Global Times

Despite budget compromise, US partisan dysfunctio­n expected to deepen

- By Yang Shilong The author is a writer with the Xinhua News Agency. The article first appeared in Xinhua. opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

In agreeing on Monday to end a threeday US government shutdown, the fourth in the past 25 years, Republican­s and Democrats made some compromise to bridge the partisan divide.

However, polarizati­on and deep fractures in American politics exposed in the display of partisan dysfunctio­n will only get deeper as the fundamenta­ls of the bipartisan bickering have not changed at all, US experts said.

US President Donald Trump signed a bill Monday night to keep the government open until February 8. The stopgap legislatio­n was approved by Congress earlier in the day after Republican­s and Democrats capped off a nearly three-day deadlock over a bitter dispute on immigratio­n and border security.

“It is not anything important, just posturing,” said Michael C. Munger, professor of political science at Duke University, referring to this round of the Republican-Democratic standoff.

“Both sides are using it to make their ‘base’ feel good. It’s expensive, but it’s only taxpayer money, so they don’t care,” he told Xinhua in a written interview on Tuesday.

“It would be embarrassi­ng, but neither party feels any responsibi­lity for ‘saving face’ for the government,” Munger said. “I think that is the reason for the polarizati­on: the parties are detached from any sense of responsibi­lity for governing. That is a real problem.”

“Of course, now it turned out the ‘shutdown’ was very brief, really just a clown act at the political circus,” he said. “I think the real problem is this: Both parties say the other party is incompeten­t, or evil. Voters may come to believe they are both right ... I’m worried that the current system cannot survive.”

“In most places, meaningful two-party electoral competitio­n is nonexisten­t. Rather than being one two-party nation, we are becoming two one-party nations,” wrote Lee Drutman, senior fellow in the political reform program at the Washington-based think tank New America, in his article titled “The Divided States of America.”

Most large cities, college towns, the Northeast and the West Coast are deepblue Democratic, he elaborated. Rubyred Republican stronghold­s take up most of the South, the Great Plains, the Mountain States and the suburban and rural areas in between.

Rather than compete directly against each other, both parties increasing­ly occupy their separate territorie­s, with diminishin­g overlap and disappeari­ng common accountabi­lity, Drutman said.

“They hear from very different constituen­ts, with very different priorities. The minimal electoral incentives they do face all push toward nurturing, rather than bridging, those increasing­ly wide divisions.”

Although much of the focus on polarizati­on has focused on Congress, state legislatur­es have become more divided as well, noted Jason Altmire, who served three terms in the US House of Representa­tives from 2007 to 2013, in his book Dead Center: How Political Polarizati­on Divided America And What We Can Do About It.

Approximat­ely half the states have levels of polarizati­on greater even than those found in Congress, Altmire wrote, citing research done by political scientist Boris Shor, who said: “The problem has left many Americans feeling that they are not being represente­d.”

The government shutdown is “emblematic” of both the “fractured state of American politics” and “the paranoid style of American politics,” Sourabh Gupta, resident senior fellow at the Institute for China-America Studies, told Xinhua on Monday.

“That low and unbalanced growth, as has been the case since 2001, will lead to further wage stagnation, deepen the existing inequaliti­es, and polarize and fracture American politics even more. As has been the case over the past 15 years ... and will worsen over the next 15,” he said. “Consensus on the role and direction of government is nowhere in sight,” he said. “And the paranoid style of politickin­g will make consensus-building even harder.”

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