The BulleTin • Friday, March 26, 2021 A5 EDITORIALS & OPINIONS AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Heidi Wright Gerry O’Brien Richard Coe Publisher Editor Editorial Page Editor Make it easier for public to participate in their government I f you wanted to, you can watch Deschutes County Commission and Bend City Council meetings from home. That was true even before the pandemic. Spoiler alert! They tend to be low Of course, actually being at the wattage. Exceptions do happen. De- meeting may be the best way to see bates can get feisty. Public testimony what is going on and provide feed- can be passionate and compelling. back. But more people will be able to A Bend City Council participate in their gov- meeting did burst into ernment if the Legisla- Being able to song. And taxes, zon- ture makes this change. ing, parking, homeless- bill should pass. watch government This ness, policing and other It will come with a things that can have a cost. meetings from major impact on your Some of the technol- home and even life do get discussed. ogy has already been Still, not many people because of the participate remotely acquired choose to tune in. pandemic. is a convenience Being able to watch But when boards government meetings and commissions start that the pandemic meeting in their regu- from home and even participate remotely is lar settings again, it will has brought to a convenience that the require cameras and Oregon. It should not just finding a way pandemic has brought to Oregon. It should to broadcast Zoom or stay. stay. WebEx meetings. Since the pandemic For instance, the began, meetings such Bend-La Pine Schools as those of the Bend La Pine School has been working on figuring out Board have been easily accessible how much it would cost to retrofit online. The Bend Park & Recreation its meeting room with cameras. It District has also been available. The could cost the district tens of thou- Oregon Legislature has regularly al- sands of dollars. lowed remote testimony this session. We believe that would be money House Bill 2560 would require well spent. many government bodies to make The forced change to remote ac- meetings remotely accessible, in- cess has greatly increased the num- cluding the opportunity for people ber of people who can participate to submit testimony. Not having in their government. If the legisla- to be present is a tremendous step tors, local governments and school forward in accessibility for Oregon boards don’t want that, we are in government. trouble. Bill would give businesses a much-needed tax break G iving businesses a break on their taxes is getting a biparti- san push in the Oregon Leg- islature. This isn’t some giveaway. It’s to help businesses who got hit with a big increase in payroll taxes because of the pandemic. Oregon businesses have to pitch in to help pay unemployment insur- ance. It helps pay benefits to workers who lose their jobs. And the pan- demic has driven the rates up for some of the businesses that were hit the hardest and let go of the most workers. The rate employers pay is aver- aged over three years. Some face tripled payroll taxes, according to supporters of the bill. An Oregonian article goes into more detail. House Bill 3389 gives businesses some relief. It basically extends the period that the state uses to calcu- late the state of the unemployment fund from 10 years to 20 years. It also would provide for deferral of up to one-third of 2021 unemploy- ment insurance taxes for employers whose tax rates increased by 0.5 per- centage points or more from 2020 to 2021. There is much more to the bill than we have just summarized here. Sponsors include Rep. Daniel Bon- ham, R-The Dalles, who represents Madras, Sisters and other parts of Central Oregon. Many employers — small and large — are facing increasing taxes just when they don’t need it. Busi- nesses in Oregon had no way to pre- pare in advance for the pandemic. They need help recovering. It’s en- couraging to see a bipartisan group of legislators step in to help. But will the Legislature pass it? Editorials reflect the views of The Bulletin’s editorial board, Publisher Heidi Wright, Editor Gerry O’Brien and Editorial Page Editor Richard Coe. They are written by Richard Coe. The filibuster has fewer and fewer defenders BY PAUL WALDMAN The Washington Post T he filibuster’s days are num- bered. When it’s finally re- formed (and it will almost cer- tainly be reformed, not eliminated), the Senate will not become a paradise of wise legislating and democratic ac- countability. But it will be a much more responsive and effective place than it is now, and the momentum to get from here to there may be unstoppable. For some time, it was only liberal Democrats in the Senate who wanted to see it go, so that bills with majority support could actually pass. But now moderates are becoming convinced — by the power of the arguments they’re hearing, the reality of Repub- lican obstruction, and the tantalizing possibility that they might actually get to do the job they got elected for. But each has his or her own rea- sons. In