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Issue of ‘Build Back Better’ is no one wants to pay for it

- Jonah Goldberg Jonah Goldberg is editor-inchief of The Dispatch.

Here is a very basic fact: People tend to like getting stuff for free. Ask most people, “Do you want a fancy new Mercedes?” and they’ll likely respond, “Yes.” But ask them to pay full price for it and demand drops dramatical­ly.

Hold that thought.

Sen. Bernie Sanders is very upset the Democrats’ “Build Back Better” package is stalled. “Poll after poll shows overwhelmi­ng support for the $3.5 trillion Build Back Better legislatio­n,” Sanders said in a statement, “and the need to lower prescripti­on drug costs, expand Medicare to cover dental, hearing and vision ...” and so on.

But as National Review’s Charles Cooke wrote, Sanders’ statement refutes itself. In the next paragraph, the Vermont senator says, “polling also shows that despite President Biden having introduced this proposal five months ago, a majority of Americans have very little knowledge as to what is in this bill.” Sanders adds, “It is hard to ask people to have faith in their government when they have little understand­ing of what their government is trying to do.”

As Cooke rightly notes, it’s odd to simultaneo­usly claim a bill is overwhelmi­ngly popular and that a majority of Americans have no idea what’s in it. But Sanders thinks that’s proof the mainstream media is failing to educate the public. Individual elements of the bill poll well, hence the claim it’s popular . ...

I’m all for dispelling ignorance, but Sanders is perpetuati­ng a myth that harms democracy, too — specifical­ly, that massive social welfare spending is wildly popular with American voters.

In 2016, Vox polled Bernie Sanders’ proposals for nationaliz­ed healthcare and free college tuition. They didn’t poll the general public; they polled Bernie Sanders’ own supporters. Not surprising­ly, respondent­s favored single-payer healthcare. But when asked if they’d be willing to personally pay more for it, support dropped. Two-thirds said the most they’d be willing to pay in additional taxes for “free” healthcare was $1,000 per year, about $83 per month. This number includes the 8% of Sanders supporters who said they wouldn’t be willing to pay anything for universal healthcare . ...

A Washington Post poll in 2019 found that 68% of Americans supported taxing “wealthy families” to pay for fighting climate change. But when asked if they would agree to pay an extra $2 a month on their electric bills, support fell to less than 47%. That same year, an AP-NORC poll asked people if they’d be willing to spend $10 more a month in their energy bills to fight climate change. Some 68% of respondent­s said nope.

This is where the truly dangerous ignorance begins. For years now, voters have been told that the rich as well as greedy corporatio­ns are an untapped renewable resource that can pay for everything and anything. That’s false. You could confiscate all of the wealth of the top 1% and it wouldn’t come close to covering the bill for, say, the Green New Deal or Medicare for All. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez may turn heads by scrawling “tax the rich” on her ball gowns, but the truth is we already do — at a remarkably progressiv­e rate.

... But even if the rich could pay for it all, democracy isn’t enriched when voters think one very small class of people is greedily standing in the way of economic salvation.

When populist politician­s promise it would be easy to deliver that salvation but then fail to do it, voters feel betrayed and the politician­s shift blame ...

That sense of betrayal doesn’t foster healthy politics. It leads to “extreme” demagogues promising to deliver what they claim the corrupt establishm­ent could not.

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