[Congressional Record Volume 152, Number 89 (Tuesday, July 11, 2006)]
[House]
[Pages H5016-H5017]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONGRESSIONAL CONSTITUTION CAUCUS FOCUS ON TENTH AMENDMENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentleman from New Jersey (Mr. Garrett) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. GARRETT of New Jersey. Mr. Speaker, I thank my colleagues who
came before me this evening to join with us, as we do each Tuesday
evening as members of the Congressional Constitution Caucus, to come to
the floor to discuss constitutional issues; and this evening to discuss
the philosophy, the intent, the foundations of the 10th amendment.
As we discussed, and you have heard already, this amendment really
could be said to be the most important amendment in defining what the
Founding Fathers' vision of the role of the Federal Government should
be.
As stated earlier, the 10th amendment states clearly: ``The powers
not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited
by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the
people.''
These historic words, penned by the Founding Fathers, some of the
most ingenious political minds of their time or anytime in the world's
history, set forth an important principle: that the Federal Government
may exercise specific powers that are listed in the Constitution. All
you need to do is simply look to it, for example, article I, section 8,
and they enumerate the powers that the Federal Government has. It
really does not even go on for more than one-and-a-half pages. These
are specific powers that the Federal Government has. The others are the
remaining powers that are reserved to the States and the people
respectively.
Unfortunately, just as the authors of the Constitution have long
passed, so too have many of their foundation principles for our
government here. Between an ever-expanding Federal Government that for
decades now has crept into many other facets of areas once
[[Page H5017]]
left to local control, to a Federal judiciary that in many instances
completely ignores the intent of Federalism, all resulting in a Federal
Government that has become wildly inefficient and just a huge
bureaucracy.
So the old concept is really nothing new. It is just that we have
lost it over time. Our founders were very clear when they established
our system of government. They intended to set up a republic, a
republic really, you could almost say, of sovereign states capable of
self-governing, but with a small central government with clearly
defined and limited powers.
As someone else previously stated, I think the gentleman from Utah,
our Constitution can be thought of as a social contract, a contract
between the people and their government. We must think of this most
important document as a trade between the rights given up between these
competing interests. One of the most important interests that we
receive then from the Federal Government, as set forth in the
Constitution, is the defense of this Republic.
All other inherently government services, the founders were very
clear about, were to be contracts between themselves and the local
government and contracts between themselves and the State governments.
We refer to this as Federalism. The only powers specifically listed in
the Constitution are to be administered by the Federal Government. All
others are reserved to the people respectively.
Now, earlier last month, I guess it was, we had the discussion on
part of this forum to look at one of the legislations that is coming
down the pike that will help facilitate this, and that is the sunset
commission. We have discussed this in the past, and I will just talk on
it briefly right now.
The sunset commission will try to rein in the Federal Government by
looking at the agencies and the powers that are already out there. We
have suggested that it could be given, maybe even stronger, be given
some teeth to it, and one of the ways you do that is to set it up in a
BRAC-like format so that when it comes to Congress, it will actually
eliminate those ineffective government programs with an up-or-down
vote.
Second, and maybe an important change we can make in this to make it
even truer, is to do this, and that is to provide provisions in that
legislation to say that you will not simply look at the effectiveness
of programs or whether programs are duplicative. You will also look at
whether or not the programs of the Federal Government are
constitutional.
Even if a program is not duplicative of other Federal programs or
State programs, even if a Federal program is effective that is being
performed right now, the underlying and most seminal question that we
must ask ourselves is, do we, as Members of Congress, have the
constitutional authority to do what the legislation is asking us to do.
If you put that into something like a sunset commission, that we can
review this as each bill and each legislation comes up, each program
that is out there, we will be moving in the right direction.
Let me just close by looking at some of the good news that just came
out recently, today as a matter of fact, and that is the economic
numbers showing that we are actually reining in Federal spending. We
are seeing our deficit go down on the Federal level, and I am happy
about that.
I am happy that I have been able to join with other members of this
delegation and Members of this House to try to rein in the government
and try to bring it in the right direction.
We must be awfully careful, though, that when we get the fiscal house
of the Federal Government in order that we do not then decide that we
will start spending money elsewhere. That would be the wrong direction
to take. We have been able to get to where we are simply by putting our
house in order as far as spending; we have been able to lower tax
rates, allow folks to be on the family budget and not on the Federal
budget, to have a more free-market approach.
So I will just say this: that if we close by putting those
limitations on the Federal Government to restrict our approach to it
and make sure that our philosophy is the same as the Founding Fathers,
then we will see that there is both a practical and a fundamental and
foundational approach to doing so, and that is a constitutional
government.
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