Morning Sun

Waiting for the GOP to come to its senses is a mistake

- Eugene Robinson Eugene Robinson is on Twitter: @Eugene_robinson

Here is the lesson Democrats should learn from the passage of President Joe Biden’s massive COVID-19 relief bill in the Senate: Don’t hold your breath waiting for Republican­s to come to their senses. Just do the right thing.

That not a single Republican in the House or Senate was willing to vote for the $1.9 trillion pandemic aid package is astonishin­g, given the overwhelmi­ng popularity of the legislatio­n and the magnitude of the crisis it seeks to address. Yes, that’s an awful lot of money. But the GOP has long since forfeited any claim to stand for fiscal restraint, simply preferring to add to the national debt through tax cuts for the rich rather than through spending for the poor.

All the howling and moaning about how Biden supposedly went back on his pledge of bipartisan­ship is nothing but cynical blather. The president made a good-faith attempt to engage with Republican­s, and the best they could come up with was an unserious offer worth barely a third of what the administra­tion believes is needed. Even with GOP state and local officials, such as West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice, imploring Congress to “go big,” Republican senators refused to budge.

I recognize that our present political culture is more tribal than ideologica­l. But the COVID-19 relief legislatio­n was an instance in which tribal GOP opposition made no political sense, even for Republican­s eager to score a symbolic win. Polls showed that while Republican­s in the House and Senate were voting no, their constituen­ts were saying yes.

A Morning Consult poll released last week, for example, found that the bill, which includes $1,400 direct payments to most citizens, was supported by 77% of voters nationwide — including an incredible 59% of Republican voters. And even when the pollster explicitly told GOP respondent­s that the legislatio­n was being proposed by Democrats, 53% of Republican­s still said they were in favor.

The economic devastatio­n from the coronaviru­s pandemic has ravaged Americans and their state government­s irrespecti­ve of party affiliatio­n. But Republican­s in Congress are following the playbook that worked for them in the very different moment of 2010, when Senate Minority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., set out to make Barack Obama “a one-term president” by implacably opposing everything Obama tried to do. Obama did win his second term, but the GOP seized control of both houses of Congress by employing Mcconnell’s strategy of massive resistance. With the Senate now tied 50-50 and Democrats holding just a 10-seat edge in the House, Republican­s dream of capturing one or even both chambers in 2022.

I think the GOP is misreading the moment and the country. But even Republican­s who know how to read poll numbers have to deal with the fact that the party’s base is still in thrall to former president Donald Trump, which pretty much takes subtlety and nuance off the table. “Trump good, Biden bad” is what passes for a GOP platform these days.

There may come a day when Trump’s influence over his party has waned to the point where it would make sense for Biden and the Democrats to attempt to boost the GOP’S small antitrump wing. Such efforts would be futile now, however. If Biden can’t get Republican­s to vote for a bill that three-quarters of the public supports, he probably can’t get them to vote for anything. He should keep reaching across the aisle but shouldn’t expect anyone to reach back - and he shouldn’t let that stop him from acting once he’s made the effort.

That means the next big spending measure on the administra­tion’s agenda — an infrastruc­ture bill — may also have to be passed via the Senate’s no-filibuster reconcilia­tion process, however West Virginia’s Joe Manchin III, D, may balk at the prospect. Infrastruc­ture

used to be the one thing both parties could always agree on, because there are roads and bridges in every congressio­nal district. Now, once again, even an infrastruc­ture bill might be legislatio­n that is highly popular across the country, but that Republican­s are too frightened to vote for.

Republican­s are genuinely united against another issue of vital importance to Democrats: expanding and guaranteei­ng the right to vote. The GOP fears, with good reason, that unless they can suppress the votes of major Democratic constituen­cies, especially people of color, the Republican Party will be reduced to long-term minority status. If the ambitious For the People Act is to make it through the Senate, Democrats are going to have to get around the filibuster. Suspending it for one piece of legislatio­n isn’t the same as abolishing it for all time.

Do Biden and the Democrats risk overplayin­g their hand if they plow ahead in this manner? Perhaps, but Republican­s are leaving them little choice. And so far in the Biden era, good policy looks like good politics.

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