Opinion Writer
By George F. Will, Published: August 14 E-mail the writer
President
Obama’s increasingly grandiose claims for presidential power are inversely
proportional to his shriveling presidency. Desperation fuels arrogance as,
barely 200 days into the 1,462 days of his second term, his pantry of excuses for failure is bare, his domestic agenda is nonexistent and his foreign policy of empty rhetorical deadlines and
red lines is floundering. And at last week’s news conference he offered
inconvenience as a justification for illegality.
Explaining his
decision to unilaterally rewrite the Affordable Care Act
(ACA), he said: “I didn’t simply choose to” ignore the statutory requirement
for beginning in 2014 the employer mandate to provide employees with health
care. No, “this was in consultation with businesses.”
He continued:
“In a normal political environment, it would have been easier for me to simply
call up the speaker and say, you know what, this is a tweak that doesn’t go to
the essence of the law. . . . It looks like there may be some better ways to do
this, let’s make a technical change to the law. That would be the normal thing
that I would prefer to do. But we’re not in a normal atmosphere around here
when it comes to Obamacare. We did have the executive authority to do so, and
we did so.”
Serving as
props in the scripted charade of White House news conferences, journalists did
not ask the pertinent question: “Where does the Constitution confer upon
presidents the ‘executive authority’ to ignore the separation of powers by
revising laws?” The question could have elicited an Obama rarity: brevity.
Because there is no such authority.
Obama’s
explanation began with an irrelevancy. He consulted with businesses before
disregarding his constitutional duty to “take care that the laws
be faithfully executed.” That duty does not lapse when a president decides
Washington’s “political environment” is not “normal.”
When was it
“normal”? The 1850s? The 1950s? Washington has been the nation’s capital for
213 years; Obama has been here less than nine. Even if he understood “normal”
political environments here, the Constitution is not suspended when a president
decides the “environment” is abnormal.
Neither does
the Constitution confer on presidents the power to rewrite laws if they decide
the change is a “tweak” not involving the law’s “essence.” Anyway, the employer
mandate is essential to the ACA.
Twenty-three
days before his news conference, the House voted 264 to 161, with 35 Democrats in
the majority, for the rule of law — for, that is, the Authority for Mandate
Delay Act. It would have done lawfully what Obama did by ukase. He threatened to veto this use of legislation to
alter a law. The White House called it “unnecessary,” presumably because he has an
uncircumscribed “executive authority” to alter laws.
In a 1977
interview with Richard Nixon, David Frost asked: “Would you say that there are
certain situations . . . where the president can decide that it’s in the best
interests of the nation . . . and do something illegal?”
Nixon: “Well,
when the president does it, that means it is not illegal.”
Frost: “By
definition.”
Nixon:
“Exactly, exactly.”
Nixon’s claim,
although constitutionally grotesque, was less so than the claim implicit in
Obama’s actions regarding the ACA. Nixon’s claim was confined to matters of
national security or (he said to Frost) “a threat to internal peace and order
of significant magnitude.” Obama’s audacity is more spacious; it encompasses a
right to disregard any portion of any law pertaining to any subject at any time
when the political “environment” is difficult.
Obama should be
embarrassed that, by ignoring the legal requirement concerning the employer
mandate, he has validated critics who say the ACA cannot be implemented as
written. What does not embarrass him is his complicity in effectively
rewriting the ACA for the financial advantage of self-dealing members of
Congress and their staffs.
The ACA says
members of Congress (annual salaries: $174,000) and their staffs (thousands
making more than $100,000) must participate in the law’s insurance exchanges.
It does not say that when this change goes into effect, the current federal
subsidy for this affluent cohort — up to 75 percent of the premium’s cost,
perhaps $10,000 for families — should be unchanged.
When Congress
awakened to what it enacted, it panicked: This could cause a flight of talent,
making Congress less wonderful. So Obama directed the Office of Personnel Management,
which has no power to do this, to authorize for the political class special subsidies
unavailable for less privileged and less affluent citizens.
If the
president does it, it’s legal? “Exactly, exactly.”
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