There is a new idea floating around Washington. Well, it's not really a new idea. It's been around a while but thrown out the window by the current administration. Anyway, the Politico is reporting that, when Barack Obama and Joe Biden take their oaths on January 20, the Office of the Vice President will be scaled back to once again fit within the United States Constitution.
Dialing back his predecessor’s expansive view of the office, Vice President-elect Joe Biden plans on "restoring the Office of the Vice President to its historical role" as adviser to the president and tie-breaker in the Senate, an aide to Biden said Saturday.
The declaration results from an attention-getting article coming from the Las Vegas Sun, which is reporting Sunday in a story by Washington Bureau reporter Lisa Mascaro that the new Congress "will reassert its constitutional independence from the White House by barring the vice president from joining in internal Senate deliberations, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said in an interview with the Sun."
"The move is intended to restore checks and balances to a system that tilted heavily toward the White House in the Bush presidency," Mascaro writes. "By giving Vice President Dick Cheney regular access to Senate Republican caucuses, at times with White House advisers in tow, party unity became more important to many Republicans than upholding their responsibilities to provide legislative oversight of the executive, experts say."
Well, there is nothing in the Constitution about giving advice, but it is still a considerable change from the degree of powers held by Dick Cheney. And given Bidens long a wide experience in Washington, it's still likely he will be given a portfolio of issues to work on. To me, that's already change for the better.