The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)
2021 budget slated for first reading
Madison Village Council will be approving a budget for 2021 a bit later than it has ratified similar financial plans in previous years.
But the village still should no problem meeting a deadline to submit the yearly budget to the Lake County Auditor’s Office.
Village Fiscal Officer Kristie Crockett said her intent is for the budget to receive a first reading at the Feb. 22 council meeting.
Crockett brought up the topic of the 2021 budget at the Feb. 8 council meeting, which was held remotely by video conference.
In addition, Crockett said the budget will be on the agenda for the Village Council Committee of the Whole session that is to precede the regular meeting on Feb. 22. She said open discussion on the budget can be held during the gathering if council members have questions or concerns.
Crockett previously said she had completed a proposed budget. However, because of health and safety risks posed by the novel coronavirus pandemic, council’s Finance Committee had been unable to meet and review the budget by late December.
To allow more time for analyzing the budget, council on Dec. 28 approved an ordinance to make temporary appropriations for the village from Jan. 1 through March 31. Crockett said the temporary appropriations totaled roughly 30 percent of the village’s 2020 budget.
With council’s upcoming
regular-meeting schedule, it would hear a third and final reading of the 2021 budget and vote on the document’s passage when it convenes on March 22.
Crockett said the village’s budget must be approved and submitted to the Lake County Auditor’s Office by April 1.
In other action at the Feb. 8 Madison Village Council meeting:
• Village Police Chief Troy McIntosh reported that the Police Department began using a new recordsmanagement system on Jan. 28.
“So aside from the expected hurdles of learning the new system and a few small bumps, it’s gone relatively smoothly,” he said.
• Mayor Sam Britton reported
that Village Hall, at 33 E. Main St., is open once again to the public.
The building had been been closed to visitors for an extended period because of COVID-19 concerns.
Britton said the village is urging only one visitor at a time to enter to the building. Everyone coming into Village Hall also must wear face masks.
“We’re trying to keep it open, but we’re trying to keep it still safe,” he said.
• Council acted on only one piece of new legislation that was listed on an extremely light agenda. The panel approved a resolution honoring Hearn Plumbing, Heating and Air, a business located at 319 North Lake St. in the village, on its 75th anniversary.
The House impeachment managers state in their brief: “Our constitutional system simply cannot function if the President, acting to extend his own grasp on power against the expressed will of the people, prompts an armed attack against a coequal branch that prevents it from performing its core constitutional responsibilities.”
I agree entirely, except for one thing — the word “coequal.”
Listen to representatives and senators, Democrats and Republicans, talk about impeachment or other issues that touch on the relationship between the three branches of government, and you’ll hear the word “coequal” over and over again. In 2019, when Nancy Pelosi was sworn in as speaker of the House for the second time, she proclaimed Congress “coequal to the presidency and judiciary.”
Richard Nixon must be having a good laugh.
Until Watergate, the notion that the three branches of government were coequal was considered far-fetched. This coequal doctrine was largely an effort by the Nixon administration to keep congressional investigators at bay.
What does coequal mean? Well, equal means being the same in status. One hundred pennies equals one dollar. Coequal means having equivalent standing. A quarterback and kicker are equally on the same team, but they are not coequal in their power, pay or responsibilities.
At least that’s what the Founding Fathers meant by coequal. Dictionaries have since muddied the waters.
The founders never imagined that the legislative, executive and judicial branches were coequals. Their intent, made plain in the structure of the Constitution, was for Congress to be supreme. That’s why Article 1 is about Congress — literally the first branch — and its powers.
Indeed, if you search through the Federalist Papers, the word coequal appears only eight times. Not once does it say that the three branches of the federal government are coequal. They reserved that term to describe the standing of the federal government to the states or the relationship between the House and Senate.
Think about what the founders were most passionate about. “Taxation without representation” probably tops the list. Well, only Congress can tax. Indeed, all tax bills are supposed to start in the House, because the House is elected by the people. (Senators were originally elected by the states.) Congress is also the only branch of government with “the power of the purse.” It alone (at least according to the Constitution) can declare war. Also, in case you forgot, it writes the laws.
Taxing, spending, declaring war, writing laws — that’s Congress’ bag, baby.
Now ask: What can Congress do that the other branches can’t?
Well, through impeachment, it can fire the president, vice president or any member of the judiciary. Indeed, with the exception of the Supreme Court, it creates every other federal court. It also creates every federal agency and department. Everyone who works for Uncle Sam, except for the president and vice president, has a job created by Congress. And their job — including, for the most part, the president — is to do what Congress says.
As historian Jay Cost puts it, “If I get to tell you what to do, but you do not get to tell me what to do, who is actually in charge?”
Recall, that the founders were drawing on the English experience — and their own as colonists. They were partisans of parliament, not the crown. Their biggest worry was that a president would become a new king, which is why they loaded up Congress with all the power.
Against this backdrop, the Donald Trump-inspired siege on the Capitol is not just a shocking affront to the constitutional order; Congress’ response is a sign of how damaged that order already was. In earlier eras, the reaction from Congress wouldn’t have been partisan but institutional. Don’t get me wrong: Trump deserved impeachment for his role in the Jan. 6 attack. That most congressional Republicans responded as if an outgoing president were their king is repugnant.
But Pelosi’s response, from refusing to consult Republicans in the drafting of impeachment articles to declining to recruit Republicans to serve as floor managers, was evidence that congressional Democrats see their role through a partisan prism, too.
When Trump attacked “Obama judges,” Chief Justice John Roberts — a Republican appointee — defended the judiciary. “We do not have Obama judges or Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton judges,” Roberts said.
Congress should have responded in the same spirit. Legislators may be elected as Republicans or Democrats, but party affiliation is meaningless under the Constitution, and legislators should have responded as defenders of their constitutional roles, not as members of some political team.
After all, Republicans and Democrats were coequally deserving of murder in the eyes of some of those barbarians.