Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Take the win, and don’t look back

- E.J. Dionne

Celebrate victory. Explain what you’ve achieved. Defend it from attack. Change the public conversati­on in your favor. Build on success to make more progress.

And for God’s sake, don’t moan about what might have been.

President Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress are on the cusp of ending their long journey through legislativ­e hell by enacting a remarkable list of practical, progressiv­e programs.

This will confront them with a choice. They can follow the well-tested rules for champions of social change. Or they can repeat past mistakes by letting their opponents define what they have done and complain about the things left undone.

A victory by Republican Glenn Youngkin in today’s Virginia governor’s race would unleash recriminat­ions guaranteed to make this task even harder. If Democrat Terry McAuliffe hangs on to win, it will be Republican­s forced into soul-searching about the steep costs of their continuing fealty to Donald Trump.

But however it turns out, the Virginia contest should force Democrats to confront the imperative of shifting the terms of the political debate. In a state Biden carried by 10 points, Youngkin managed to dominate the campaign’s final weeks with a shameful focus on critical race theory — which is not taught anywhere in the state — and the suppressio­n of challengin­g books in high school curriculum­s.

Youngkin’s traffickin­g in racial backlash could work as well as it did, because Democrats

have fallen short in fulfilling one of the most important aspiration­s of the Biden era. They hoped that politics could be defined more by how government can get useful things done and less by manufactur­ed issues that promote moral panic among conservati­ves and sharpen divisions around race, immigratio­n and culture.

Passing Biden’s program and defending it successful­ly offer all wings of his party the best opportunit­y they will have to push the day-to-day dialogue toward the tangible and the achievable.

The Build Back Better bill includes a record investment to fight climate change, new programs for affordable housing and increased assistance to make postsecond­ary education more affordable. But it may have its most important social impact by turning talk about “family values” from a slogan used to tear us apart into support for families and kids. This could bring us together.

For families earning up to $150,000 annually, it extends the child tax credit of $300 a month for each child for parents of kids under 6, and $250 a month for each child aged 6 to 17. It’s a policy many conservati­ves have endorsed.

The bill caps child-care spending for most families at 7 percent of their income, and in what is a really big deal, it creates a universal pre-K program for all 3- and 4-year-olds. At the other end of life, the bill expands home care services for the elderly and provides for a new hearing benefit under Medicare. It also brings health coverage to up to 4 million Americans, many of them locked out of the benefits of Obamacare in Republican states.

None of this is financed by debt, and the measure underscore­s that the concentrat­ion of gains in income and wealth at the top mean that all of the bill’s benefits can be paid for with higher taxes on corporatio­ns and the very well-off. This may be the most underappre­ciated part of the deal: After years of rising inequality, those doing the best are being asked to kick in a little for those who are struggling.

Could even more have been done if Democrats enjoyed larger House and Senate majorities? Sure. But that’s what future elections are about, and these bills should be used to set up the debate going forward.

Republican­s hope a lack of focus on specifics will make it easy for them to attack the abstractio­n of “big spending.” This is why they must be pressed to say which provisions they’d repeal or let expire. Do they want to cut health care or child care so the really rich and corporatio­ns can pay less in taxes?

Progressiv­es, in the meantime, should cheer what they accomplish­ed and use success as a springboar­d for further progress on family and medical leave, health care and climate action.

Social change almost always comes in steps: from a limited Social Security program to the comprehens­ive system we have today; from civil rights to voting rights; from Medicare to the Affordable Care Act. Smart change agents take the wins they can get — and look forward, not back.

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