How Coons hopes to cure congressional paralysis
When 18 Republican attorneys general back President Donald Trump’s latest ludicrous Supreme Court try to overturn the election, it’s hard to foresee any GOP cooperation with a Biden presidency.
Yet President-elect Joe Biden has made bipartisan outreach his motto. And Biden knows that little congressional work will get done with a slim Democratic margin in the House and a closely divided Senate unless there is some crossparty cooperation.
So a key to Biden’s legislative agenda will be Sen. Chris Coons, DDel., a close ally for decades, who has spent the last decade cultivating relationships with Senate Republicans, out of a sincere belief that this is the only way government can function. The news website Politico labeled Coons “Biden’s ambassador to the GOP.”
“It’s going to be very difficult,” Coons told me by phone, referring to the odds for cross-party action.
But the Delaware Democrat, (who holds Biden’s old seat) is unflagging. He is also smart, thoughtful and straightforward, with simultaneous Yale degrees in law and in ethics from Yale Divinity School. (Ethics and law: How blissfully old-fashioned to think of those two words in the same sentence.)
“A number of GOP senators I have talked with, including Pennsylvania’s Sen. (Pat) Toomey, talk about how frustrated we are,” Coons continued. “The work of the legislature has ground to a halt. This is a bipartisan concern. A group of us are pressing our leaders.”
There is more contact between senators from both parties than may be apparent in Trump Times. Coons has tried to have dinner with incoming new GOP senators. He asks his staff to look for areas of common interest with GOP legislators for possible legislation. He is warmly regarded by many Republican colleagues, some of whom called and asked him to congratulate Biden after the election because they couldn’t do it publicly.
The senator talked of working with Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on the First Step Act, a bipartisan effort to reform the criminal justice system, and on the Great American Outdoors Act, to help maintain our public lands. He can imagine such cross-party cooperation on aspects of climate change and global food security. And there is room for cooperation on international recovery from the pandemic.
“Senator Coons is a friend and a good colleague,” Sen. Toomey told me via email, recalling how he worked with Coons on a bill to improve the firearm background check system. “He understands that progress can generally only be achieved through bipartisan cooperation in the Senate,” Toomey added. “We also share a goal of restoring normal legislative activity on the Senate floor, which could help in lessening the current partisan divide.”
Moreover, Coons’ foreign policy expertise (he was seriously considered by Biden for secretary of state), and work as a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, has put him in close touch with many GOP counterparts. He has traveled the world with South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham. He talks regularly with Utah Sen. Mitt Romney in the climate caucus. North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis is his co-chair in the human rights caucus.
Of course, one has to ask whether these friendships can translate into real progress on domestic or foreign issues, especially if Trump is still sniping from the sidelines after he leaves office. Even now, as a bipartisan senatorial group, Coons included, has been working hard on a compromise stimulus package, McConnell has blocked them.
And although Biden has a longtime close relationship with McConnell, relying on the future cooperation of the majority leader is a dubious bet.
However, if I were a betting woman, I wouldn’t shy from putting my money on Coons’ bipartisan strategy — and Biden’s. One main reason Biden won is that so many voters were fed up with political divisions and gravitated towards his message of healing. His popularity will grow if his excellent coronavirus team can mange the pandemic and vaccine distribution in ways Trump never bothered to plan.
Senators from the heartland ignore this reality at their peril. The issues of most concern to Americans — control of the virus, economic recovery and jobs — will fester without bipartisan efforts. So too, the country can’t address its major foreign policy challenges, from China policy to trade to climate change, without cross the aisle cooperation. (And cooperation between wings of the Democratic Party.)
No matter who wins the two senatorial seats in the Georgia runoff election, the Congress will remain too divided to operate under control of one party. The GOP senators who call Coons privately know that. Unless he, and others like him, can lift the Trumpian stigma attached to bipartisanship, we will all lose big.