If you thought you sent representatives and senators to
Washington, D.C., to exercise the constitutionally mandated power
of the purse -- you're wrong.
Silly you. You wasted all that time in civics class learning a
whole bunch of outdated claptrap about separation of powers and
the lawmaking process for nothing.
The spending power belongs to federal judges now, regardless of
what that quaint little document called the U.S. Constitution
says.
That's what ACORN's favorite federal judge, Nina Gershon of
the Eastern District of New York ruled Wednesday.
In December Gershon, a Bill Clinton appointee, helped ACORN out
by offering the Obama administration political cover by issuing
a
temporary injunction prohibiting Congress from cutting off
funding for ACORN. She found that depriving ACORN of
taxpayer dollars was an unconstitutional "bill of attainder" that
singled out ACORN for punishment without trial.
Only in the through-the-looking-glass world of a leftist activist
judge could the organized crime syndicate ACORN be deemed a
victim because Congress decided to stop funding it. Only in such
a world could a cutoff of such funding be deemed a penalty.
To give credit where it's due, the Obama administration did the
right thing and appealed the December ruling.
Now Nutty Nina's made the ruling permanent and it's not yet
clear if the administration will appeal this latest ruling.
(Here
is the permanent injunction and the
opinion and order she issued yesterday.)
Gershon showed a similar contempt for the legislative
branch previously. In 1999 she ruled then-New York
mayor
Rudy Giuliani had no right to cut off city funding of the
Brooklyn Museum of Art
when it displayed dead animals and a painting of the Virgin
Mary decorated with elephant dung. Gershon's not exactly
courageous, by the way. She managed
to get out of taking accused Al Qaeda
terrorist Najibullah Zazi's case when a courthouse computer
randomly assigned it to her.
If Gershon's absurd ruling remains undisturbed it will mean
every parasitic leftist group in the country will have due
process rights in the appropriations process. At worst, Congress
will not be able to cut off any group for any reason. At
best, Congress will have to jump through hoops in order to
de-fund any group. The rights of tax eaters will become paramount
to the rights of taxpayers.
The ruling should be music to the ears of Rep. Jerrold Nadler
(D-N.Y.), a huge fan of ACORN who has given thousands of dollars
over the years to the ACORN network. The thoroughly corrupt
Nadler urged ACORN's lawyer to sue the government, arguing that a
ban on funding constituted a "bill of attainder." Within weeks,
ACORN took his advice.
The ruling also appears to mean that ACORN and other
leftist activist groups are eligible for up to $3.99
billion in federal funding included in President Obama's $3.83
trillion fiscal 2011 budget blueprint.
The $3.99 billion comes from a congressional slush fund known as
the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program, which is
part of the Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD)
$48.5 billion fiscal 2011 budget. CDBG grants, which are awarded
to states and localities, flow indirectly to ACORN and similar
groups that compete at the state and local level for grants.
Thanks, Nutty Nina. You've outdone yourself this time.