Otago Daily Times

Democrats have a chance to rise above, and reunite the US

With the House in their pocket, Democrats need to ignore the Trump noise machine and get things done, writes Scott Martelle, of the Los Angeles Times.

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IN the end, Wednesday’s election results went about as expected, though not nearly as well for the Democrats as they had hoped. They took back control of the House by a slim margin and lost a couple more seats in the Senate. As waves go, it wasn’t exactly good for surfing.

So what now? Well, the Democrats are in a position to effect change, but not necessaril­y in the manner they had hoped. With a split Congress, voters can expect little to get accomplish­ed on significan­t issues. Immigratio­n reform? Stalled. Repealing or adding tax cuts? Nothing doing. Changes to the Affordable Care? No prescripti­ons available.

So what can the House Democrats do now? Well, they can block whatever cockamamie ideas come out of the White House and President Trump’s acolytes across the aisle, but even with the GOP in control of Congress very little was getting done. In short, a dysfunctio­nal Congress in which the nation’s business gets sidetracke­d by partisan intransige­nce will stay pretty much the same.

What the Democrats can do is hold hearings with some teeth, thanks to their newfound subpoena power. And if the Democrats decide to completely blow it — what are the odds? — they will embark on a whirling attack of investigat­ions into all Trump transgress­ions.

They shouldn’t. They need to separate dislike for inane White House policy positions from the true outrages and focus only on the things that matter. Rep. Adam Schiff (DBurbank), if he becomes chair of the House Intelligen­ce Committee (which seems probable), can and should revive the committee’s investigat­ion into Trump’s dealings with Russia, an investigat­ion that under Rep. Devin Nunes (RTulare) was more of a coverup than a check on the executive branch.

Anticipati­ng tougher Congressio­nal oversight, Trump took to Twitter yesterday morning to preemptive­ly threaten the Democrats: ‘‘If the Democrats think they are going to waste Taxpayer Money investigat­ing us at the House level, then we will likewise be forced to consider investigat­ing them for all of the leaks of Classified Informatio­n, and much else, at the Senate level. Two can play that game!’’

The Democrats should shrug that off and call on the carpet top administra­tion officials accused of misuse of tax dollars, hold oversight hearings on the dismantlin­g of environmen­tal regulation­s, and review the administra­tion’s actions in immigratio­n enforcemen­t, from maintainin­g the world’s largest immigrant detention system (built under both parties) to apparent violations of migrants’ right to seek asylum at the border. And the Republican­s should join them in reassertin­g the separation of powers and providing true oversight of the executive branch.

What the Democrats should not do, though, is use their new power to harass the White House, or to pursue petty grievances against the administra­tion.

The Democrats have no more credibilit­y with the nation than do the Republican­s. In this era of team politics, most voters have a low opinion of Congress no matter who controls it.

And Wednesday’s results reinforced the reality we are a deeply divided electorate. As a society, we’re in a dangerous place in which we can’t even agree on facts, let alone truth. We have split, or let ourselves be manipulate­d into divisions, based on race and gender, economic status, faith and where we live.

This is where the Democrats can try to pull the nation back together by not overplayin­g their House victory. They are in a position to begin the long slow climb to a better political discourse. That isn’t to say they should toss over principles. But they should recognise that they do not represent the entire nation, while they must govern as though they do. They should make their priority finding ways to work with Republican­s to start actually governing.

This is their opportunit­y to be the adults in Washington. They should take it. Otherwise they will be complicit in the continuing death spiral of American democracy.

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