The author discusses a new book: Democracy Denied: How Obama is Ignoring You and Bypassing Congress to Radically Transform America – and How to Stop Him (BenBella Books, October 2011).
I intend to buy this book and perhaps get involved in implementing its ideas.
The book discusses the shameful abuses and overreach that Obama has engaged in to implement his ideas. Browner's rewrite of expert's advice on offshore drilling moratorium, then used by Obama to justify the job-killing moratorium, is one example of what the reviewer calls Obama's "calculated deception'.
Kerpen has written the best book available on Obama Administration regulatory abuse and excess. It is a must-read for every informed voter.
Despite the 2010 mid-term election in which voters gave Democrats a "shellacking" in order " to stop the emergent Obama agenda, not to cooperate in its advancement", Obama has shifted tactics and is implementing his ideas by just ignoring courts and Congress. The result is we now have "regulators writing and executing their own laws". No wonder the economic recovery has not happened.
But President Barack Obama refused to heed the people and change course. The election results only changed the means by which he has pursued the most left wing policies of any President in U.S. history. Recognizing that he could no longer advance his agenda through Congress, Obama pivoted to maximizing the vast regulatory powers of the Executive Branch.
For example, since cap and trade legislation obviously no longer had any prayer of getting through Congress (even the overwhelmingly Democrat Congress of 2009-2010 wouldn’t pass it), Obama said after the election, “Cap and trade was just one way of skinning the cat; it was not the only way. It was a means, not an end.” Sometimes this pivot has involved ignoring legal rulings, breaking agreements with Congress, and exceeding statutory authority.
Kerpen’s book continues to discuss Obama Administration regulatory abuses and counterproductive misjudgments in full detail. Such overregulation and its costs is one of the reasons America has suffered no recovery after the last recession on the historical time scale for the American economy.
But Kerpen doesn’t just complain. He offers good, long overdue solutions, leading with the REINS Act (Regulations from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny). As Kerpen explains, that legislation proposed by Rep. Geoff Davis (R-KY) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) “cuts to the heart of abuse of regulatory power by requiring any major regulatory action to receive the approval of the House and Senate as well as the signature of the president before it can take effect.”
That would restore the Constitution to control over regulation, which states in Article I, Section I, “All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and a House of Representatives.” Kerpen adds, “In Federalist 47, James Madison explained that the U.S. Constitution was written to avoid the danger of legislative and executive power being fused by prohibiting the executive from making laws…Yet we now have precisely the situation that Madison and the other framers wanted to avoid. We have regulators who are effectively writing and executing their own laws.”