US Senator Ben Sasse (R-Nebraska) is a consummate constitutionalist.

He does not do whatever President Trump wants, and he is not afraid to demand jealous safeguarding of the United States Senate and its institutions.

Indeed, the Framers of the United States Constitution never intended to the United States Senate to operate as an extension of the House of Representatives. The US Senate was never intended to be an extensive democratic chamber.

The US Senators were supposed to be elected by the legislatures, and they were supposed 

Make the Senate Great Again

To restore the world’s greatest deliberative body, we need
to think big.

What would the Founding Fathers think of America if they
came back to life? Their eyes would surely bug out first at our technology and
wealth. But I suspect they’d also be stunned by the deformed structure of our
government. The Congress they envisioned is all but dead. The Senate in
particular is supposed to be the place where Americans hammer out our biggest
challenges with debate. That hasn’t happened for decades—and the rot is
bipartisan.

Many on the left think the problem is the filibuster, which
requires a supermajority to end debate and enact most legislation. But ending
the filibuster would allow political parties to change the direction of the
country dramatically with a succession of shifting 51-49 votes. That’s a path
to even more polarization and instability. The Senate’s culture needs dramatic
change aimed at promoting debate, not ending it. Here are some ideas:

• Cut the cameras. Most of what happens in committee
hearings isn’t oversight, it’s showmanship. Senators make speeches that get
chopped up, shipped to home-state TV stations, and blasted across social media.
They aren’t trying to learn from witnesses, uncover details, or improve
legislation. They’re competing for sound bites.

There’s one notable exception: The Senate Select Committee
on Intelligence, the majority of whose work is done in secret. Without
posturing for cameras, Republicans and Democrats cooperate on some of America’s
most complicated and urgent problems. Other committees could follow their
example, while keeping transparency by making transcripts and real-time audio
available to the public.

• Abolish standing committees. The Senate is supposed to be
the world’s greatest deliberative body, but it operates on about 20 permanent
fiefdoms. Dividing legislative work is important, but there’s no corporation
that would tackle its problems by creating 20 permanent committees and running
every decision through them. The Senate should instead create temporary
two-year committees, each devoted to making real progress on one or two big
problems. Committees should draw power from their accomplishments, not based on
which industries need to supplicate before the gavel.

• Pack the floor. Serious debate happens only if senators
show up. Ninety-nine percent of the time you see a senator talking on the
floor, he’s speaking to a chamber with somewhere between zero and two
colleagues present. The Senate’s rules privilege the majority, which controls
the agenda and floor time. Senators ought to be packed on the floor having real
debates. We can do that by changing the rules to allow committees to control
some floor time. Elections have consequences, so the majority leader should
control the majority of the Senate’s time, but committees should be able to
command specific times for specific debates.

• Live together. A lot of time is spent demonizing the
opposition, but most senators can get along quite well. Sen. Brian Schatz of
Hawaii is as liberal as the day is long, but he’s my friend. Senators should
live, eat, and meet in dormitories when the Senate is in session. It’s hard to
demonize people you spend time with every day.

• Cancel re-election. One of the biggest reasons Congress
gives away its power to the executive branch is that it’s politically expedient
for both parties to avoid the decisions that come from the work of legislating.
Lawmakers are obsessed with staying in office, and one of the easiest ways to
keep getting re-elected is by avoiding hard decisions. We ought to propose a
constitutional amendment to limit every senator to one term, but we should
double it from six years to 12. Senators who don’t have to worry about
short-term popularity can work instead on long-term challenges.

If that’s a bridge too far, at least ban fundraising while
the Senate is in session in Washington. It’s an everyday experience to sit down
at a $2,000-a-plate lunch fundraiser and then run over to make committee votes.
Lobbying is protected by the First Amendment, but it shouldn’t be the primary
focus of senators when we’ve got work to do.

• Repeal the 17th Amendment. Ratified in 1913, it replaced
the appointment of senators by state legislatures with direct election.
Different states bring different solutions to the table, and that ought to be
reflected in the Senate’s national debate. The old saying used to be that all
politics is local, but today—thanks to the internet, 24/7 cable news and a cottage
industry dedicated to political addiction—politics is polarized and national.
That would change if state legislatures had direct control over who serves in
the Senate.

