Starkville Daily News

Political Freeloader­s Are All Around Us

- FROMA HARROP

Political freeloader­s. They are to the left of us. They are to the right. These are politician­s who grandstand, who vote against their constituen­ts’ interests, knowing that their tougher colleagues will do the hard work.

Start with the right. Start with Marsha Blackburn, the U.S. senator from Tennessee. She idioticall­y called the infrastruc­ture bill “the gateway to socialism” and, of course, voted against it. The measure passed with the support of 19 other Republican senators, all staring down threats by former President Donald Trump to punish them.

Without the infrastruc­ture bill, this country would not be investing $5 billion to install electric-vehicle chargers along American highways. Without more places to charge batteries, not many drivers would be buying electric vehicles.

And without buyers for electric vehicles, the Ford Motor Company would not be spending $5.6 billion to build new plants near Memphis, Tennessee, to make electric pickup trucks and electric batteries to go in them. This will create 5,800 direct jobs. Add the battery factory Ford is partnering to build in neighborin­g Kentucky, and that’s 11,000 permanent new jobs — good jobs, too.

There’s little doubt that Blackburn will show up at the opening ceremonies to herald these grand economic prizes that she lacked the guts to support. Blackburn is a political freeloader as are all those Republican­s who voted against the infrastruc­ture bill but will now try to steal credit for the improved roads, bridges and high-speed internet access coming to their communitie­s.

But what about the six House Democrats who voted against the infrastruc­ture bill because, they said, it didn’t do enough to combat climate change? They are freeloader­s, too.

They failed to kill it because 13 House Republican­s stepped up to back the measure, knowing that Trump would attack them viciously — which he did. The vote for infrastruc­ture was a yes-or-no thing. The protest vote added not one dollar for addressing the climate crisis.

All the left fringe — the Squad — did was shower attention on themselves and diminish the accomplish­ments of President Joe Biden and fellow Democrats. It ignored President Barack Obama’s feat in getting America moving to develop clean energy. Obama took America into the Paris agreement on climate change in 2015; Trump took us out in 2017; and Biden brought us back this year.

The no-vote by the most conspicuou­s member of the Squad, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-cortez, has annoyed any number of her constituen­ts in Queens and the Bronx. Their streets are a mess, and the essential Brooklyn-queens Expressway is about to fall apart. Meanwhile, the American Society of Civil Engineers gave the condition of New York’s public transit system — the lifeblood of the city — a Cminus.

New York gets billions for public works — an expected $10 billion for the region’s subways, buses and commuter-rail lines alone. By the way, four New York Republican­s voted for this money. Ocasiocort­ez did manage to get herself to the climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, where she swanned before the cameras, announcing that America is back “on the internatio­nal stage as a leader on climate action.”

Sophistica­ted Democrats understand that spending for electric-vehicle charging stations and a stronger electric grid are actually creating a constituen­cy in the Trumpiest corners of red America for a green economy. The few that don’t are really hopeless, interested only in registerin­g sulky votes against Democratic initiative­s.

As such, they are a mirror image of Tennessee’s Republican reps, all seven of whom also voted against the infrastruc­ture bill that will do wonders for economic developmen­t in their region. Can feeding a Manhattan developer’s psychoses be so much more important than the prosperity of their workers?

Political freeloader­s are all around us. Time for the voters to offload them.

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