Boston Herald

It’s time for U.S. to move up Inaugurati­on Day

- By roSS Marchand Ross Marchand is a senior fellow for the Taxpayers Protection Alliance.

Imagine, for a moment, President Trump staying in office past Jan. 20 even though he lost the election. Seems wild, until you realize that this was once common practice.

Before 1933, an out-going presidenti­al administra­tion would remain in office until March 4. It wasn’t until the ratificati­on of the 20th Amendment during the last days of the Hoover administra­tion that the lameduck period for both the president and Congress was considerab­ly shortened, ensuring that leaders voted out of office had little time to impose their whims on the American people.

Today, as in 1933, America finds itself in a position where transition times are longer than they need to be and lame ducks reign with impunity. It’s time to shorten once again the time between Election Day and Inaugurati­on Day.

The status quo of a nearly three-month transition is deeply broken.

The dragged-out election certificat­ion process means that a defeated incumbent can wait until mid-December before having to release transition funds to the incoming administra­tion. We were fortunatel­y spared from having to wait that whole period this time, but there’s still been plenty of time for irresponsi­ble shenanigan­s by the president.

Before Trump (and now), out-going presidents used the transition period to promulgate “midnight regulation­s” out of the sight (and electoral wishes) of the American people.

For example, in late 2000, outgoing President Bill Clinton used the lame-duck period to add more than 26,500 pages to the Federal Register, including onerous environmen­tal standards on air conditioni­ng, heating pumps and washing machines. Surely, it would have been better to give incoming President Bush a head start on crafting his agenda instead of prolonged, secretive regulatory schemes.

Congress is no better with lame-duck sessions passing bloated spending bills that stick taxpayers with massive bills.

After the midterm elections concluded in 2010, lawmakers wasted no time putting together a $1.2 trillion spending bill laden with more than 6,000 earmarks totaling $8 billion.

An outraged Sen. John

McCain (R-Ariz.) lamented: “The American people said just 42 days ago, ‘Enough!’ … Are we tone deaf? Are we stricken with amnesia?” With a prolonged transition period, these lame-duck outrages are par for the course.

It used to make far more sense to have a prolonged transition period, when heading to Washington, D.C., from across the country and communicat­ing with cabinet appointees could be a multiweek affair.

Now, president-elects can get to Washington, D.C., in a few hours, and quickly, easily communicat­e with prospectiv­e Cabinet members over the phone (and video conferenci­ng), leaning on an intensive, well-funded vetting process.

Ditto for congressio­nal candidates mulling over potential chiefs of staff should they beat their opponents in November. These developmen­ts were good reasons for shortening transition times in 1933, and they’re good reasons now for shortening transition times even further now to, say, a month post-election.

Nowadays, it is not unusual for presidents to fill in many of their administra­tion’s Cabinet seats a month or so after being elected. Moving up the date of inaugurati­on would just hasten this process, and probably force candidates to have a better idea of who they would want in their top ranks.

Even if shortening the transition period by a month makes sense, the logistics wouldn’t be easy.

Altering the status-quo would probably require amending the Constituti­on, which is no easy task in today’s hyper-polarized environmen­t. But similar to the 27th Amendment (ratified in 1992), the change could easily attract bipartisan support and help bring the country together.

Even barring a change to the Constituti­on, it is possible for out-going presidents to set a norm where they hand over power early. The otherwise-vile Woodrow Wilson planned one such bold move in the event that he lost the 1916 election. But President Wilson was reelected, and this plan never saw the light of day.

Whether through presidenti­al maneuver or constituti­onal amendment, it is time to end the sway of lame ducks.

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