Los Angeles Times

To GOP, voters say: ‘Send me my money’

- JONAH GOLDBERG @JonahDispa­tch

After the Senate passed the $1.9-trillion American Rescue Plan, President Biden came out to take a bow. This measure came “not a moment too soon,” he explained. “For over a year, the American people were told they were on their own.”

This is the kind of thing presidents say when partisansh­ip defines reality.

One of the hallmarks of hyperparti­sanship is to live entirely in the moment. The nearest weapon to hand is fair game. Precedents matter only as a way to show the other side is hypocritic­al for violating them. The past itself is a foreign country with no binding power over the “fierce urgency of now,” as Barack Obama liked to say, borrowing from Martin Luther King Jr.

Because Donald Trump lived in the moment, with no historical memory and no foresight beyond the lifespan of a tweet, his administra­tion was a constant demonstrat­ion of this dynamic. For example, he frequently insisted that the military had been totally run into the ground under his predecesso­r — “we had no ammunition!” — and that he completely rebuilt it. Neither were true.

President Biden may have a longer memory and a broader time horizon, but he is acting like a player in the same game. When his administra­tion took office, it immediatel­y floated the claim that nothing had been done to combat the pandemic and that it would have to start “from scratch.” The fact that about a million people per day were already getting vaccinated when Biden was sworn in, alone proves that was wrong.

Similarly, the idea that the American people have been told “they were on their own” is ahistorica­l claptrap.

The $1.9 trillion in this package is simply the latest installmen­t in an unpreceden­ted spending spree. This time last year, Congress passed the CARES Act, which spent more than $2 trillion on relief. In December, Congress extended the act to the tune of an additional $900 billion — that’s equivalent to slightly more than the entire GDP of Turkey ($852 billion).

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) fairly chastised the Democrats for passing another round of massive spending on a party line vote. “In 2020, we passed five historic pandemic rescue packages totaling $4 trillion,” he said. “Not one of them got fewer than 90 votes in the Senate or about 80% of the House.”

No one told Americans “they were on their own.”

McConnell is also right that it would take a hernia-inducing effort to connect some of its provisions to the pandemic, such as including $130 billion for K-12 education, even though $113 billion of prior education subsidies are still unspent. There’s $30.5 billion for mass transit, including $1.7 billion for Biden’s beloved Amtrak. It’s no wonder that House Majority Whip James E. Clyburn (D-S.C.) has said the pandemic creates “a tremendous opportunit­y to restructur­e things to fit our vision.”

Indeed, the idea that this package comes “not a moment too soon” for an ailing economy is also prepostero­us. Yes, there are millions of Americans suffering from the economic consequenc­es of the pandemic, but signs point to an economy about to skyrocket. Employment is surging and U.S. households have $1.6 trillion in excess savings they are probably dying to dip into, once they get the all-clear. Relief targeted where needed isn’t just defensible, it’s necessary. It would also cost vastly less than $1.9 trillion.

But the dilemma for McConnell, and Republican­s generally, is that this is the world they helped create. Under the Trump administra­tion, spending and debt exploded, even before the pandemic. And while McConnell has a point about the bipartisan nature of COVID-19 relief efforts, he would be hard-pressed to point to other examples of significan­t bipartisan­ship when he was majority leader under Trump.

This is not to say that this story begins with Trump. One could tell a similar tale about the George W. Bush and Obama eras. Indeed, that’s the point. The partisan need for wins at any cost, as fast as possible — fueled by a fear that they only have so much time before voters punish them for overreachi­ng by electing another set of partisans who will then overreach — has created bipartisan dysfunctio­n. Complaints about debt and spending lose credibilit­y when politician­s spout them only when it’s the other party doing the borrowing and spending.

And voters have noticed. The Biden administra­tion likes to point out that while the bill passed along partisan lines in Congress, it enjoys bipartisan support with the public. And why shouldn’t it?

If you spend decades flip-flopping on debt and spending, depending on whether or not you’re in power, you shouldn’t be shocked if the voters say, “Yeah, yeah, whatever. Send me my money.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? MINORITY LEADER Mitch McConnell in the Senate on Saturday, when the COVID-19 relief bill passed 50-49 on party lines.
Associated Press MINORITY LEADER Mitch McConnell in the Senate on Saturday, when the COVID-19 relief bill passed 50-49 on party lines.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States