The
Great Transition
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell,
Jr.
If
there is a glorious moment in American politics, it is the transition
between administrations. The outgoing one is powerless, "lame
duck." That’s a great image: government as a duck hobbling
around without workable legs and wings. Too bad it can’t be a permanent
state of affairs. It appears that the Clinton administration is
going to attempt to defy the label. USA Today reports that
it is planning a flurry of new regulations governing businesses,
60 from the EPA alone, to be imposed before year’s end. Clearly,
the duck isn’t nearly lame enough.
On
the brighter side, during the transition hundreds of thousands of
politically appointed government workers are losing their job and
their power to intimidate and push people around. The lifetime bureaucrats
are free to openly despise their politically appointed masters.
Once their palatial offices are vacated, the lifetimers can even
desecrate the appointees’ pictures. Many political appointees attempt
to convert their political jobs to permanent jobs. When they fail,
they seek private sector employment real jobs. Some go back
to their hometowns real life.
The
incoming political appointees, thousands of them, are not yet wholly
corrupted. When it is a Republican regime, there are even a few
young idealists among them. Some may bring their copies of Mises’s
Human
Action with them to remind them of the core principles of
a free society. Of course their ideals will be out the window within
the first month after the inauguration, but we are talking about
the transition here: if there is ever a good moment in the life
of government, this is it.
With
Gore still contesting the election, the General Services Administration,
under the advisement of the Clinton administration, is refusing
to release the $5.3 million usually given to the incoming administration,
just to give the new governing crew a foretaste of the opulence
in store for them over the next four years.
Most
Americans knew nothing of this strange "transition" subsidy.
It turns out that some of the money goes to non-profit organizations
in DC, which helps explain why so many are so slavish to the party
in power. The dependency relationship between government and the
intellectual classes in Washington begins very early-even before
the inauguration.
What’s
more, this transition spending is patently immoral. Why should people
be forced to fund the setting up of a government they didn’t vote
for? If the money were going to Gore, Republicans would be justly
upset to be taxed for such purposes. And I can understand why Clinton’s
people are reluctant to fund Bush’s transition, even though refusing
it is pretty darn nasty.
Lacking
money or even office space, the would-be Bush administration is
having to raise private money to begin its transition. That’s right:
they are going to pay rent and salaries like everyone: not by clubbing
people over the head but by persuading them that it is a good cause.
No doubt many Republican activists will be pleased to help out,
given the unusual circumstances. Many of us would gladly toss money
to a traveling circus if it were slated to displace the current
crew in office.
But
why should this private funding end after the inauguration? This
seems like a good way to fund the executive in general. Only people
who support the government should help pay for it. The party in
power can only spend money that it can raise on its own and only
from people who support its policies.
This
practice recalls the great medieval moral tradition which demanded
that "the king should live of his own," that is, spend
only his own money. Even the armies working for the king were paid
only in money that the king himself could round up. The system wasn’t
perfect, and, yes, acquiring the money involved graft and bribe
giving and taking. But that was a lot cheaper than income taxes.
If the king had tried to do what presidents do today routinely,
he would have been quickly overthrown.
So
Bush and Cheney have started out on very solid footing. They are
paying their own way. Let’s institutionalize this while we can.
November
28, 2000
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr., is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. He
also edits a daily news site, LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2000 LewRockwell.com
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