Americans are both outraged and energized over headlines highlighting scandals in Washington related to the Benghazi tragedy and the IRS targeting of conservative groups.
But there is a bigger concern at play in these events. It's something
very few people are talking about, although it underpins and links the
two scandals together.
The "Five Laws of Decline," as detailed in our book, LeaderShift, are creating systemic problems that are eroding our government and other institutions.
These five systemic problems, which include increased quantity leads
to decreased quality, aren't going to be fixed by Congressional
hearings, or even heads rolling at at the Internal Revenue Service. Even
if State Department, IRS, White House and other officials are held
fully accountable for whatever went wrong, these five laws of decline
will remain in force -- and such crises will continue.
For example, just one of these systemic laws of decline is directly responsible for the IRS and Benghazi scandals.
President Obama inadvertently hinted at this problem when he vowed to
hold the Internal Revenue Service accountable if reports of political
targeting are proven true:
"Because the IRS as an independent agency requires
absolute integrity, and people have to have confidence that
they're...applying the laws in a non-partisan way."
This quote points to a root problem. The president said that the IRS
"requires absolute integrity." This is the opposite of the American
Founders view.
The framers valued integrity, but they built the Constitution
to work even if the leaders had no integrity -- especially in such
cases, in fact.
James Madison famously said that since men aren't angels, all
government officials and agencies must be vigorously checked and
balanced.
Only effective checks (not hopes of official integrity), keep
government in line. The White House seems to have believed that the
level of integrity from government officials at the IRS, State
Department and other agencies would be enough (it is doubtful they would
have afforded such trust to business leaders or taxpayers).
Nor is this a partisan issue. The current scandals seem all too
familiar to those who watched the Bush White House promise that there
were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and target key Democratic state
attorneys general for unwarranted investigations.
Same story, different actors.
Executive overreach is endemic in Washington, regardless of which party is in power.
There are, put simply, too few effective checks on the sprawling
executive branch with all its programs, funding, institutions and
agencies. As long as they aren't checked, we're going to see more abuses
and scandals.
The Constitution provides judicial and congressional checks on the
executive branch, but they are only belatedly and timidly used anymore.
In the case of the IRS and Benghazi, it was the media that checked
the Executive branch. On the one hand: good for the media. Quality
journalism should be a check on government arrogance and abusive
secrecy. But a functional free government can only last if its branches
effectively check each other.
This isn't so much a "conservative vs. liberal" problem as a
"Washington vs. America" issue. Washington is systemically
dysfunctional, the people want real progress, and partisan politics
can't provide effective solutions because the executive branch isn't
adequately checked.
Real change is going to require a new look at checks and
balances, and the only real checks include a check on an agency's
ability to spend.
Even if conservatives win the day on these two scandals -- if Congress
fires or fines those responsible for IRS targeting and Benghazi, and
sets up a system where this can never happen again (and that's a pretty
big "if") -- we'll continue to see these kinds of crises and scandals
until we understand the systemic causes and start addressing the real,
underlying problems.