William Buckley once said "I would rather be governed by the first 2000 names in the Boston phone book than by the Harvard faculty." Rasmussen Reports tells us:
If they could vote to keep or replace the entire Congress, 59% of voters would like to throw them all out and start over again. The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey found that just 17% would vote to keep the current legislators in office.More important, with respect to those 2000 names:
Today, just 23% have even a little confidence in the ability of Congress to deal with the nation’s economic problems and only 24% believe most Members of Congress understand legislation before they vote on it.
Last week, the House of Representatives initially rejected a financial bailout bill proposed by the Bush Administration. Later, after the Senate added a number of items that some call “pork” and others call “sweeteners,” the measure eventually passed. While the bill survived Washington, it did so at a time when just 30% of voters favored it and 45% were opposed.
Only half (49%) believe that the current Congress is better than individuals selected at random from the phone book. Thirty-three percent (33%) believe a randomly selected group of Americans could do a better job and 19% are not sure (see crosstabs).I would have to say that the 49% may be correct in the sense of "well informed" but not in the sense of morally "better." What a random sample of Americans knows might be deficient, compared to Congress (although perhaps not by the huge margin that the elites would like to believe). But I find it very easy to believe that a random sample of Americans would be less corrupted by the influence of K Street lobbyists than the current pack of jackasses.
I really wish that the popular revulsion at Congressional incompetence and stupidity would cause a massive rejection of the current political class next month. But that just isn't going to happen.
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