Posted on Fri, Mar. 24, 2006
Watchdog contends budget bill broke law
By Jonathan Weisman
Washington Post
WASHINGTON – For anyone who took fifth-grade social studies or sang
“I’m Just a Bill,” how legislation turns to law always seemed pretty
simple: The House passes a bill, the Senate passes the same bill, the
president signs it.
“He signed ya, Bill – now you’re a law,” shouts the cartoon lawmaker on “Schoolhouse Rock” as Bill acknowledges the cheers.
But last month, Washington threw all that old-fashioned civics stuff
into a tizzy, when President Bush signed into law a bill that never
passed the House. Bill – in this case, a major budget-cutting measure
that will affect millions of Americans – became a law because it was
“certified” by the leaders of the House and Senate.
After stewing for weeks, Public Citizen, a legislative watchdog
group, sued Tuesday to block the budget-cutting law, charging that Bush
and Republican leaders of Congress flagrantly violated the Constitution
when the president signed it into law knowing that the version that
cleared the House was substantively different from the Senate’s version.
The issue is bizarre, with even constitutional scholars saying they
could not think of any precedent for the journey the budget bill took
to becoming a law. Opponents point to elementary school civics lessons
to make their case, while Republicans are evoking an obscure Supreme
Court ruling from the 1890s to suggest a bill does not have to pass
both chambers of Congress to become law.
“We believe that the law is constitutional and that this is yet
another political attempt by the Democrats to stop us from cutting
spending,” said Ronald D. Bonjean Jr., a spokesman for Speaker Dennis
Hastert, R-Ill.
But liberal interest groups hoping to bring down the budget law have
the backing of many legal scholars, who say that a $2 billion mistake
cannot be ignored.
“The Deficit Reduction Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 2005 may be
something, but it is not law within the meaning of the Constitution,”
said Jamin Raskin, an American University law professor.
No one disputes the central facts of the lawsuit: Last December,
Vice President Cheney broke a tie vote in the Senate to win passage of
a bill that would cut nearly $40 billion over five years by reducing
Medicaid rolls, raising work requirements for welfare, and trimming the
student loan program, among other changes.
Among those other changes was a provision to save $2 billion by
restricting Medicare payments for durable medical equipment, such as
wheelchairs and oxygen tanks. Under the Senate bill, government-funded
leases for such equipment could last only 13 months.
As the measure was being sent to the House last month, a Senate
clerk inadvertently changed that 13-month-restriction to 36 months, a
$2 billion alteration. With the mistaken change, the measure squeaked
through the House, 216 to 214.
After the mistake was revealed, Republican leaders were loath to
fight the battle again by having another vote, so White House officials
simply deemed the Senate version to be the law.
“This is simple elementary school civics,” said Public Citizen
attorney Adina Rosenbaum, announcing that the group sued in U.S.
District Court to nullify the law. “The courts should declare void laws
passed in an unconstitutional manner.”
The suit has the sympathy of constitutional scholars.
“I think it’s an open and shut case,” agreed Michael Gerhardt,
director of the Center on Law and Government at the University of North
Carolina School of Law. “It would be a horrible precedent to set if
this is how Congress is allowed to make laws.”
For their part, congressional leaders and administration officials
point to an 1892 Supreme Court decision, Field v. Clark, to argue that
as long as the Speaker of the House and the leader of the Senate
certify a bill passed, it is passed. In that case, a bill signed by
President Benjamin Harrison and authenticated by the leaders of the
House and Senate was different from the version printed in the official
journals of Congress, known now as the Congressional Record.
“Congress presented a bill certified by both chambers. It’s been
signed into law, and we consider the matter closed,” said Scott
Milburn, spokesman for the White House budget office.
In the 1892 case, the Supreme Court did not rule that the law really
was a law, but instead said the dispute was not a matter for the courts
to decide, said Michael Dorf, a constitutional law professor at
Columbia University. The main problem for Public Citizen will not be
showing that the budget law is technically not a law, but getting the
courts involved, Dorf said, especially with a measure as sweeping as
this one.
“An honest application of precedents would probably lead to the
conclusion that the courts should strike this down,” Dorf said. But, he
added, “The courts will probably try to find a way to not throw the law
out because it is so broad.”
The issue would be solved if the House voted again, this time on the version that passed the Senate.
But that would mark the third time House members would have to cast
their votes on a politically difficult bill, containing cuts in many
popular programs, and it would be that much closer to the November
election.
But the issue may be snowballing. On Feb. 13, James Zeigler, a
Republican lawyer in Alabama who specializes in elder-care issues,
filed a similar suit, challenging the budget measure’s
constitutionality.
“The Constitution is broad and vague on a number of things; this is
not one of them,” Zeigler said. “The same bill must be passed by House
and Senate and signed by the president. Otherwise it’s not law. Case
over.”