• Sunset everything. For decades Pennsylvania Avenue has
been a one-way street, as authority flowed from Congress to the executive
branch. When the unelected bureaucracy gets power, it doesn’t let go. We ought
to end that by having the Senate create a “super committee” dedicated to
reviewing all such delegations of power over the past 80 years and then
proposing legislation to sunset the authority of entire bureaucracies on a
rolling basis. Does, say, the Health and Human Services Department ever answer
for its aggressive regulatory lawmaking? Of course not. Sunset all its
authority in 12 months and watch lawmakers start to make actual laws.

• Make a real budget. The power of the purse is Congress’s
primary lever—and the area where Congress is most unserious. The budget process
is completely broken, and every couple of months lawmakers are faced with a
monumentally stupid decision: Shut the government down or spend 102% of what
was spent last year, with no oversight. It’s an endless series of
all-or-nothing brinkmanship fights—continuing resolutions, omnibus spending
deals and debt-ceiling hikes. We ought to fix that with two-year budgeting that
includes all federal spending, including on entitlements. We ought to end the
distinction between appropriation and authorization. Legislation that
authorizes federal action should also appropriate the money to pay for it.

These aren’t partisan proposals, because congressional
dysfunction isn’t a partisan problem. Lawmakers—Republicans and Democrats—don’t
make laws. Over years, Congress made the choice to shirk its duty and cede
power to the executive branch. Recovery will be hard, but it’s time for
Congress build some muscle and figure out how to serve the American people by
doing our constitutionally mandated jobs again.

Mr. Sasse, a Republican, is a U.S. senator from Nebraska.

Here are my reflections on the above set of suggested reforms:

I agree with the vast majority of US Senator Ben Sasse's
(R-Nebraska) suggested reforms.

The Senate’s culture needs dramatic change aimed at
promoting debate, not ending it."

Agreed. Here are reforms that would restore the deliberative
core of the US Senate:

1. Repeal the 17th Amendment. The Senate was designed to
represent STATES, not individuals. Senators should not be elected by popular
vote. The United States is not a democracy, although one chamber does indeed represent
the more democratic impulse in the country: The House of Representatives

2. Cut the cameras. Hearings should be audio-recorded only
(just like Supreme Court hearings), and transcripts can be provided afterwards.
No more videos, no more playing to the cameras.

3. Abolish standing committees. YES! Every committee should
be ad hoc (set up for a specific task, then decommissioned once the task is
completed). Standing committees have allowed The Swamp to gain considerable
power in Washington at the expense of the states and the people (cf. Ninth and
Tenth Amendments)

4. "Pack the Floor" — Senators need to show up
and speak. Sasse points out that most US Senators speak on the floor to only
one or two people. There is no real discussion or deliberation, just a lot of
pontification and monologue. By extension, US Senators must be present when
invoking a filibuster. They cannot "call in" to object to a
legislative motion, and that alone suffices. Blue paper motions must also be
scrapped. If a home state senator wants to block or delay a judicial or
executive nominee, he needs to make the case to the entire body.

5. "Sunset everything", i.e. give regulatory or
legislative action and commission assignments a 12-month time limit. There
should be no bureaucratic process in place beyond one year. Every legislative
action of such a caliber should have a required "sunset" clause. This
reform from Senator Sasse is excellent.

6. I disagree with his call for term limits. No term limits
for legislators. The best term limit is an election. Instead, we need to make
it easier for every citizen to challenge incumbents. Enactment of recall for
federal officials would be far more appropriate.

7. "Make a real budget … We ought to end the
distinction between appropriation and authorization. Legislation that
authorizes federal action should also appropriate the money to pay for
it." Yes. No more "all or nothing" budget bills which waste
money on frivolous projects with no oversight.

The biggest reform needed, of course, is the full repeal of
the 17th Amendment. Make America a Republic Again.

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