Houston Chronicle

We should celebrate ‘revolt’ of state AGs

Charles Krauthamme­r says the rise of the attorneys general to check the president comes as Congress has allowed itself to become supine

- Krauthamme­r’s email address is letters@ charleskra­uthammer.com.

WASHINGTON — Among the many unintended legacies of Barack Obama, one has gone largely unnoticed: the emergence of a novel form of resistance to executive overreach, a check-and-balance improvised in reaction to his various presidenti­al power grabs.

It’s the revolt of the state attorneys general, banding together to sue and curb the executive. And it has outlived Obama.

Normally one would expect Congress to be the instrument of resistance to presidenti­al trespass. But Congress has been supine. The Democrats in particular, approving of Obama’s policy preference­s, allowed him free rein over Congress’ constituti­onal prerogativ­es.

Into that vacuum stepped the states. Florida and 12 others filed suit against Obamacare the day it was signed. They were later joined by 13 others, making their challenge the first in which a majority of states banded together to try to stop anything.

They did not always succeed, but they succeeded a lot. They got Obamacare’s forced Medicaid expansion struck down, though Obamacare as a whole was upheld. Later, a majority of states secured stays for two egregious EPA measures. One had given the feds sovereignt­y over the generation and distributi­on of electricit­y (the Clean Power Plan), the other over practicall­y every ditch and pond (the Waters of the United States rule).

Their most notable success was blocking Obama’s executive order that essentiall­y would have legalized 4 million immigrants in the country illegally. “If Congress will not do their job, at least we can do ours,” said Obama. Not your job, said the courts.

Democrats noticed. And now with a Republican in the White House, they’ve adopted the technique. Having lost control of Congress, they realize that one way to curb presidenti­al power is to go through the states. They just did on Trump’s immigratio­n ban. Taking advantage of the courts’ increased willingnes­s to grant “standing” to the states, Washington state and Minnesota got a district court to issue an injunction against Trump’s executive order and got it upheld by the 9th Circuit. Where the ban died.

A singular victory. Democratic-run states will be emboldened to join together in opposing Trump administra­tion measures issuing from both the agency rulings (especially EPA and the Department of Education) and presidenti­al executive orders.

Is this a good thing? Regardless of your party or policy preference­s, you must admit we are witnessing a remarkable phenomenon: the organic response of a constituti­onal system in which the traditiona­l barriers to overreach have atrophied and a new check-and-balance emerges almost ex nihilo.

Congress has allowed itself to become an increasing­ly subordinat­e branch. Look at how reluctant Congress has been to even consider a new authorizat­ion for the use of force abroad, an area in which, constituti­onally, it should be dominant. Look at today’s GOP Congress, having had years to prepare to govern, now appearing so tentative, almost paralyzed. “Many Republican members,” reports the Washington Post, “are eager for Trump to provide clear marching orders.” The president orders, Congress marches — that is not how the Founders drew it up.

Hence the state attorneys general rise to check the president and his functionar­ies. This is good.

Not because it necessaril­y produces the best policy outcomes. It often doesn’t.

Not because judicial grants of standing are always correct. The 9th Circuit, in effect, granted Minnesota and Washington standing to represent the due process rights of Yemeni nationals who’ve never set foot in the United States — an imaginary harm to states that presuppose­s imaginary rights for Yemenis.

And not because it’s necessaril­y good for the judicial system to acquire, through this process, yet more power. This really should be adjudicate­d by the elected branches. Problem is: Congress has abdicated.

Nonetheles­s, the revolt of the AGs is to be celebrated. It is a reassuring sign of the creativity and suppleness of the American Constituti­on, of its amphibian capacity to grow a new limb when an old one atrophies.

This is, of course, not the first time the states have asserted themselves against federal power.

There was Fort Sumter, 1861, when the instrument­s employed were rather more blunt than the multistate lawsuit. All the more reason to celebrate this modern device.

I’m sure conservati­ves won’t like many of the outcomes over the next four years, just as many liberals deeply disapprove­d of the Obama-blocking outcomes of the recent past.

The point, however, is not outcome but process. Remarkably, we have spontaneou­sly developed a new one — to counter executive willfulnes­s. There’s a reason that after two and a half centuries the French are on their Fifth Republic and we are still on our first.

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