The Bakersfield Californian

Infrastruc­ture bill is liberal plot to make you love big government

- Paul Waldman is an opinion writer for the Plum Line blog.

As the week began, Democrats were celebratin­g final passage of a long-overdue infrastruc­ture bill, which will address a range of pressing needs from lead water pipes to crumbling bridges to broadband deserts, while it will likely create hundreds of thousands of jobs. Meanwhile, Republican­s were livid that a few of their congressme­n voted for the bill, and took their anger out on Big Bird.

In a way, those Republican­s are right to be mad, because infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts are indeed a liberal plot to undermine everything the contempora­ry GOP stands for.

Yes, some Republican­s — 19 in the Senate and 13 in the House — did vote for the bill. In those votes you can see the fading vestiges of an age when members of both parties considered it their obligation to deliver tangible benefits for their constituen­ts. That’s how you got reelected: a repaired bridge here, a new hospital wing there, all celebrated with a ribbon-cutting at which the congressma­n or senator who brought home the bacon was center stage for the local media.

But for most Republican officehold­ers, what matters now is what’s airing on Fox News, where the culture war is king.

Which is where Big Bird comes in. Republican­s spent the weekend pretending to be outraged that “Sesame Street” was telling kids not to be afraid of vaccinatio­ns, even though Big Bird has been talking to kids about vaccines for half a century. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) Immediatel­y denounced it as “Government propaganda ... for your 5 year old!” Across Fox News, apoplectic talking heads pummeled the show. An Arizona state senator tweeted “Big Bird is a communist.”

All of which no doubt left the Republican base with the warm feeling that can only come from a good round of shaking your fist at liberals. Meanwhile, Democrats are asking themselves whether their infrastruc­ture bill can actually be turned into a political winner.

There are at least a few Republican­s who worry that it might. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (who voted for the bill) is touting the good it might do for his home state of Kentucky; he clearly doesn’t want Democrats to get all the credit. But the more visible its effects are — and the more Republican­s characteri­ze it as a socialist boondoggle (or attack their own leadership because a few of their members in the House helped pass it) — the more Democrats will have an opportunit­y to use it as a case study in what Democratic governance actually does for people’s lives. Already, the White House is dispatchin­g Cabinet secretarie­s and members of Congress across the country to promote the coming repairs and upgrades to roads, bridges and much more.

So why do I say this is indeed a fundamenta­lly liberal accomplish­ment? A few reasons.

First, it avoided most of the gimmicks and giveaways Republican­s usually employ when crafting similar bills. You’ve probably forgotten by now, but amid all the “Infrastruc­ture Week” jokes, the Trump administra­tion did at one point in 2018 put out an infrastruc­ture plan. It was full of misleading numbers and public-private “partnershi­ps” in the form of gigantic tax gifts to private companies to build whatever projects they found most profitable. Rather than the government owning the bridge or road, the private company would — and they’d then charge us tolls to use it forever.

Second, the fact that Republican­s failed to pass infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts everyone acknowledg­ed were necessary when they were in charge, but Democrats succeeded, reveals a key truth: Only one party is serious about governing these days.

If you’re a wealthy person looking for a tax cut, Republican­s will come through for you. But on more fundamenta­l obligation­s of government, such as making sure you have clean water to drink, only one party will really try to deliver. It wasn’t always that way — Dwight Eisenhower was substantia­lly responsibl­e for building the interstate highway system — but it is now.

And finally, infrastruc­ture is fundamenta­lly liberal because, when it’s done well, it reinforces the idea that there are important things that only government can do. As long as you believe that, you’ll be favorably inclined toward politician­s who actually want government to do those things — and just as important, can make it happen.

That doesn’t mean the administra­tion will have an easy time convincing voters that this bill (and the Build Back Better social infrastruc­ture bill, should it pass as well) is a great reason to get out and vote for Democrats. Many of the benefits will take months or years to be felt in people’s lives. And in a polarized age, nothing drives voter turnout like anger.

Which is why they should argue that what matters about that new bridge in your town is not only that Democrats delivered it but that Republican­s fought against it. Will it work to say, “While our opponents are complainin­g about Big Bird, we’re actually helping improve your lives”? It’s certainly worth a shot.

 ?? ?? PAUL WALDMAN
PAUL WALDMAN

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