Also read Why I don't fear a US Constitutional Convention and yet still do not want one |
Another source states, "The Constitution says that the total number of representatives shall not be greater than one for every 30,000 citizens. During the ratification debates over the Constitution, opponents argued that such a ratio was inadequate to properly represent the country. But even using the original ratio in the Constitution, the House of Representatives would have consisted of about 9,400 members after the 2000 census. Faced with the ever increasing size of the House, Congress voted in 1929 to limit the number of representatives to 435."2
Can you imagine a House of Representatives with 9400 members? How would business get done? Well, maybe that's the point. There would be so many representatives, that votes would have to be made based on what the person feels is right for their 30,000 voters, rather than how much money they can collect from lobbyist for their next campaign. 9400 Representatives would make it a lot harder for lobbyist to sway the will of our elected officials. It would make pork barrel projects almost nonexistent because districts would be too small to gather enough support for the most silly of funding requests. It's a lot harder to buy off 9400 people than it is 435. Particularly if each of those 9400 people have to go back to talk directly to just 30,000 people several times a year. Representatives' support would really have to come from the local grassroots level. They might even vote per their constituents desires! Imagine that!
The one problem with a number of Representatives being so large is that bill introduction may become a bit unmanageable. If we keep to the current system of making huge bills with tons and tons of legal code, things would be unmanageable. However, that doesn't necessarily need to be a roadblock. Maybe we shouldn't keep the current system of bill introduction! Maybe our Representatives should really just submit succinct laws that apply to very specific things. We would still need a huge bill from time to time to address social and other national issues, and the national budget, but we would pretty much end riders that plague the current system. We can even use 21st Century technology to make such bills easier to process. (Anyone hear of this Wonder called The Internet?)
More meaningful and useful laws might actually get passed because they wouldn't be tied up so frequently in political maneuverings. Political Parties couldn't hold our government hostage with standoffs, because their members would be so easily replaced. We would actually be able to hold our Representatives accountable!
It would enhance the power of the executive, which is the last thing we need at this point.
ReplyDeleteI don't agree with that comment, but even so, the executive branch can be divided up too. Our population is way larger than ever envisioned by the founders. Who says that a single president acting on their own is desirable in modern context? Maybe split that up too into multiple people elected in offsetting cycles. Three people each elected for 4 years, with 2 elected in the main cycle, and 1 elected in the offset cycle.
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