New Rules To "Discourage and Restrain"
Unfortunately, the Founders did not include in the Constitution a mechanism that would "discourage and restrain" the behaviors and practices of political parties which they feared the most. Instead, in a serious error of judgement, counter to their own inclinations, they made the faulty assumption that Congress would act in the best interest of the country and citizens. They simply said in Article I, Section 5 of the Constitution that, "Each House may determine the Rules of its Proceedings.”"The alternate domination of one faction over another, sharpened by the spirit of revenge, natural to party dissension, which in different ages and countries has perpetrated the most horrid enormities, is itself a frightful despotism. But this leads at length to a more formal and permanent despotism. The disorders and miseries which result gradually incline the minds of men to seek security and repose in the absolute power of an individual; and sooner or later the chief of some prevailing faction, more able or more fortunate than his competitors, turns this disposition to the purposes of his own elevation, on the ruins of public liberty."Without looking forward to an extremity of this kind (which nevertheless ought not to be entirely out of sight), the common and continual mischiefs of the spirit of party are sufficient to make it the interest and duty of a wise people to discourage and restrain it. . ."
Obviously a new Amendment cannot include all of the details of a system of new "rules of proceeding" but it can mandate a process for creating such rules and defining how they relate to the Constitutional requirements of Article I, Section 5. To translate this concept into proposed Constitutional amendment language I would offer as a starting point something like the following:
Proposed Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
"Section __. There is established in the legislative branch an independent, National Commission On Congressional Rules, whose purpose shall be to review, revise, amend and establish baseline rules of proceedings for the U.S. House and Senate to fulfill the requirements of Article I, Section 5. The Commission shall establish rules of proceedings designed to establish rational, unbiased decision making and to encourage true bipartisanship in fulfilling the Congressional responsibilities in developing legislation, conducting Executive branch oversight and exercising its review and approval functions. Congress shall enact enabling legislation for the establishment of the Commission."
[Note: As a possible model for new enabling legislation for establishment of the Commission I would suggest similar language as the 9-11 Commission legislation, a 10-member bipartisan commission of prominent US citizens, with national recognition and
significant depth of experience in such pertinent professions.
[Title VI i.e. https://tinyurl.com/y6nooym4]
Because it is doubtful that a sitting Congress would propose such an amendment, it may be necessary to pursue a strategy authorized by the Constitution involving a convention where two-thirds (2/3) or 34 of the 50 states make an application for Congress to establish a constitutional convention in order to propose amendments. Amendments would then need to be ratified by either individual state conventions or by individual state legislatures with a three-quarters (3/4) vote. This method has never been utilized and it is noted that the convention method of amendment is surrounded by a lengthy list of questions [https://tinyurl.com/yxl7wbs5].
Whether it would be proposed by the Congress or by at least 34 states, such an amendment would require a nationwide movement similar to the Amendment 28 movement being conducted by the organization American Promise to restore a democracy in which we the people — not big money, not corporations, not unions, not special interests — govern ourselves [https://tinyurl.com/y27ygahj]. In a previous post I have provided a list of organizations and groups that would be capable of organizing and conducting such a movement [https://tinyurl.com/y5qb35ge].
If such a National Commission On Congressional Rules could be established with Constitutional authority it would be able to establish any number of new and revised rules to achieve more rational Congressional operations designed to reflect the best interest of the country as a whole. In many previous posting I have advocated and provided details on a system of Shared Legislative Power (SLP), however, in this posting I am not strictly advocating SLP but merely suggesting a few specific rule revisions that I believe would force Congress to act in a truly bipartisan manner that would lead to much improved decision making.
Also as an inspiration and validation that Congress can function in a more civil, professional and responsible manner I offer the testimonials from Democratic and Republican representatives in Michigan that actually experienced participation in a Shared Power Arrangement. Their comments give us hope and a vision for a better future for our country. [See: https://tinyurl.com/
1. "Regular Order" - Strict compliance with Regular Order all legislative measures must be assigned to a committee and go through the committee process before a Floor vote can be considered. Debate and amendments may be considered with all amendments and final passage requiring Two-Thirds (66.7%) approval.2. Nonpartisan Staff - All Committees shall include combined, unbiased politically neutral staff similar to existing requirements of the House and Senate Ethics Committees, e.g. "a professional, nonpartisan staff... perform all official duties in a nonpartisan manner... shall [not] engage in any partisan political activity..."3. Proportional Membership - Committee membership makeup proportioned to overall chamber majority v. minorityExample: assume Senate split 53-47 so 53/100 = 0.53 so a 20 member committee divided 20 x .53 = 10.6 round to 11. Committee makeup would 11-9. If Senate majority was 60-40; Makeup would be: 12-8. If Senate majority was 51-49; Makeup would be: 10-104. Approval Votes -All subcommittee and committee votes require 75% approval. e.g. 20 member committee requires 15 votes to approve.5. Co-Chairmanships - All Oversight committees, Special Committees, Approval Committees (Advise & Consent, Treaties, etc.) require Co-Chairmanship with equal powers and combined, unbiased, politically neutral staff. Committee membership remains proportioned, but Co-Chairmanship and neutral staff will prevent political grandstanding and political theater with regard to critically important oversight responsibilities6. Conflicting Rules - Eliminate extraneous rules that would interfere with this process.. e.g. filibuster, holds, Hastert, etc.7. Petition For Action - To avoid leadership simply refusing to act as a means to delay or avoid critical issues (e.g. refusing to act on SCOTUS approval, stimulus, etc.) a Petition for Action may be submitted by 10% of the total chamber membership and which must be brought to the Floor for a vote and requiring a simple majority for approval. This would require members to be on record with a vote and combined with other changes (e.g. #5 & #1 above) will provide a transparent process to force action on critical issues and put members on the record.8. Elevate Importance of Bill Cosponsorship - Devise a system that recognizes the total numbers of members and the degree of bipartisanship for each legislative proposal that will be used to determine the priorities for legislative action. This will put more responsibility on individual members to seek support for their ideas and reward individual and cosponsoring members that can develop priority legislation for action.
9. Eliminate or Revise The Electoral College Process - As an added consideration to the effort to amend Congressional rules, the National Commission should also seriously debate the Electoral College process and consider elimination or revisions similar to the National Popular Vote (NPV) initiative which makes the national popular vote relevant.