The Arizona Republic

State can’t drain the swamp, but it can do next best thing

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“You see what Trump just did?!”

As I write this, he’s gotten himself into another jam; by the time you read this, there’ll have been several more.

Our president greets each day with a few odd tweets, puzzling statements or controvers­ial actions, each sending the D.C. press corps into a new panic.

At least until they’re distracted by the next crazy scoop out of the White House.

And Capitol Hill is hardly inspiring confidence. The GOP controls the House and Senate, so you’d expect them to be passing one conservati­ve reform after another. Instead, the House ekes out unpopular bills and the Senate proclaims them dead on arrival.

Meanwhile, out-of-power Dems are distractin­g themselves with hyperbole, media stunts and thousands of #resist hashtags on Twitter.

America is the world’s most powerful nation, and everyone in the capital has lost their damn mind.

Granted, the Beltway was hardly a well-oiled machine before the current crew took over. Team Obama left us with a collapsing health-care system and a $20 trillion Visa bill, while Bush presided over mismanaged wars and a Wall Street bailout.

Optimistic voters thought new leadership would fix the foundering ship of state. Just hold on ‘til 2017, they thought. The cavalry is coming. Help is on the way.

By now, anyone hoping to drain the swamp — or even see a few grown-ups running the show — must be sorely disappoint­ed. Washington remains a festival of incompeten­ce.

The standard reaction is to look to 2018 and 2020. If we just rearrange a few deck chairs, the Titanic will right itself again. But if the recent past is any guide, a few new faces won’t change much at all.

It’s past time for the American people to accept a harsh truth: The cavalry isn’t coming from Washington and no federal help is on the way.

That’s no reason to despair, however, since every crisis brings opportunit­y. If D.C. won’t get the job done, we need to focus on solutions closer to home.

The United States wasn’t designed to be run by some far-off mandarins in an imperial capital. Most day-to-day responsibi­lities were handed to each state, and most state responsibi­lities were handed to counties, cities and towns.

When people talk of checks and balances, they usually think of the White

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