Los Angeles Times

The devastatin­g power of the presidency

- By Lee Drutman Lee Drutman is a fellow in the political reform program at the think tank New America. This essay is based on his policy paper “Can Our Political Institutio­ns Handle Our Political Divisions?”

The United States isa divided nation: There is Redland, where Donald Trump won among exurban non-college educated whites, and Blueland, home to diverse city and coastal cosmopolit­ans, where Hillary Clinton triumphed. Voters in these two lands have fundamenta­lly different views about what it means to be an American, and they increasing­ly view their fellow citizens as enemies.

Our political system, which requires compromise and collaborat­ion, is not set up to handle such profound difference­s. Worse, our current political rules are exacerbati­ng and reinforcin­g them.

The primary amplifier of division is the ever-expanding power of the presidency, on top of a winner-take-all electoral system. In our form of government, especially as it evolved in the 20th century, the president is the focal point. When the population splits into two polarized tribes, organizing politics around a winner-take-all structure focused on a single person only deepens the divide.

We saw it with Barack Obama. Many residents of Redland felt he could not possibly be their president, and they did all they could to de-legitimize him. Now the same thing is happening with Bluelander­s and Trump.

The high stakes of the presidency just keep getting higher. The more power the president has, the more consequent­ial the presidenti­al election becomes. The more consequent­ial the election, the longer, more involved and more bitter the campaign. Increasing­ly negative campaignin­g has fueled the fierce enmity between Republican­s and Democrats, which has spilled over from the White House into the contentiou­s, partisan and often-gridlocked Congress.

And that again makes matters worse. A gridlocked Congress is a weak Congress, and a weak Congress makes the president more powerful, which serves to ratchet up the polarizati­on another few notches.

The effect over the last four decades has been devastatin­g. As partisansh­ip has increased, leadership offices in both the Senate and the House have taken control, bypassing committees, even cutting their staffs and destroying congressio­nal policy expertise in the process. The leadership has turned almost every issue into a fundraisin­g and messaging vehicle — healthcare, for instance — and rewarded only the most loyal team players with influentia­l posts.

In such a climate, when one party controls the House, the Senate and the presidency, Congress becomes the direct enabler of presidenti­al power. It ducks its oversight responsibi­lities because the party brand and how its members will fare in the next election are tied to the president’s popularity. A current example: the hemming and hawing among Republican­s about investigat­ing Trump’s ties with Russia.

Even if the White House and Congress are split between the parties, the president still will gain power as long as there is little common ground between Redland and Blueland. In this scenario, the majority party simply refuses to compromise with the executive branch, leaving the president to try to accomplish his goals by executive order, daring Congress to stop him (which it has less and less ability to do). Sound familiar?

In an earlier, less-divided era, when Republican­s and Democrats were made up of looser overlappin­g coalitions, Congress had more levers to push in its dealings with the White House. When its members ceded less control to their leadership, they also allocated more money to maintain experience­d, profession­al staff who could go toe-to-toe with the executive branch on substantiv­e policy issues, and to its support agencies, such as the Congressio­nal Research Service or the now-defunct Office of Technology Assessment. Now our representa­tives mostly rely on a rotating cast of 20-somethings who often look to lobbyists and special interests for authority and policy details.

We would be in much better shape if the members of Congress started thinking institutio­nally again rather than primarily as Republican­s or Democrats. But how can we get there, given our deep political divisions and the winner-take-all structures that keep feeding a viciously partisan political cycle?

Our best hope is in restructur­ing party politics and the way we elect our representa­tives.

California’s move to lessen the influence of party politics on redistrict­ing and its embrace of an open “top two” primary system are green shoots. An even more encouragin­g reform came out of Maine, when the state’s voters approved “ranked choice” voting in November.

In congressio­nal and statewide races, Maine voters now will be able to pick up to five candidates in order of preference. That means they can tap third-party candidates without worrying about throwing away their votes. If no candidate wins a majority when the voters’ No. 1 choices are counted, the lowest vote-getter is taken out of the mix and any votes that had gone to him on the first round move to those voters’ second choice. And so on, until a majority winner emerges. Ranked choice voting has been adopted for municipal elections in a number of cities, where it generally has led to less-contentiou­s politics — most candidates try to be everybody’s second choice, if they can’t be their first choice.

Thinking even bigger, congressio­nal districts redrawn to allow for more than one winner in House elections could move the federal Legislatur­e toward something like a multiparty, proportion­al representa­tion system. Imagine, for example, if most of Los Angeles were just one large congressio­nal district, electing the top five vote-getters to Congress. It’s possible L.A. would send to Washington one moderate Republican, one Green Party representa­tive, and three different types of Democrats. New parties, or new factions within existing parties, could more easily assert themselves. It would become harder for any single party to have a majority, which would require governing parties to compromise and build coalitions.

When reformers consider the chasm between red and blue, they talk about “the need for civil dialogue” and they implore everyone “to put country ahead of party.” But the divide between Redland and Blueland isn’t healing. Until we contend with the ways our electoral systems and institutio­nal arrangemen­ts undermine our good intentions, that isn’t likely to change. The American experiment requires cooperatio­n and compromise among different factions. Either we update the way we conduct politics, or our democracy may not survive.

A too-strong White House and a too-weak Congress are conspiring to destroy the American experiment.

 ?? Wes Bausmith Los Angeles Times ??
Wes Bausmith Los Angeles Times

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States