The Denver Post

DEMS LOOKING AT BOLDER IDEAS

- By Alexander Burns

Party leaders want to pump trillions more into the economy, invest in public health jobs.

More than 36 million Americans are suddenly unemployed. Congress has allocated $2.2 trillion in aid, with more likely to be on the way as a fight looms over government debt. Millions more people are losing their health insurance and struggling to take care of their children and aging relatives. And nearly 90,000 are dead in a continuing public health catastroph­e.

This was not the scenario Joe Biden anticipate­d confrontin­g when he competed for the Democratic nomination on a convention­al left-of-center platform. Now, with Biden leading President Donald Trump in the polls, the former vice president and other Democratic leaders are racing to assemble a new governing agenda that meets the extraordin­ary times — and they agree it must be far bolder than anything the party establishm­ent has embraced before.

So far, neither Biden nor Trump has defined in itemized terms what an agenda for the first 100 days of a new presidency in the coronaviru­s era might look like. But on the Democratic side, far more than within the Republican Party, there is an increasing­ly clear sense of the nature and scale of the goals a new administra­tion would pursue.

Biden’s campaign has been rapidly expanding its policy-drafting apparatus, with the former vice president promising to detail plans for “the right kind of economic recovery” within weeks. He has already effectivel­y shed his primary-season theme of restoring political normalcy to the country, replacing it with promises of sweeping economic change.

On Wednesday, Biden signaled anew that he was willing to reopen his policy platform, announcing six policy task forces — covering issues including health care, climate and immigratio­n, as well as the economy — that combine his core supporters with left-wing allies of Sen. Bernie Sanders, his vanquished primary opponent.

The formation of those committees was aimed in part at easing divisions between Democrats that are already flaring on subjects such as the size of a potential infrastruc­ture bill and the intractabl­e issue of health care. Despite having dashed Sanders’ populist insurgency in the primary, Biden is still facing loud calls from his party’s activist wing to adopt ideas he has firmly resisted, such as single-payer health care.

But in several areas there are already strong signs of consensus within Biden’s party, as once-cautious electoral and legislativ­e tacticians shed their opposition to huge price tags and disruptive change amid a crisis that has melted traditiona­l obstacles to government action.

Democratic leaders say that if they hold power next January, they must be prepared to move to pump trillions more into the economy; enact infrastruc­ture and climate legislatio­n far larger than they previously envisioned; pass a raft of aggressive worker-protection laws; expand government­backed health insurance; and create enormous new investment­s in public health jobs, health care facilities and child care programs.

“There is a recognitio­n that this event is more transforma­tive than 2008, more transforma­tive than 9/11, more transforma­tive than the fall of the Berlin Wall,” said Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia. The party’s moderates, Warner said, had begun to think “exponentia­lly bigger” about a legislativ­e vision for overhaulin­g the economy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States