When
revolutionary fever was raging across Europe in the 19th century,
when atheist, egalitarian communists were writing new political constitutions
without hesitation and according to every whim and fad, conservatives like
Edmund Burke and Joseph de Maistre brought attention to a very important
concept: the unwritten
constitution. The unwritten constitution
is the temperament and predispositions of a society that give it its unique
features. Any written political
constitution will be a reflection of this deeper part of a people’s life. At its best, the written constitution will be
a true reflection of it; at its worst, a distorted reflection of it.
Louisiana,
like every real ethnos, has her own unwritten constitution that shapes
her political institutions. Because of
her deep French influence, Louisiana’s unwritten code differs from that of many
other States in the union, whose ancestry is largely English. Before the revolutions, most countries in
Christian Europe generally had the same political institutions: a central authority in the king as well as
regional and local authorities, some elected, others hereditary, that governed
conjointly with him – though the powers exercised by each varied from country
to country. In France, the national
executive was stronger and the other authorities weaker. In England, it was the reverse: The local authorities were stronger, and the
national king weaker. This does not make
one country better than another; it is simply a manifestation of the inner life
of each people, which, thanks be to God, is not a dull uniformity across the
globe.
The French
political system, as we said, works best when there is a strong central
executive authority overseeing the whole of it – an Iberville, a King Louis
XIV, a Charles de Gaulle. Since this French element is the primordial
one in Louisiana’s unwritten constitution, we need to harmonize our written
constitution with it. A fight against
nature is one doomed to failure. But it
is just this sort of fight that many are engaged in here in Louisiana by trying
to establish a legislature that is independent of, hostile to, or supreme above
the executive. The results are easy
enough to see in the dysfunction of Louisiana’s Legislature over the years
(especially glaring this year, with the Clay Schexnayder debacle).
Rather than
fighting a losing and costly war against nature, we need to work with it. For years, the unofficial practice in
Louisiana was for the governor to choose the Speaker of the House and the
President of the Senate. Rather than
abandoning this practice and thus warring against Louisiana’s unwritten
constitution, it needs to be made official, in keeping with our Frenchness,
while hedging it with some checks/protections, in keeping with our Englishness
(of which there is a good deal here in Louisiana).
Ideally, we
would see the necessary clauses added to the State constitution empowering the
Governor to name the leaders of the two legislative chambers, while at the same
time vesting the two chambers with the ability to oust the Speaker or President
by a vote of 3/5 of the members of the respective chamber (a simple majority
seems too low a threshold for such an extraordinary motion). This vote would be initiated at the request
of ¼ of the members of the chamber, who would be required to submit a report
detailing their reasons for bringing the request (if they fail to produce such
a report, the request for a vote would be denied outright); . . .
The rest is
at https://thehayride.com/2021/05/garlington-the-revenge-of-the-unwritten-constitution/ .
--
Holy Ælfred
the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!
Anathema to
the Union!
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