The Washington Post on Wednesday, Sen. Angus King of Maine — an independent who cau- cuses with the Democrats — ex- plained why he has changed his mind. When King got to the Senate, he wrote, he was persuaded by the “what goes around, comes around” argu- ment. If Democrats eliminated the filibuster to pass their own priorities, goes this line, then Republicans would be free to do the same the next time they took power, and the result would be a lot of policymaking Democrats didn’t like. But now, King says, he is fed up: “But this argument is sustainable only if the extraordinary power of the 60-vote threshold is used sparingly on major issues or is used in a good-faith effort to leverage concessions rather than to simply obstruct. If, however, the minority hangs together and reg- ularly uses this power to block any and all initiatives of the majority (and their president), supporting the con- tinuation of the rule becomes harder and harder to justify, regardless of the long-term consequences.” This is significant, because King isn’t looking to get rid of the filibus- ter so Medicare-for-all or a universal basic income can pass. He’s one of the moderates. As it happens, I and many others disagree with the logic of the “what goes around, comes around” argu- ment that King still finds somewhat persuasive. The terrible scenario its advocates posit — that your party gets to enact the agenda it advocates, and if the other party is elected, then it gets to enact its agenda — is also known as democracy. It’s what an accountable system is supposed to look like. It also reflects a terrible philoso- phy of governing, one that says I don’t mind if I achieve none of the policy changes I want, so long as the other party doesn’t, either. It makes gridlock the goal of the system, which inevita- bly makes voters disillusioned. But if King still finds it somewhat persuasive, that’s OK. What he seems to envision is a system where the mi- nority still has the power to obstruct — but only if it uses that power with restraint. That was the situation for decades, when the filibuster required those who wielded it to hold the floor; it was used mostly to prevent Congress from passing civil rights laws. But today, the parties’ ideological sorting (there are almost no liberal Republicans or conservative Democrats left), and changes in the rules that allow the mi- nority to create a filibuster literally by sending an email, have created every incentive for that minority to filibus- ter just about everything the major- ity wants to do. So even senators like King have lost their patience. But this debate isn’t settled yet. Former filibuster defenders, includ- ing President Joe Biden and senators such as Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., are steadily inching their way toward re- form, saying they’d be open to changes in the rule if Republicans continue to use it promiscuously. Each of them might have their own last straw in mind, the bill they will not tolerate being killed by the minority. First, fil- ibuster reform will have to be under- taken to achieve passage of a bill that is widely popular with their constituents, even many of the Republicans. Then they can say that the substantive mat- ter at hand is so vital that they had no choice but to retreat on the filibuster. Second, they’ll have to be the ones dictating the terms of the reform, and it will have to stop well short of sim- ply eliminating the filibuster. Perhaps it will involve forcing the minority to talk, or adopting one of the other ideas to change it, but they’ll need to say be- cause of their efforts, the filibuster still exists to protect the minority but it will no longer grind the chamber to a halt. That’s the way this ends, and a new era where the party elected by the vot- ers can pass the agenda those voters agreed to can begin. We’re not quite there yet, but the momentum is get- ting stronger by the day. e e Paul Waldman is an opinion writer for the Plum Line blog. Letters policy Guest columns How to submit We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer’s signature, phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We re- ject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of The Bul- letin. Writers are limited to one letter or guest column every 30 days. Your submissions should be between 550 and 650 words; they must be signed; and they must include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject those submitted elsewhere. Locally submitted columns alternate with national colum- nists and commentaries. Writers are lim- ited to one letter or guest column every 30 days. Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s Worth or Guest Column and mail, fax or email it to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel’s Worth/Guest Column P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804 A federal judge’s dangerous assault on the free press BY J. MICHAEL LUTTIG Special to The Washington Post F ederal appeals court Judge Lau- rence H. Silberman’s danger- ous dissenting opinion in Tah v. Global Witness Publishing last week has already caused a firestorm — not because he urged the Supreme Court to overrule New York Times v. Sulli- van and its “actual malice” defamation standard, but because of the astonish- ing and disturbing reasons that he pro- posed for dispensing with that land- mark decision. Global Witness was — or should have been — an unexceptional case. The two judges in the majority found that two Liberian officials who sued Global Witness failed to meet the re- quirement that the human rights orga- nization acted with knowing or reck- less disregard for the truth in writing about them. Silberman used his dissent as an op- portunity for score-settling with the Supreme Court and the nation’s me- dia. He offered two reasons Times v. Sullivan should be overruled, both of which are shocking. Neither is correct, and neither offers a legitimate basis for dispensing with the 57-year-old prec- edent. The first is that, in Silberman’s view, the ruling bears “no relation to the text, history, or structure of the Con- stitution” and is “a policy-driven deci- sion masquerading as constitutional law.” According to him, Times v. Sulli- van is “a threat to American Democ- racy” and “must go.” Paraphrasing former Soviet Union leader Leonid Brezhnev as having said that “once a country has turned communist, it can never be allowed to go back,” he ac- cused the Supreme Court of having “committed itself” to a “constitutional Brezhnev doctrine” in its adherence to precedent. The court’s unanimous decision in Times v. Sullivan set constitutional limits on state defamation laws for the first time, striking the exceedingly difficult and admittedly imperfect balance between the right of public of- ficials not to be defamed by false accu- sations and the right of a free press to report the news. In its ruling, the court reinforced the bulwark of the First Amendment and American democ- racy, and the delicate balance it struck remains the appropriate one today. Constitutional rights do not wax and wane with the wind. The second, more explosive and suspect, reason the judge gave is that, in his opinion, the constitutional pol- icy of free speech that Times v. Sulli- van seeks to protect has been turned upside down by what he asserts as fact: that almost every media organization in the country is biased in its reporting against the Republican Party and in fa- vor of the Democratic Party. Note, not against public officials and high office- holders, celebrities, the politically or financially powerful, political or social conservatives, nor even Republicans, but against the Republican Party. In Silberman’s view, “two of the three most influential papers,” the New York Times and The Post, “are virtually Democratic Party broadsheets,” with the Wall Street Journal’s news pages leaning in that direction. Meanwhile, “nearly all television — network and cable — is a Democratic Party trum- pet. Even the government-supported National Public Radio follows along.” Silberman offered little support for this astonishing indictment of the me- dia. But having concluded that nearly the entire national media distorts the news against the Republican Party and that this “homogeneity in the media . . . risks repressing [the Republican Par- ty’s] ideas from the public conscious- ness,” he went on to argue that the me- dia has “abused” its rights to such an extent that it effectively has forfeited its First Amendment protections. The judge ended his dissent with an unfounded, but no less chilling, warning to the media, the Democratic Party and the Supreme Court: “It should be borne in mind that the first step taken by any potential authoritar- ian or dictatorial regime is to gain con- trol of communications, particularly the delivery of news. It is fair to con- clude, therefore, that one-party control of the press and media is a threat to a viable democracy. It may even give rise to countervailing extremism. … And when the media has proven its willing- ness — if not eagerness — to so dis- tort, it is a profound mistake to stand by unjustified legal rules that serve only to enhance the press’ power.” It is tempting to consign the judge’s opinion to the infamous dustbin, and that may be where it ends up. But there is an illuminating silver lining — even if unintended by Silberman. Now, Times v. Sullivan is all but cer- tain to remain the law of the land, the dissent having conclusively demon- strated that the precedent’s First Amendment rule is as essential to a free press as judicial immunity is to an independent judiciary and legislative immunity is to the legislature. And if the court ever does revisit the case, it assuredly will not be because that decision is an intolerable imposi- tion on the “Brezhnev doctrine,” an il- legitimate exercise of constitutional in- terpretation, or “a threat to American Democracy.” Let alone, for that matter, because the court concludes that the American media is uniformly biased against the Republican Party in favor of the Democratic Party. e e J. Michael Luttig served as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit from 1991 to 2006.