Dems Agree to Shut Down Future State Laws to Protect Consumers
Consumer and safety groups are rightly applauding an agreement by House and Senate lawmakers to move forward a bill which bans lead and most phthalates -- plastic chemicals that can cause developmental disorders -- in most children's products. The bill, already approved by the U.S. House, will also increase funding for the Consumer Product Safety Commission, strengthen testing standards, and enhance public access to product safety information.
There is little question that the proliferation of state laws that passed this year banning toxic toys played a key role in industry leaders deciding to make concessions over the bill. Unfortunately, one key concession that industry demanded, and got, in the negotiations is preemption of new state laws protecting consumer safety. As industry spokespeople emphasized in their support for the bill:
A single set of national standards was "the framework we were looking for," said Carter Keithley, president of the Toy Industry Association ... E.R. Anderson, a Wal-Mart spokeswoman in Washington, called the legislation "a good bill, in our estimation." She added, "We are very pleased that this bill acknowledges that 50 separate state standards is unworkable and inefficient."
While state Attorneys General will have a role in enforcing the new federal law in the courts, states will largely be barred from enacting new rules to protect the public that are stricter than the federal standards. While the new proposed bill is a considerable improvement over existing consumer protections, the danger is that when new public health dangers are found in the future, if the federal agencies refuse to act, there will be little ability for the states to step in and be a check on federal inaction.
This is part of a pattern of Congress voting over 57 times in the previous five years to preempt state laws. As we saw with the subprime mortgage debacle,
federal laws designed to protect consumers have often been used instead
to stop stronger state laws, so progressives should be wary of federal
compromises such as this one that cripple state authority.
One thing that distinguishes modern liberals from the New Deal left is that progressives back then assiduously expanded state authority to protect workers and consumers. The minimum wage enacted in the 1930s went out of its way to specify that the federal minimum wage was only a minimum and that states and local governments could enact higher wage rates. This has meant that when the federal government lags in protecting wage levels, states still have the ability to step into to raise the bar.
Unfortunately, modern progressives have increasingly signed onto environmental, consumer and economic regulations that preempt state laws, meaning that when the federal government falls into the hands of conservatives, not only does federal vigilance fail but all proactive action by government can be blocked due to federal preemption. If Obama wins the Presidency, the question is whether progressives will recognize that he may not be in office forever, so policy should be designed to empower progressive legislators at the state and local level in order to safeguard progressive policy in the future, even when the federal government may be in hostile hands.















Having anathematized states rights lo these past 50 or 60 years, it's a real struggle for liberals to turn themselves around.
July 31, 2008 5:21 PM | Reply | Permalink
Liberals fail to understand that dispersed authority is better than centralized authority for progressive causes, because corruption works from the center outwards.
August 1, 2008 10:37 AM | Reply | Permalink
"Unfortunately, modern progressives..."
What's a "modern progressive"? When the party ran away from "liberal" and became "progressive" it stopped having a clue where it stands on most anything. That's a big reason proud agenda driven conservatives run circles around "modern progressives".
July 31, 2008 6:25 PM | Reply | Permalink
Actually, it was the other way around. "Liberals" ran away from the word "progressive" back in the late 1940s because they thought it was too lefty-communist associated. "Cold War liberal" became the position of those rejecting many positions seen as too leftwing.
July 31, 2008 10:25 PM | Reply | Permalink
Right on, bluebell.
Don't listen to Nathan. He's not the enemy, but he has been dozing these past 15 years. Here are the enemies -- and here.
August 1, 2008 4:05 AM | Reply | Permalink
"Progressivism was associated with the more forthright and hard-nosed suffrage and governmental accountability movements of the time, including the popular election of Senators, first wave feminism, and the implementation of ballot initiatives. Economically, it was vehemently anti-trust and pro-corporate regulation. In many ways, it is what we would now define as the differences between "neo-liberalism" and "progressivism.""
This is the sense in which progressive has a positive meaning in my opinion.This is in the American grain of maximizing the rights of the individual and viewing Government with justified suspicion, particularly when Governments started infringing free speech and locking up dissenters in the name of a war against an abstract noun.
August 1, 2008 1:00 PM | Reply | Permalink
Right on
Can I still be a Bolshevik?
August 2, 2008 12:56 AM | Reply | Permalink
There was a reason why states were sovereign at our nations conceptions. Our founders knew the evils of pure democracy aka mob rule aka tyranny of the majority.
Unfortunately not many people understand this concept and progressives are getting elected like mad. Even so called conservatives are picking up the progressive flag.
A wise person once said that those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it. I am afraid that is exactly what is going to happen to the United States.
You would think with our higher education standards compared to 1776, we would be more enlightened, but ironically as a whole we are not.
July 31, 2008 10:26 PM | Reply | Permalink
progressives are getting elected like mad.
Well, bless my buttons! And here I never noticed...Those wouldn't be secular progresssives,(Ohh, nooo....) would they Mr. Bill?
August 1, 2008 1:25 AM | Reply | Permalink
I had to google that one,
I don't know, it depends on who you would define as a secular progressive. I can tell you though that Al Franken isn't doing so hot.
August 1, 2008 9:15 AM | Reply | Permalink
I had to google that one
Well, well.
You are not entirely beyond redemption, the above betraying a laudable lack of familiarity with the usages of the Satanic O'Reilly.
August 1, 2008 7:40 PM | Reply | Permalink