Los Angeles Times

‘More partisan, more tribal’

- T’s hard to ignore

Ithe irony of Sen. John McCain returning to Washington from cranial surgery at the Mayo Clinic just to keep alive a bill that would make health insurance unaffordab­le to millions of Americans. Had McCain (R-Ariz.) considered the symbolism of his actions more carefully, he might have lingered longer at the hospital.

But immediatel­y after voting Tuesday to proceed to debate on the healthcare measure, McCain gave his colleagues a muchneeded lecture on how badly they’ve gone astray — not just on the healthcare bill, but on legislatin­g in general. Noting that the Senate has often been called the world’s greatest deliberati­ve body, McCain said, “I’m not sure we can claim that distinctio­n with a straight face today.” No, they most definitely cannot. The path the Senate took to reach this point — private negotiatio­ns by Republican­s to develop legislatio­n affecting one sixth of the U.S. economy, never bothering to hold hearings, let alone negotiatin­g with Democrats — is shameful. So is the path that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (RKy.) is leading them down now, as they fasttrack a bill they haven’t seen and devote no more than a few minutes of debate to a series of major amendments regarding health insurance cost and availabili­ty.

McCain has been called a maverick for his willingnes­s to stray from GOP orthodoxy. But on Tuesday he sounded like a traditiona­list, excoriatin­g the Senate for abandoning the painstakin­g, cautious processes of good legislatin­g in favor of procedural shortcuts and winning at any cost.

Although he’d just voted to let debate begin on McConnell’s mystery healthcare bill, McCain neverthele­ss called it “a shell” that he couldn’t support in its current form, the product of an indefensib­le process. “We’ve tried to do this by coming up with a proposal behind closed doors in consultati­on with the administra­tion, then springing it on skeptical members, trying to convince them it’s better than nothing, asking us to swallow our doubts and force it past a unified opposition. I don’t think that is going to work in the end. And it probably shouldn’t.” No, it most definitely should not. What the Senate ought to do on healthcare, he said, is what it has traditiona­lly done, but has abandoned in its hyperparti­san dysfunctio­n: Hold hearings. Take ideas from both sides. Bring a bill to the floor and try to “pass something that will be imperfect, full of compromise­s, and not very pleasing to implacable partisans on either side, but that might provide workable solutions to problems Americans are struggling with today.”

One other requiremen­t that McCain should have included, but did not: Whatever the Senate does, it should make things better for as many Americans as possible. The Affordable Care Act has flaws, but they can be fixed. Like the House-passed healthcare bill, the Senate GOP’s proposal has problems that are far more fundamenta­l, and they cannot be remedied. The goal here should be to make insurance more available and affordable, not push it out of reach of those with preexistin­g conditions or little income.

To his credit, McCain didn’t limit his critique to the healthcare legislatio­n, but addressed the day-in, day-out operations of today’s Senate. Debates are “more partisan and more tribal more of the time than any other time I remember,” McCain said, and that’s demonstrab­le, as is the fact that the Senate and Congress as a whole are getting less done. Those conditions didn’t emerge overnight, and like most of the problems afflicting the Senate, they aren’t attributab­le exclusivel­y to one party or the other. Instead, there has been steadily escalating unilateral­ism and obstructio­n, a destructiv­e cycle that no one seems able (or eager) to stop.

The answer, as McCain so eloquently put it, is to accept incrementa­l progress built around bipartisan compromise­s — the best that can be expected in a country “as diverse and quarrelsom­e and free” as the United States. “Considerin­g the injustice and cruelties inflicted by autocratic government­s, and how corruptibl­e human nature can be, the problem-solving our system does make possible, the fitful progress it produces, and the liberty and justice it preserves, is a magnificen­t achievemen­t,” he added.

Senators badly need to find their way back to that place. They also need to take to heart McCain’s reminder that they are — collective­ly — an important check on presidenti­al power. “Whether or not we are of the same party, we are not the president’s subordinat­es. We are his equal,” McCain intoned. It’s time they started behaving that way.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States