The battle to determine the Speaker of the House continues after six votes failed to determine who would lead the House. Once Republicans won control of the House by a narrow majority, most people – including myself – expected Representative Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) to win the seat without any serious problems. McCarthy had to move his stuff out of the Minority Leader’s Office to allow Democrat Hakeem Jefferies to move his stuff in. So, McCarthy oved some of his stuff into the Speaker’s office.
Six
rounds of voting made this race for Speaker one of the most contentious since
1923. Twenty Republican House members are still opposing McCarthy. Many people
on both the Left and the Right have labeled the situation as chaotic and
dangerous for the Republicans.
Messy House Race
In
reality, what we are seeing in the House is a debate, something that has been
absent from the House for numerous years. However, we should see a debate on
most of the bills that come out of the House. After all, democracy is messy,
while other types of governments are more orderly. Jarrett Stepman at the Daily
Signal explained it this way.
Right now, the House represents the only
serous brake on Democrats’ initiatives until the next election. How it operates
during this time will mean a lot if Republicans take the Sente and White House
in 2024.
Unlike how the Left now defines “democracy”
– which vacillates between pure mob rule and rule by a bureaucratic, woke
priesthood – the Founders understood that democracy had a limited, but
important place in our federal republic.
In the debates over the Constitution,
George Mason of Virginia called the House the “grand depository of the democratic
principle of government.” The Framers created it to more directly represent the
interests, temperament, and immediate concerns of the people – certainly by
comparison with the Senate.
If democracy was the only element of our
government, as with the Greek democracies of old, we would quickly obliterate
ourselves. However, if democracy is entirely shunted aside, we end up with
other forms of malignant government, such as oligarchy.
Democracy can be brutal and unthinking,
but it can also provide a quick and necessary course correction when
conventional wisdom is wrong and “elites” have become corrupted.
At a time when most of the big decisions in our society are made by unelected bureaucrats and courts, and when elected representatives are more likely to listen to lobbyists and the donor class than to the American people, we should be encouraged by our representatives showing a little independence.
Is rebellion a bad thing?
Stepman
explained that the “House was meant to be bumptious” and other races for
Speaker have not gone smoothly. “The 1856 election took two months and 133
rounds of voting. So, a couple of days of voting is minor-league stuff by comparison.”
Yes, the House speaker’s race is messy. So
is democracy. And we live in troubled times. Let’s be honest: American society –
especially post-pandemic – has become more dysfunctional, resigned, and willing
to accept mediocrity. That shouldn’t be good enough….
Surely, Republican voters deserve more
than token, ineffectual “opposition.” A little contentiousness now may prevent
a bigger problem in the future….
As no less a personage as Thomas Jefferson
once said, a little rebellion from time to time is a good thing.
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