~
James Madison
The Washington
political scandals dominating the news in recent weeks may be
disheartening, but they cannot be considered surprising. We live
in a time when the U.S. government is the largest and most powerful
state in the history of the world. Today's federal government
consists of fifteen huge departments, hundreds of agencies, thousands
of programs, and millions of employees. It spends 2.4 trillion
dollars in a single year. The possibilities for corruption in
such an immense and unaccountable institution are endless.
Americans
understandably expect ethical conduct from their elected officials
in Washington. But the whole system is so out of control that
it's simply unrealistic to place faith in each and every government
official in a position to sell influence. The larger the federal
government becomes, the more it controls who wins and who loses
in our society. The temptation for lobbyists to buy votes and
the temptation for politicians to sell them is enormous. Indicting
one crop of politicians and bringing in another is only a temporary
solution. The only effective way to address corruption is to change
the system itself, by radically downsizing the power of the federal
government in the first place. Take away the politicians' power
and you take away the very currency of corruption.
Undoubtedly
the recent revelations will ignite new calls for campaign finance
reform. However, we must recognize that campaign finance laws
place restrictions only on individuals, not politicians. Politicians
will continue to tax and spend, meaning they will continue to
punish some productive Americans while rewarding others with federal
largesse. The same vested special interests will not go away,
and the same influence peddling will happen every day on Capitol
Hill.
The reason
is very simple: when the federal government redistributes trillions
of dollars from some Americans to others, countless special interests
inevitably will fight for the money. The rise in corruption in
Washington simply mirrors the rise in federal spending. The fundamental
problem is not with campaigns or politicians primarily, but rather
with popular support for the steady shift from a relatively limited,
constitutional federal government to the huge leviathan of today.
We
need to get money out of government. Only then will money
not be important in politics. It's time to reconsider exactly
what we want the federal government to be in our society. So long
as it remains the largest and most powerful institution in the
nation, it will remain endlessly susceptible to corruption.