Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Work together and stop romanticiz­ing divided government

- Catherine Rampell Columnist

With Joe Biden now president-elect, and partisan control of the Senate hanging in the balance, pundits are already romanticiz­ing “divided government” — a Democratic president alongside a Republican-controlled legislativ­e chamber.

It sounds “inherently moderate,”wax some commentato­rs; it’s “a good moment because in order to get something done, people are going to have to cooperate and compromise,”claim others. In this telling, “divided government” is, paradoxica­lly, just what the country needs to heal our divisions. It’s a nice thought. Unfortunat­ely, a single man stands in the way of this fantasy. And it’s not the guy in the White

House. It’s the current Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. — to whom Senate custom gives nearly unilateral power to block most initiative­s from ever getting a vote, compromise­s or efforts toward common ground be damned. Over and over, McConnell has already exercised this power.

It’s true that today, as when President Trump was elected four years ago, Democrats and Republican­s already agree on oodles of issues. Or at least the exhausted middle majority of Americans, and the middle chunk legislator­s, do.You get the idea. There are indeed obvious solutions to be had, and clinched by the middle 50 votes within the Senate, if only lawmakers had the courage to cooperate.

For instance, lawmakers could finally pass a permanent legislativ­e fix for the Obama-era Deferred Action for Early Childhood

Arrivals program, which provides partial protection­s to unauthoriz­ed immigrants brought here as children. Large majorities of voters in both parties support these immigrants, known as “dreamers,” and a bipartisan agreement giving them a path to citizenshi­p almost materializ­ed two years ago.

Resolving other immigratio­n issues remains thorny. But making life better for dreamers is low-hanging, bipartisan fruit.

Or there are pocketbook issues important to American families.

In an interview Sunday, Republican Sen. Mitt Romney (Utah) spoke about his desire to work with the presidente­lect and Democrats on an expansion of the child tax credit. Other Republican­s and conservati­ves have supported variants of the idea, partly because it can help “traditiona­l” families, with one nonworking parent (usually mom); and nearly every sitting

Democratic senator co-sponsors related legislatio­n.

Voters seem to like the idea of divided government on the premise that it incentiviz­es such shared victories. This is part of the pitch Republican­s are making about the two U.S. Senate seats in Georgia facing runoff elections, which will decide which party ultimately controls the upper chamber next year.

But if past is prologue, such promised cooperatio­n is likely to be a con. At least if McConnell continues running the show, as he almost certainly would if those Georgia seats remain Republican.

Recall that back in the day, Barack Obama also ran on a platform of healing our divides and bringing political harmony to a polarized Washington. Republican­s, led by McConnell, refuted this promise simply by obstructin­g nearly every Obama initiative on offer, regardless of public support. This forced

Obama to implement his agenda through executive action wherever possible, which led to GOP accusation­s of executive-branch “tyranny.” (Those same Republican­s, somehow, stayed mum when Trump exercised even more executive power, including when his party controlled both houses of Congress.)

Any opportunit­ies for finding common ground — and for Biden to prove his political healing powers — will be blocked if McConnell again prevents such legislatio­n from even getting a vote. Which he is likely to do, at least if he still believes his top priority is to make a Democratic occupant of the White House a “one-term president.”

Maybe McConnell will ultimately be less obstructiv­e. We’re told that he and Biden are “old friends,” after all. But Charlie Brown and the football-wielding Lucy are sometimes said to be pals, too.

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