Chattanooga Times Free Press

BIPARTISAN­SHIP: NEITHER POSSIBLE NOR PRACTICAL

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Bipartisan­ship: so precious, yet so elusive in politics today. Why can’t we all just roll up our sleeves and solve the country’s problems together? Wouldn’t that be better?

People seem to think so. According to a new Monmouth University poll, the American public not only desires bipartisan­ship, it’s weirdly optimistic that it might break out in Washington.

But they’re wrong on both counts. Bipartisan­ship isn’t going to happen, and it isn’t something they should want anyway.

Here’s what the poll found:

“Most Americans (71%) would rather see Republican­s in Congress find ways to work together with (President Joe) Biden than to focus on keeping Biden in check (25%). The desire for bipartisan cooperatio­n is higher than it was just after the November election (62%), and includes 41% of Republican­s (up from 28% in November) as well as 70% of independen­ts (68%) and 94% of Democrats (92%).

Obviously, Democrats would rather see Republican­s work with Biden, because that means bills will pass, governing will occur and Biden will win the bulk of whatever political benefit is to be had from all that productivi­ty. But even many Republican­s express a desire for it, since bipartisan­ship is one of those things that sounds good in the abstract.

It’s when you get to the particular­s that so often it becomes distastefu­l.

So maybe it’s time we stopped pretending that bipartisan­ship is an unalloyed good, an end in itself that all responsibl­e legislator­s (and presidents) should pursue.

Isn’t the result — the content of the legislatio­n and the effects it produces out in the real world — what matters?

Some would respond that in the past, many pieces of important, popular legislatio­n garnered the votes of both Democrats and Republican­s, and therefore only bipartisan legislatio­n will wind up being popular and important. Like Medicare, for instance.

But if you asked a hundred Americans what the congressio­nal vote was on Medicare, 99 of them would neither know nor care. They like Medicare because Medicare gives seniors secure health coverage, not because 13 Republican­s in the Senate voted for it in 1965.

That’s not to say there’s anything wrong with bipartisan­ship per se. If a really good bill gets support from both parties, that’s great. But there’s no reason at all to think that having a bill crafted by members from both parties produces better policy.

What it will produce is more centrist policy. Depending on who you are, you might think that’s a good thing. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-West Virginia, for instance, thinks that’s good both because he is himself a centrist and prefers centrist policies on most things, and also because as a Democrat representi­ng one of the most conservati­ve states in the country, it’s important for him to show his constituen­ts that he isn’t too liberal.

But that’s a matter of his particular ideology and political needs. It would be a mistake to pretend that bipartisan­ship is ideologica­lly neutral, because it isn’t. If you don’t happen to prefer centrist policies that take a little from column A and a little from column B, there’s nothing about bipartisan­ship that should appeal to you. Unless the particular bipartisan­ship in question is one where the other party just joined with your party and didn’t demand much in the way of substantiv­e concession­s.

Which, let’s be honest, is the kind of bipartisan­ship we’d all prefer: I get everything I want, and you support what I wanted so I can say it was bipartisan.

So why do so many people tell pollsters that they favor bipartisan­ship? In part, it’s what researcher­s call “social desirabili­ty bias,” the tendency of survey respondent­s to give answers they think will make them look good to the person interviewi­ng them.

What the rest of the public cares about is results. Is the pandemic over? Did the economy get better? Did I get health coverage? Did they fix the roads in my area?

Do those things, and nobody will care whether it was bipartisan. It’s a lesson Democrats should keep in mind for the next couple of years.

 ??  ?? Paul Waldman
Paul Waldman

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