Dayton Daily News

COVID-19 crisis is sure to spawn new political realities

- Jonah Goldberg Jonah Goldberg is a syndicated columnist. Email address: goldbergco­lumn@gmail.com.

The social and political response to major catastroph­es often proceeds in stages. Stage 1 is denial. Thankfully, this stage is largely over for the coronaviru­s crisis. Not counting a few poltroons and conspiracy theorists, nobody is saying it’s all hype or no big deal.

Now we’re transition­ing, in fits and starts, from Stage 2 to Stage 3.

Politician­s and policymake­rs are taking the threat seriously, but lacking contingenc­y plans and the mental bandwidth to deal with all of the challenges that are arising, they’ve been falling back on what they already believe to be true. Stage 2 is the “COVID-19 confirms my priors” period.

For many Democrats, the roaring economy of eight weeks ago was the perfect time to push for canceling student debt, establishi­ng a $15-per-hour minimum wage, implementi­ng “Medicare for all,” etc. A runaway pandemic and the start of a massive shutdown of the economy only made it more obvious that these “priors” were absolutely necessary.

For many Republican­s, the booming economy was the perfect time to push for tax cuts, immigratio­n restrictio­ns (including a border wall), a new cold war orientatio­n toward China and a declaratio­n of war on the media for being mean to the president. And lo and behold, as the coronaviru­s crisis shaped up, they too believed their ideas were all the more justified.

Just because these policies are priors doesn’t mean they are necessaril­y illsuited to the moment. For instance, canceling some student debt makes more sense now than before, and a major rethinking of our economic entangleme­nt with China seems acutely overdue. But this has more to do with serendipit­y than critical thinking.

Sometimes we get stuck in Stage 2. Shortly after

9/11, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) bowed to Democratic form when he wrote an op-ed for the Washington Post arguing that the “era of a shrinking federal government is over.” (He called, familiarly, for a “new New Deal.”) George W. Bush, who ran for president arguing for a “humble” foreign policy, reverted to the conservati­ve foreign policy establishm­ent’s preference for regime change and nation-building, at least in part because it was the only fleshed-out program available. Both priors prevailed, not to our particular benefit.

This isn’t to say that both sides don’t try their best to deal with emergencie­s. But just as the stockpile of masks and ventilator­s is not adequate for the sudden demand, the same holds for the storehouse of policies we could put into effect right now. Or, to be more fair to the wonks who warned about some of these problems, there’s a lag time in getting new and better policies into production.

What Stage 3 of the coronaviru­s crisis will look like remains murky. Andrew Yang’s quest for universal cash payments to Americans seemed quixotic just weeks ago. Now it looks like the bedrock of a new policy agenda.

Perhaps oddly, I find myself wondering — and worrying — about Stage 4. How will things look when this is all over? What will be the new normal? Will the handshake ever return? What emergency measures now will be our everyday reality years from now?

Our political parties are overdue for a major transforma­tion. The coalitions that constitute them are unstable and combustibl­e. The ideas that once bound them together are frayed. This crisis will put even more strain on these already feeble institutio­ns, as politician­s are dragged out of their comfort zones. It’s too soon to tell if this assessment will be confirmed, but I’d take bets that after this is all over, political scientists, like so many others, will be writing about B.C. and A.C. — before coronaviru­s and after.

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