will play out in the weeks to come at the White House, in corporate board rooms and at economic summits in Italy and Germany. On Tuesday, U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry will shed light on the debate at the Bloomberg New Energy Finance gathering, which also will feature Myron Ebell, an avowed climate-change denier who headed Trumps Environmental Protection Agency transition team.

Ebell said global warming and the advantages of clean power are largely a myth perpetuated over the last half century by financiers and scientists he dubbed the climate industrial complex.

President Eisenhower in his farewell address not only talked about the military industrial complex, but he talked about the technological scientific complex as a problem as well, Ebell, director of the Competitive Enterprise Institutes Center for Energy and Environment, said at the conference.

In many ways little has changed in Americas energy markets since Trump took office. States including California, New York and Massachusetts continue to move forward with aggressive policies to cut carbon emissions. Anheuser-Busch InBev NV, Apple Inc., Amazon.com Inc., Alphabet Inc.s Google and other companies continue to power facilities with wind and solar energy.

How to Hit the Brakes on Climate Change

(Source: Bloomberg)

Even so, federal policy matters.

Despite the presidents executive orders, much of his energy blueprint remains a work in progress. That includes his position on tax credits for wind and solar, how energy fits into a federal infrastructure plan and how, if at all, the administration plans to keep uneconomical coal plants open.

So investors will listen closely as Perry -- who oversaw record expansions of wind power as Texas governor -- steps to the microphone at this weeks conference.

There are a lot of blanks to be filled in, Ethan Zindler,an analyst with New Energy Finance in Washington, said in an interview.

Perhaps no issue engenders more debate within the Trump administration than the Paris accord. The president famously vowed to cancel the landmark agreement during the campaign.Afterward, he said hed keep an open mind about it.

Two key events next month are likely to force him to make a decision. Leaders from the Group of Seven nations meet for an economic summit in Italy on May 26 and have indicated they will push Trump to sign off on a joint statement supporting efforts to fight climate change. And envoys hashing out details of the Paris accord will gather in Germany for two weeks of discussions concluding May 18.

Meanwhile, Trumps advisers have staked out their positions. EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt and chief strategist Stephen Bannon are among those pushing to scrap the Paris deal, brokered in 2015 by almost 200 nations. Opposite them stand Trumps daughter, Ivanka and her husband Jared Kushner, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and others.

Pressure is coming from outside the White House on both sides of the debate. Coal baron Robert E. Murray has pushed Trump to scrap the deal. Other energy companies have endorsed the accord, includingExxon Mobil Corp., RoyalDutch Shell Plc, BP Plc and liquefied natural gas exporter Cheniere Energy Inc.

Domestic energy companies are better positioned to compete globally if the United States remains a party to the Paris agreement, Cheniere Chief Commercial Officer Anatol Feygin wrotein an April 17 letter to George David Banks, a White House energy adviser.

Outside the beltway, Trump backers are split over energy policy, too. The president received strong support from coal-rich regions of West Virginia, Wyoming andKentucky. Yet recent polls have indicated Trump voters also back renewables, especially in windy states like Iowa and Texas.

While wind and solar were the province of liberal environmentalists, conservatives have increasingly begun to see clean energy as way to weaken the power of monopolistic utility companies and bolsterAmericas energy independence. It doesnt hurt that wind and solar employ almost 475,000 people in the U.S., almost three times as many as coal.

These are conservative values: jobs, energy freedom, choice, personal liberty, Dooley said. There is really a green revolution going on within the Republican party.

Ebell doesnt buy it. And he doesnt see Trump backing away from his pledge to back fossil fuels.

The president has a very definite agenda on increasing oil and gas production, Ebell said. Wind and solar are always going to be secondary. They are always going to be a pain in the neck.

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Republican Cracks Emerge in Trump's Coal-Heavy Energy Plan - Bloomberg

The Quintessential Democratic Politician – A Magazine of American Culture

By:Claude Polin | April 24, 2017

What follows is an attempt to portray not the typical statesman, as he repeatedly appeared in the course of Western history up to yesterday, but the average professional politician of our times, the man (or woman) whose chosen trade is to govern his (or her) fellow citizens.

