Wars of choice, a plethora of changing tariffs and sanctions on countries across the world, and a historically high number of executive orders characterize the first year of Donald Trump’s second presidential term. And all this has been accomplished by the executive branch with minimal pushback from the legislative branch.
Congress has over time ceded more and more power to the executive branch. Over the last year, this process has reached a level where the assertion that the legislature comprises a “coequal” branch of the United States government seems more a punch line of a joke than an expression of reality.
In a Tuesday Washington Post article, Liz Goodwin provides details of the withering of the exercise of congressional power in Trump’s second term. Commenting on the situation now in Congress, Goodwin wrote, “While lawmakers once jealously guarded their constitutionally endowed power over spending, trade and war — regularly checking the executive — Republicans in the 119th Congress have cast themselves as helpmeets to the president instead.”
A problem for Republicans in Congress who have chosen to just look on as the president does whatever he wishes is that the president has grown increasingly unpopular among voters. For a significant number of these Congress members, their status as Trump’s “helpmeets” may cause them to fail in their reelection efforts. Their departure, along with the decision of some of their Republican colleagues to forgo uphill reelection campaigns, could lead to increased assertion of congressional authority after a new Congress convenes in January.
Reprinted with permission from the Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity.