Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The corrupt GOP

- Paul Krugman Paul Krugman, who won the 2008 Nobel Prize in economics, writes for the New York Times.

The inaugurati­on of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris was an astonishin­gly emotional moment. I know I wasn’t alone in suddenly and unexpected­ly finding myself tearing up. It felt as if we were living in a dream—a dream about the nation we should be, a land of decency, honesty, justice and unity in diversity. (E pluribus unum, to coin a phrase.)

But now the work begins, and it won’t be easy. Biden spoke movingly about unity, but let’s face it: He won’t sway many people in the other party.

Some, perhaps most, of the opposition he’ll face will come from people who are deeply corrupt. And even among Republican­s acting in good faith he’ll have to contend with deep-seated cluelessne­ss, the result of the intellectu­al bubble the right has lived in for many years.

Let’s start with the face of corruption: Ted Cruz. There are other prominent Republican­s just as bad or worse—hello, Josh Hawley. But Cruz epitomizes the bad faith Biden will have to contend with.

Cruz is, or used to be, smart—ask him and he’ll tell you (although in my experience people secure in their intellectu­al bona fides don’t boast about their academic credential­s).

But he has spent many years pursuing power by trying to appeal to the worst instincts of the Republican base. Most notably, he has been among the leading voices pushing the false narrative of a stolen election and bears significan­t responsibi­lity for the sacking of the Capitol.

He and his allies failed to overturn the democratic process. But he didn’t wait, even briefly, before demagoguin­g the policies of the new president. Just hours after the inaugurati­on he sneered that Biden, by rejoining the Paris climate agreement, indicated that “he’s more interested in the views of the citizens of Paris than in the jobs of the citizens of Pittsburgh.”

The stupidity—it burns. It’s called the Paris agreement because that’s where it was signed, not because it represents Parisian interests. As Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez asked, “Do you also believe the Geneva Convention was about the views of the citizens of Geneva?”

But again, Cruz isn’t stupid, he just imagines that voters are. What he’s really doing is offering us an early taste of the unprincipl­ed opposition Biden can expect from the anti-democracy wing of the GOP, which appears to be most of the party.

Still, there are some Republican­s with principles. Unfortunat­ely they’ll be a problem, too.

Mitt Romney deserves a lot of credit for standing up to the authoritar­ians who dominate his party. He was the only Republican senator who voted to convict Donald Trump after the late-2019 impeachmen­t; he congratula­ted Biden and Harris almost as soon as the election was called, in stark contrast to Mitch McConnell, who waited more than a month.

But that doesn’t mean he’ll be helpful. After the inaugurati­on, Romney expressed opposition to a new economic relief package, declaring: “We just passed a $900 billion-plus package. Let’s give that some time to be able to influence the economy.”

Romney has earned the presumptio­n that, unlike other Republican­s opposing relief, he’s honestly trying to do the right thing. But that’s an utterly clueless remark, indicating that he doesn’t understand what Biden’s proposed package is all about.

While coronaviru­s relief legislatio­n is often called “stimulus,” that’s not what Biden is trying to do. The economy in 2021 isn’t like the economy in 2009, depressed because there isn’t enough demand; we haven’t fully recovered because we’re still on partial lockdown, with some activities curtailed by the risk of infection.

The goal of policy in this situation isn’t to pump up spending, getting people to eat out and travel. It is, instead, to help people, businesses and local government­s get through the difficult period until widespread vaccinatio­n lets us go back to business as usual.

And we know, as certainly as we know anything in economics, that the economy will be depressed at least into the summer and probably beyond. The last package didn’t provide remotely enough aid to get us through those months. Asking whether that package boosted the economy therefore completely misses the point; it’s obvious that America needs another round of disaster relief.

So how is it that Romney, who definitely isn’t stupid, doesn’t understand the most basic aspects of pandemic economics? My guess is that in the years since he was governor of Massachuse­tts he has shut himself into the conservati­ve intellectu­al bubble and no longer listens to sensible economic analysis, or knows what it sounds like.

What hope is there, then, for bipartisan­ship? Much of Biden’s opposition, as poet Amanda Gorman declaimed, “would shatter our nation, rather than share it.” And even patriots on the right are befuddled by ideology.

So the new administra­tion will have to be aggressive, using whatever legislativ­e strategies it must to get big things done. By all means, let Biden try to unify the nation; but first he has to save it.

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