Any ruler must somehow be subordinate to the nature of the society he rules. But in all societies other than democracies, the rulers have some leeway, precisely because as rulers they set the course that the body of citizens must follow.

On the contrary, the democratic politician theoretically has no leeway at all, for the simple reason that he is not supposed to have any. Indeed, no one can disagree that democracy is the government of the people, by the people, and for the people. This obviously implies that in a democracy there is no legitimate ultimate ruler other than those who are supposed not to be ruled: the people, as they are usually referred to. Democracy means the sovereignty of the people. This is the sacred founding dogma to which all citizens are supposed to deferso sacred that the very existence of some citizens ruling over others should be a scandal in a democracy, unless the latter be understood as mere slaves obeying the orders of their masters.

That is the principle. But the disturbing factone that should be obvious, although democratically incorrect to mentionis that the people is a nonexistent entity, a purely abstract notion devoid of any constant empirical content, with the result that its definition is arbitrary and subject to constant interpretation. There is a logical reason for this.

Any unifying of different parts into a whole comes from the subordination of those same parts to something that is beyond them all. A heap of sand is not an entity, because each grain constitutes a self-contained entity of its own superseded by none other (since they are all the same) and by nothing (since there is no privileged shape for the heap). In a similar manner, since all individuals in a democracy are supposed to be sovereigns, their uniting basically rests upon an individual consent whose motive is definitely individual. The underlying philosophy of democracy is that every man is a self-contained (though not self-sufficient) island, a perfect and solitary whole, as Rousseau used to say. This is why democracies are by nature contractual regimesi.e., societies which, by definition, have no substance other than a free association that each citizen enters only because he deems it somehow useful to join it. What, then, can the people in a democratic society be, apart from a constantly revocable, mutable, and therefore indefinable or ghostly entity whose cohesion and permanence is the product of the brute force of mere habit?

The same may be said of the so-called will of the people. It is readily obvious that it is highly improbable that an aggregate of individuals, whose primary right is for each to obey his own free will, may end up having anything resembling a common will. (Indeed it is enough for the average democrat that the will of the people be equated with the will of the majority; this amounts to confessing that the will of the people is actually the will of the greater number imposed by sheer force upon the smaller one. It should be added that, taking into account the number of abstentions, a majority in Western countries represents at most 30 percent of a constituency.)

Take the example of France. In 1789 the people (individuals enjoying the rights of citizens to the full extent) started at the upper-middle class level; in 1848 it was decided that the people would include all male citizens above the age of 21; then in 1945 it grew to include women, and in 1975 young people above age 18. Today, there is a constant influx of immigrants who become part of the people (after five years residency), mostly in order to obtain the welfare benefits attached to the passport, though determined to retain their own cultural identity. And, to top it all, what constitutes the sovereign people may depend on the electoral system. (In France more than 20 percent of the voting people dont get represented at all.) How more arbitrary could the definition of the people be?

Most modern Americans have forgotten the incontrovertible fact that they were originally white Europeans, Protestants and Catholics, a core around which the new immigrants could fuse, at least to some extent. Unaware of the nature of earlier immigration, Americans today believe they will be the first nation to be an endlessly metamorphic entity, relying on a miracle to retain some sort of identity, despite a constant influx of heterogeneous components. As is the case in France, one may wonder who the people of the United States of America actually are.

Only by keeping in mind these two basic factorsthe sovereignty of the people as a principle and the indeterminate nature of the people as a factcan one understand the predicament confronting the typical politician in a democracy. His universe is two-sided, and like a ball in a pinball machine he ceaselessly rebounds from one wall to the other: On one hand, he is the repository of the sovereignty of an elusive sovereign, which makes him the de facto sovereign; on the other, only the people are supposed to be sovereign, which makes him a de jure usurper.

