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Tags: bill | constitution | bill of rights

Bills Should Be Written in Plain English

By    |   Sunday, 29 November 2015 09:25 AM EST

With the 2016 presidential election looming and a new Congress about to be elected, now is time to take stock of the way we govern and the consequences thereof.
 
Today citizens are sick and tired of partisanship, procedures and process that legislators do not understand and the American people cannot make heads or tails of.
 
Our Founding Fathers wrote the documents creating the greatest nation the world has ever known using plain English. Although drafted by highly educated and talented people, they knew that in order to get the public to support their efforts the common as well as the cultured had to understand it.
 
There is not a doubt in my mind that the average American high school student today can fully understand and appreciate the words and the meaning of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the amendments thereto including the Bill of Rights.

The same cannot be said of the healthcare bill passed by the House. You need a Ph.D., a degree in economics, and a law degree to fully appreciate the convoluted and highly technical legislation that will affect every single American.
 
There is no way even the average legislator can fully understand a 1,900-plus page highly technical bill, even with the benefit of the extensive professional staff they are afforded.
 
Highly specialized staffers, government lawyers, lobbyists, industry executives and their lawyers write these bills. They are purposely written to obscure the true intent, meaning and effect of the bills they author.
 
If as a legislator, you cannot understand a bill, how can you vote on it?
 
If the American People cannot understand a bill, how can they support it?
 
For starters, I say that no single bill should exceed 50 pages.
 
All bills should be required to meet a “plain language” standard. This would force the drafters to make legislation understandable and succinct.
 
Many states have enacted “plain language” statutes that require consumer contracts to be, “written in a clear and coherent manner using words with common and everyday meanings.” New York General Obligations Law Section: 5-702.
 
It is ironic that the federal government enacted the “Truth in Lending Act” which requires certain disclosures be made to consumers yet there is no requirement for those disclosures to be written in “plain language”
 
Our Constitution starts out with, “We the People” not “We the elite” or “We the Legislators.” The people need to understand what their government is doing in their behalf.
 
The only way to ensure a more informed and engaged public is to provide them with information they can understand.
 
In recent years the Supreme Court has become a de facto legislature stepping in the shoes of Congress to save legislation that should have been struck down. Obamacare is the perfect example of this.
 
We must make plain English and capped length bills a campaign issue at all levels next year and force candidates to either support this or not. Lets get it in writing!

Bradley A. Blakeman served as deputy assistant to President George W. Bush from 2001-04. He is currently a professor of politics and public policy at Georgetown University and a frequent contributor to Fox News Opinion. Read more reports from Bradley Blakeman — Click Here Now.

 

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BradleyBlakeman
All bills should be required to meet a “plain language” standard. This would force the drafters to make legislation understandable and succinct.
bill, constitution, bill of rights
537
2015-25-29
Sunday, 29 November 2015 09:25 AM
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