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Editorial columns

  • Rev the small-business engine
    The United States doesn’t need a new economic engine. It already has one: entrepreneurship. It’s just that we aren’t getting the mileage out of it that we could. Small businesses are instrumental to the U.S. economy.
  • Agenda for a stronger Hoosier economy
    Going into the fall election, Hoosier citizens are, and should be, concerned about jobs. If what we hear on the campaign trail is any indication, many are wondering, “What are my state legislators doing to help?
  • U.S. falls short on debt to military vets
    Here is something worth remembering as we celebrate Memorial Day: The Department of Veterans Affairs estimates that every 80 minutes a veteran takes his or her own life.
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Lightening the approval logjam

This is an inauspicious moment to expect lawmakers to yield any partisan weapon.

But one thing Congress could do to unclog the federal government is so obvious and requires lawmakers to give up so little, even the most ardent partisan should be able to support it.

Last June, the Senate overwhelmingly passed a bill reducing the number of executive branch positions subject to Senate confirmation.

The House has yet to act on the legislation.

The bill would cut about 200 government posts from the list of 1,400 that require confirmation – jobs such as public relations officials and technology officers. It would also create a committee to rationalize the many long, redundant and invasive questionnaires that nominees must complete.

If anything, this bill does not go far enough. Senators would still be able to put personal “holds” on the remaining confirmable nominees, distorting government operations to extort concessions from the executive branch.

Federal government expert Paul Light recommends slashing the number of political appointees, or, as President Obama proposed in his State of the Union address, giving the Senate a deadline for confirming nominees. Others suggest limiting the use of filibusters on certain appointments. Such reforms, whatever their merits, have no chance in an election year.

This modest bill, on the other hand, seemed on a glide path toward approval. But it may encounter turbulence because of Republican anger at Obama’s recent recess appointments. Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, is vowing to block any White House nominee until the president rescinds them.

Lawmakers may feel as though they can’t give up any amount of leverage. Most people see this fight as evidence that the current confirmation system makes collateral victims of too many would-be public servants.

The standoff certainly should not be a predicate for blocking a bill that could lighten the Senate’s workload, improve government operations and still leave lawmakers with plenty of political leverage.

The House should at least allow senators to take the baby steps they have already concluded they can tolerate.