The standard representative of the people is not supposed to be anything but the mirror image of the peoples sovereign will, its passive executive officer. But since nobody knows, including himself, exactly who the people are or what may actually be the common will of their indeterminate aggregate, the people and their will end up being embodied in their only visible manifestation, which is the elected politician himself and his particular will. The people are merely whatever their representatives may be. The political world is an inverted one: The people become the subjects of those who are supposed to be the servants of the people, while the representatives, who are supposed to bow to the voice of the people, become their masters.

And masters they are. Having inherited the sovereignty of the people, theirs is a natural propensity to arbitrary power, to feeling entitled not only to make whatever decisions they please, but to consider these decisions wise, since they are said to be the peoples. And theirs is a jealous power, resentful of any other that might challenge them. Moreover, where only the popular will is a legitimate one, it naturally should have a say in whatever matter it pleaseshence the tendency of all politicians ceaselessly to invade and legislate the private lives of ordinary citizens. There is a built-in totalitarian streak in the democratic politicians mentality. By the same logic, since the centralization of power is only natural to democracies, because the people are the only decisionmakers, and no man can have two heads, it would be a true miracle if the collective body of politicians were not to take advantage of such a proclivity, and another miracle if each of them didnt claim to embody the will of the people better than the others. (Democracy is the natural breeding ground for all sorts of Robespierres.) And finally, why shouldnt they all unashamedly enjoy wielding their illegitimate but lawful power? Since they are the peoples de facto will, there is no higher authority. Whatever they do, they are irresponsible, blameless, generally beyond any courts reach; their persons are sacred and immune to prosecutionand their own constituency cannot help being hard put to indict those it is supposed to have selected to represent them.

On the flip side, the people, whose sovereignty the democratic politician is supposed to reflect, is but an indeterminate entity. The politician is doomed to choose (or strike a balance) between catering to a more determinate but smaller fraction of the people, on the one hand, and pleasing a larger onea potential majority that is a multiple, heterogeneous, and changing aggregateon the other. In both cases, while he is arrogant as the embodiment of the sovereign people, he must also be a particularly fickle, spineless, and all in all servile species of man, because he is always after available votes. He is in the position of a servant eager to please but with so many masters that he doesnt know exactly which one he should obey first, like a weathervane spinning with the strongest windwhich is why so many politicians are devoid of personality and rather bland or mediocre men who play the strongman only when they feel enough people are expecting them to do so.

There is a point at which politicians become so obsequious as to lose all personal substance and distinguishable characteristics. There is nothing more hollow or shallow than a politicians speech, since the vaguer his words, the greater his chances of reaching the requisite number of voters. Hence, for instance, there is no word he loves more than change: He is the messiah who, if elected, will change everything. (The politicians of the French Revolution, democrats if there ever were any, did not beat around the bush: They kept proclaiming they were in the process of creating the world and man anewand, of course, making them perfect.) Another favorite catchphrase of todays politician is social justice: In a democratic society discontent runs highafter all, citizens expect to be kings but never areso his standard stance is that of the white knight who will right all wrongs. Still another of his standard expressions is tax the wealthy: The usual politician is the new Robin Hood preying upon the (supposed) rich to give to the (supposed) poor; taxes and welfare payments sum up the standard platform.

All in all, the democratic politician is doomed to be a whore whose main and almost exclusive concern is not to have a single thought of his own, but to be alluring to the greatest number of potential clients. (Those who strive to be truthful dont get elected or remain marginal.) Panem et circensesthe old trick is more than ever a modern one, except that todays Caesars take part in the show themselves, to the point of, more often than not, being unashamed to play the contortionists.

Summing up these first two points, Im drawn to the conclusion that the democratic politicians essence is that of an oxymoronic creature, a skittish, jumpy despot.

