Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Culture wars a convenient distractio­n

- Jonah Goldberg Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

You know what you get for spending trillions of dollars you don’t have? More fights over Dr. Seuss, cancel culture and identity politics.

By any measure, the federal government has been on a spending spree for decades. Without getting bogged down in the green eyeshade stuff, suffice it to say Uncle Sam has been spending more than he takes in from tax revenues since the 1990s. We’ve made up those shortfalls by borrowing money. The national debt ($28 trillion) is now considerab­ly larger than the GDP (about $21 trillion).

Reasonable people can differ on how much value we got for all that credit card debt. But that’s not relevant here.

What’s relevant is that when both parties reach a de facto bipartisan consensus that deficit spending is fine — at least when their party is doing the spending — it makes it difficult to argue about overspendi­ng or overborrow­ing in a credible way.

For instance, during what was supposed to be the debate period for President Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package, which spent plenty on non-pandemic Democratic priorities, the Republican National Committee was silent on it. The RNC did release two statements about it — but only after the bill passed. Yet plenty of Republican­s found time to decry the “cancellati­on” of Dr. Seuss.

For the record, Seuss wasn’t actually canceled. His estate announced that it wouldn’t continue to publish a handful of his least popular and allegedly racially insensitiv­e works. In what he thought was an act of defiance to “cancel culture,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy staged a reading of “Green Eggs and Ham” — a book that wasn’t actually canceled. That showed those profligate Democrats!

We tend to define bipartisan­ship as both parties openly agreeing with each other in a gauzy spirit of civic cooperatio­n. But there’s another kind of bipartisan­ship — when each party cynically and tacitly agrees to take turns doing things they denounce when the other party does them. That’s what the parties do on spending and debt (and Supreme Court nomination­s, gerrymande­ring and a host of other issues). The cumulative effect is a political culture that says you can do whatever you can get away with. Why should voters care about deficits when most politician­s only claim to care about them when it’s the other party increasing them?

But here’s the catch. Political parties need to differenti­ate themselves from their competitor­s. Neither Republican­s nor Democrats can run on the vow “There’s not a dime’s worth of difference between us and the other party.” So what does that leave? Culture-war stuff.

This is not to say that cultural issues aren’t legitimate or important points of disagreeme­nt in a democracy. They often are. But if that’s all you’ve got to work with, you’re going to make as big a deal of that stuff as you can.

As Shadi Hamid of the Brookings Institutio­n recently noted on my podcast,

The Remnant, this is precisely what’s happened in Western Europe. There’s a broad consensus among European political parties on spending and a generous welfare state. This doesn’t mean economic issues aren’t important to European voters. But the partisan fights are often over which state-dependent interest — government workers, unions, farmers, big business — should get more subsidies or protection­s. Meanwhile, cultural issues like European identity vs. national identity and, especially, immigratio­n become major sources of brand differenti­ation.

Immigratio­n is a perfect example of what I’m getting at. It’s an important issue regardless of where you come down on the specifics of immigratio­n policy. But there’s a reason Republican­s and Democrats often invest so much more in the issue than it warrants. It taps into, among other things, questions of race, national identity and the relationsh­ip between wealthy elites and average workers. Democrats love the issue because it lets them demonize Republican­s — often but not always unfairly — as rank nativists and bigots. It lets Republican­s rail about Democratic animosity toward the working class and indifferen­ce — real or alleged — to American culture.

Again, immigratio­n is a legitimate issue to debate. But a lot of the culture-war trolling — and much of the immigratio­n hysteria — that takes up so much of our energy and attention amounts to a convenient distractio­n from the fact that both parties have spent this country into a hole it will take decades to climb out of, if either of them ever bothers to try.

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 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R DOLAN/AP ?? Four of six titles by Dr. Seuss that the author’s estate decided earlier this year would no longer be published.
CHRISTOPHE­R DOLAN/AP Four of six titles by Dr. Seuss that the author’s estate decided earlier this year would no longer be published.

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