Starkville Daily News

Hyperparti­sanship is hurting the country

- LINDA CHAVEZ SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

Hyperparti­sanship is destroying

American politics.

The announceme­nt this week that Democrats will filibuster

Supreme Court nominee Judge Neil

Gorsuch — who is eminently qualified — puts them on a dangerous collision course that jeopardize­s the confirmati­on process itself. Similarly, Republican­s’ willingnes­s to pass a major overhaul of the health care system without a single Democrat vote follows in the disgracefu­l path set when President Obama shoved the Affordable Care Act down the country’s throat without a single Republican vote. As of this writing, it is unclear whether there are even enough Republican votes in the House to pass health reform, despite their 44-seat majority, but the point remains: In an already polarized country, partisans on both sides of the aisle are doing more harm than good.

The same applies to Congress’s oversight responsibi­lity. The week began with testimony before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligen­ce by FBI Director James Comey and National Security Agency Director Adm. Michael Rogers. The testimony was the first open hearing on the government’s investigat­ion into meddling by the Russians in last year’s election. But instead of focusing on something Republican­s and Democrats — indeed, all Americans — should be deeply concerned with, the hearings turned into a referendum on whether President Trump was truthful when he tweeted almost three weeks ago that former President Obama was secretly spying on him just before the election.

Republican­s spent much of their precious time in the hearings making the case that Russia’s involvemen­t in the election was not nearly as important as who leaked informatio­n regarding that involvemen­t. The chief objects of Republican wrath were suspected Obama appointees. Republican­s seemed especially exercised about individual­s whose leaks revealed disgraced former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn’s contacts with the Russian ambassador to the U.S. I, for one, will shed no crocodile tears over Flynn’s firing. The man lied to the vice president and, it turns out, was also a paid foreign agent of the Islamist government of Turkey’s President Recyip Erdogan at the same time he was serving as candidate Trump’s top security adviser.

Democrats’ behavior was little better during the hearings. Their main focus was on whether President Trump lied in his ridiculous early-morning tweets accusing President Obama of spying on him. The tweets were fact-free; no one, including the president, has produced evidence oth-

erwise. But Democrats — and the country — would be better off focusing on Russian meddling, not refuting baseless claims. Exactly how do you prove something didn’t happen anyway? The outcome of the hearing was simply a hardening of views among partisans. We are no closer to understand­ing how extensive the Russians’ involvemen­t was, what exactly it consisted of and how they managed to carry it out, including who might have assisted them wittingly or unwittingl­y.

There are large difference­s in philosophy and policy between Democrats and Republican­s. Those difference­s are important, and national elections reflect voters’ preference­s.

But barring a major landslide, which the last election certainly was not, enacting laws requires negotiatio­ns and, yes, compromise. The pendulum rarely shifts dramatical­ly in a single election. And prudence suggests that’s a good thing. From 1960 to 1980, the country shifted mostly left, with the exception of the Nixon years, which were a mixed bag. President Nixon gave the country racial quotas, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, and wage and price controls — hardly a far-right agenda. From 1980 to 2012, the country moved to the center-right, including during the Clinton years. Congress passed, and President Clinton signed, both welfare reform and the Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act during his tenure.

But things shifted dramatical­ly during

the Obama years. It wasn’t just that policy veered sharply left but that Democrats and Republican­s in Congress quit seeking compromise on highly divisive issues. Even when a few Democrat and Republican senators tried to forge bipartisan legislatio­n on contentiou­s issues like immigratio­n, the hyperparti­sans in their respective parties sunk the bills.

What began under Obama has now metastasiz­ed under Trump. If this keeps up, we can look to four years of stalemate or, perhaps

worse, legislatio­n so out of step with a mostly centrist country that it will be rebuked by whoever succeeds Trump in office. Neither party benefits long term in that scenario. Worse, Americans lose — big league, as the president likes to say.

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