Essay: Biden’s Pragmatism, Republican Extremism
Essay: Biden’s Pragmatism, Republican Extremism
As we all try to come to understand what happened to the GOP, how an American political party could have become so lost and extreme, we come back to this basic idea – modern conservatism never really matured into a full-fledged political philosophy capable of governing a post-Cold War America. It was an ideology that had its moment in the 1980s – a long time ago now – and has done more harm than good since.
At its core the American right has seen itself as a corrective to a Democratic Party which had lost its way in the late 1960s and 1970s, and remains to this day most comfortable in seeing itself as a response to perceived excesses of the center-left (radical left, Marxists, BLM antifa now). The problem for the right has been that a post-Clinton reformed Democratic Party was not excessive or leftist, but modern, pragmatic, successful; and thus the blocking of the Democratic agenda over time has became something reactionary and harmful to the national interest, not something virtuous.
Consider the Dem agenda from Obama on. A big stimulus, emphasizing clean infrastructure – cut in half, the clean part stripped out. Slowed our transition to a low carbon economy, made the recovery slower than it needed to be. Immigration reform – blocked. The ACA – relentlessly opposed, undermined despite it being an extraordinary success. Min wage – blocked, leaving us with a ridiculous national minimum wage now. Iran nuclear deal – terminated, Iran restarts its nuclear program. Efforts to make it easier to vote – rolled back, even authoritarian assaults on the Postal Service, the Census, the 2020 election, the Congress itself. Climate – unyielding opposition, continued fealty to global oil and gas interests, including Russia and Saudi Arabia.
Now, Biden. His plan to defeat COVID, restart the US economy – opposed. His plan to correct for years of chronic underinvestment in our infrastructure, hasten transition to clean energy economy – opposed, absurd arguments about what constitute infrastructure pursued. Pragmatic steps to make it easier for all workers to succeed like universal child care - communism. Immigration – hysteria and arm waving, no solutions (again, again).
There are a lot of ways we can look at what Biden is doing now but to us here at NDN we think there is a deep pragmatism to it all. COVID needed to be defeated – he is doing that. The economy needed to be re-started – we are doing that. We need to transition to a clean energy future, modernize our infrastructure which we know from data has been underinvested in – we are doing that. Globalization had made it harder for workers to compete – he has a plan for that. Our immigration system is antiquated, and needs an update – he has a plan for that too. Too many Americans, including those in red states and rural areas don’t have access to high speed Internet - well, we can fix that. The Bush and Trump tax cuts were too big, and cut far too much from wealthy people and corporations – that can be fixed; and as learned from Clinton and Obama tax increases as part of a broader economic strategy can bring sustained growth to America. Our democracy was attacked – we can protect it, strengthen it – and we must.
The point is that none of what Joe Biden is proposing is radical, extreme, out of the mainstream, some lefty “wish list” not based on data and analysis. Everything he is proposing has extensive analysis to back it up, is based on years of policy debate and discussion. Consider that NDN, not a leftist organization, came out in 2005 for rolling back the Bush tax cuts and making major investments in child care/pre-k/community colleges/working training, raising the minimum wage, immigration reform, universal health care and universal broadband. In 2007 we endorsed a series of ideas to once again make infrastructure investment central to our politics. In 2008 NDN came out for the carbon tax, and a massive “clean infrastructure” plan as part our recommendations to use the 2009 stimulus to create long term, sustained growth. In 2012 we argued for a big agenda to strengthen our democracy, as even then the anti-majoritarian impulses of the GOP had begun to emerge. All of these ideas are at the very center of what Biden is proposing now. None of them are new, or out of the mainstream of thinking in the US.
Looking back at all this it’s hard not to see the 2010s as a lost decade for America, one where so much progress on the things that matter most were blocked by the rise of the Tea Party and the GOP takeover of the House in 2011. Yes Obama was able to get the ACA done before 2011, but all these other vital things, things needed by the US, not Democrats, didn’t get done. Progress stalled, and America fell behind (most of the House Members who served in senior positions in the Trump White House came from the Tea Party faction).
The reason even a Senate institutionalist like Biden is considering pushing so much through reconciliation and not through regular order is because for a decade now the GOP has been more focused on fighting Democrats than fighting the problems we face; and if anything is more radical and extreme today than it has ever been. It’s as if the GOP’s only agenda now is to lie about the intentions of Biden and the Democrats, and try to paint us as extremists – it is that old impulse to act as a corrective to leftist largesse. Their fight is with us, not the challenges facing America. There is no GOP policy agenda. No COVID strategy, no economic strategy, no health care strategy, no immigration strategy, no climate strategy – but there is a big agenda to overthrown the election we won, and to make sure we never win elections again. We are even at the point where several states have introduced bills allowing the running over of “leftist” protestors with cars (a new favorite tactic of the right).
If Biden is forced to choose between making progress on long unaddressed problems or appeasing a radicalized political movement which is no longer operating in the same information reality as the rest of the world what course should he take? Of course he has to choose what’s best for America – that is his solemn obligation.
Joe Biden is a pragmatist. America has problems. He wants to fix them. He has offered reasonable proposals for how to do so. The debate now should be about the how, not the whether; and if Republicans cannot join the debate then he should act alone – it is the pragmatic, and necessary, thing to do. One could even call it patriotic.
PS - John Harwood has a new analysis up on CNN which does a good job at exploring how reasonable Biden's economic plans are; those who believe they are radical are letting us know who they are.