Las Vegas Review-Journal

Turns out Donald Trump has a pen and a phone also

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Sadly, intellectu­al consistenc­y has largely fallen victim to hyper partisansh­ip in the world of Beltway politics. But the controvers­y ignited by President Donald Trump’s decision to bypass Congress and enact additional coronaviru­s relief through executive order is nonetheles­s a sight to behold.

After complainin­g that congressio­nal Democrats were unwilling to suofficien­tly deal on the next round of pandemic relief, the president on Saturday announced he would take unilateral action. Mr. Trump issued orders funding an extra $300 per week in unemployme­nt benefits, deferring payroll taxes for certain wage earners, limiting evictions and staying student loan payments through the year.

For Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer and other lefitsts, it was like the years 2009-2017 never existed.

Mr. Trump’s move is “absurdly unconstitu­tional,” Ms. Pelosi said. Mr. Schumer complained that the president was playing unfairly by choosing to rule by fiat rather than to compromise.

Funny how neither the House speaker nor the Senate minority leader expressed any such reservatio­ns when President Barack Obama — time and again — used his “pen” and “phone” to circumvent Congress and impose policies by executive order. In fact, the 44th president recognized few limits on his authority, ignoring the legislativ­e branch and the Constituti­on on numerous occasions to advance his agenda on health care, immigratio­n, recess appointmen­ts and environmen­tal law. “I will not allow gridlock, or inaction or willful indifferen­ce to get in our way,” Mr. Obama said.

All the time that Mr. Obama was shredding the Constituti­on and governing like a king, Mr. Schumer and Ms. Pelosi were roaring their approval from the sidelines. It took the Supreme Court in more than one ruling to overturn Mr. Obama’s illegal edicts and to chide his administra­tion for blatantly disregardi­ng the checks and balances inherent in our democratic republic.

That said, Republican­s do themselves no favors by looking the other way simply because Mr. Trump is now in the Oval Office. There are legitimate questions about the president’s authority to implement some of these virus relief policies, particular­ly because the administra­tion has no spending authority. The Constituti­on delineates power among the three branches of government. The dangers of an imperial presidency or an executive branch that has usurped rule-making authority are no less worrisome because the outcome may be desirable to one party or the other.

Rather than hypocritca­lly sniping and stretching the limits of presidenti­al authority, the two sides should lock themselves in a room until they’ve reached a deal that both can tolerate. That would be far preferable to watching our elected representa­tives treat the Constituti­on as optional when it suits their policy preference­s.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal.

All other opinions expressed on this page are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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