Barack Obama's remark to Tom Brokaw on Meet the Press yesterday, in response to a question about Caroline Kennedy's expression of interest in HRC's vacant Senate seat, takes on new meaning today, huh? Something like he likes Caroline, but he doesn't need to weigh in on New York politics because he's got enough on his plate with Illinois politics. Rod Blagojevich indeed has hit a new low in Illinois state politics, and that is saying something.
I remember encountering the comment some years ago, in law school I think, in the context of federal vs. state power, and the notion that a part of the beauty of the federal system is that we've got 50 states to experiment with different levels of regulation, different regulatory approaches and the like, and that, where we can, we should leave matters to the states to regulate because they are "closer to the people." That is, viewing the state legislatures as so-called "laboratories of democracy" as the Reagan "New Federalism" was still relatively fresh--moving power from the federal governments to state/local governments. And an effective counter to that argument (or at least it seemed so to me at the time) was that if you wanted to see how powerful lobbyists could get, unleash them on the state regulators. They could be rolled with ease, and that, even though there were 50 state governments, if you really wanted to see an industry (e.g., take the tobacco industry) control their own governmental regulatory regime, turn it over from the feds to the states.
I think events in Illinois today prove that that surely would be a probable result.
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
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2 comments:
There is a little bit of buzz on the internet that perhaps Rahm Emanuel took down Blago. Sort of trying to get Blago corraled before he did serious damage to the big "O".
Whaddayuhthink?
One other good thing is that Blago's tapes are apparently Obama's best defense--calling him an "expletive deleted" for "not playing ball"--he couldn't get anything out of him except "appreciation." I don't know which is more breathtaking--the depth of Blago's corruption or his incredible stupidity.
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