Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Fifty experiments in dysfunction

One of the arguments for federalism -- shifting more power to states and away from the Federal government -- is that we create 50 different experiments in democracy.

It's a great notion that has served us well: 50 different laboratories, all trying new things, making mistakes, cleaning up messes, and slowly crawling toward reform.

(Yes, with the occasional nudge from Uncle Sam...)

Readers of this blog know my general take on American democracy:

By any reasonable measure -- from openness and accountability to fairness and a lack of corruption -- our system works better now than it did a century ago.

In large part, that's due to experiments at the state level. Franklin Roosevelt first tinkered with his big ideas here in New York state, including the North Country's St. Lawrence Seaway.

Ronald Reagan test-drove his vision of America in California.

But these days, the laboratories seem to be breaking down. The political cultures in New York and California are gridlocked.

Alaska -- where I grew up -- is a banana republic without the bananas, unless you count members of Governor Sarah Palin's extended family.

South Carolina? Don't get me started.

What troubles me most about these failures is that state government is -- compared with our Federal system -- extremely responsive to the public will.

For all our groaning and complaining, we're getting the government we want and deserve.

Most of us now see our elected officials primarily as conduits of pork.

We want more and more services, more government jobs, and big cash payments to fund our local projects -- and we're outraged at the idea that we should pay for any of it.

But when times are hard, we need leadership not patronage.

We need thoughtful, creative politicians, willing to try new things and take risks.

Maybe in next year's election, more voters will go looking for fresh faces, fresh minds, people willing to renew the experiment.

-Brian in Westport

2 Comments:

At July 1, 2009 9:11 AM , Blogger Jim said...

Unfortunately in the next election the major parties will put up the same bunch of candidates and any candidates who offer real change will have no visibility or real chance of getting elected.

 
At July 3, 2009 3:11 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have to disagree with your claim that state government is extremely responsive to the public will. NY state government is extremely responsive to the will of legislative leaders and in particular shelly silver. He completely controls the agenda and essentially wrote the state budget. It's been a long time since NY state government was responsive to the will of the people and not just the agendas of the legislative leaders. Upstate residents in particular have no voice in state government. The APA being an infamous example of this.

Compared to NY state legislature Congress has done a wonderful job.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home