I want to add a third equally flattering touch to this portrait. Politicians in our democracies are supposedly vested with some competence for the often prestigious functions they fulfill: An election is a selection, and though the people are not embarrassed to admit they are unable to govern themselves (since they are willing to elect rulers), they are called upon to designate by whom they should be ruled. But even supposing the people to be an identifiable entity, how the heck could they comprehend a quality that they themselves admittedly do not possess? Moreover, if the people are only a heterogeneous aggregate, who is he (or she) to know what is good for them allfor the wholesince, by definition, there cannot be anything common to them all? And again, how could a democratic society constitute a whole? Is it not a system in which every citizen is entitled to pursue his own private aimsbe it at the expense of his neighborsand not be subordinate to any restraint that would hinder his effort to attain them? There can be statesmen only when there is a state: When there is none, there is no common good, and there cannot be any competence for serving that good. The only skill a representative may legitimately claim is to be an efficient toola technocrat. But the real issue is to determine wisely the end to be pursued for the sake of the whole, and such an end cannot exist if there is no whole. What competence could a politician then have in a democracy?

This suggests there is a fourth trait typical of the democratic representative. If he is not chosen for his statesmanship, then there is no reason why he should be chosen at all. Which means that if he is actually designated, it must be because he has been artificially presented as the self-evident candidatein other words, because the whole process of the designation of leaders in a democracy is a contrived operation. A representative in a democracy has to be the product of an electoral machine. As a matter of fact, what else makes sense? How could any given individual, inside a huge aggregate whose members are all supposed to have equal standing, possibly stand out enough to be noticed by all, if not because he is raised on the shoulders of some whose particular job is to prop him up? (This is, by the way, precisely the essential function of a political party.)

But then, if this is indeed the case, it means that all the pallbearers must have a special interest in supporting their candidate. It could be argued they are men devoted to the well-being, the power, and the glory of the wholeto the national interestbut again one must then presuppose that there actually exists a whole, a nation. If not, the only logical inference is that all members of the electoral machine are geared to private interestsusually presented, of course, not as selfish ones but as the very embodiment of the true public ones. A representative in a democratic system is basically an investment made by political entrepreneurs (the electoral machine is a costly one always looking for more funding), whether investing their personal money or acting as brokers for sponsors, but in both cases expecting dividends. This makes the politician a salesman for sale, chosen for his ability to attract audiences by his smile, his looks, his joviality, or his talent for team-playing and play-acting according to the mood of his spectators. If a politician represents not the public interest but a particular one (his partys), either he does so out of personal choice but still strives to present a particular interest as a general one, or he does not care and merely gets paid for defending it. In either case he is a politician in order to make a living, if not a fortuneunless it is merely for the perks and the limelight. Politics is not an altruistic business, but one that pays better than many others without being mentally demanding.

The stage does not accommodate an indefinite number of actors. Hence, the politicians principal activityhis fifth featureis to stay in business (to be reelected). Which again boils down to one activity: ruining his competitors. He must, on the one hand, prevent outsiders from setting up shop. (Politics is an exclusive club, discouraging new memberships; the voters are always presented only the members of the club, and Mr. Smith seldom goes to Washington.) On the other hand, he must saw off the board on which his colleague is standing (which is why politicians hate the clean ones, an endangered species on whom they have no hold).

To conclude, I feel tempted to ask the famous question imagined by the French socialist aristocrat C.H. de Saint-Simon about the political elites of the 1820s: What would happen if they all suddenly died? The answer could be this: nothing, except that the country would fare better, because the actual working portion of the population would be left to manage its own affairs to the best of its ability. Unfortunately, it is too much to hope for, mainly for a paradoxical reason: While the masses are often wont to criticize the political class (or to worship it, but only until they realize the hollowness of its promises), they nevertheless keep an undying faith in democracy (the worst of all regimes, apart from all the others). This is a common afflictiondyspeptic people yearn for waterbut a nonetheless incurable one: What other system offers the average citizen, if not actual sovereignty, at least an ability to demand to be treated as a sovereign? It seems as if most citizens think, I may hate or despise this particular politician, but, all things considered, ultimately I have a say in his being or remaining where he is.

Then what can I say, except Nolite confidere in principibus?

From the November 2014 issue of Chronicles.

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The Quintessential Democratic Politician - A Magazine of American Culture