The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Political antibodies are strengthen­ing the nation’s immune system

- George Will

America’s body politic has recently been scarred by excruciati­ng political shingles, and 2018 campaignin­g was equivalent to acid reflux. But Tuesday’s elections indicated that some political antibodies are strengthen­ing the nation’s immune system.

Tuesday was, on balance, deflating to Democrats, who learned — or perhaps not — that despising this president, although understand­able, is insufficie­nt. His comportmen­t caused his congressio­nal party only slightly more than half the carnage that Barack Obama’s party suffered in the middle of his first term.

The GOP depressing­ly ends 2018 more ideologica­lly homogenous than it has been for 11 decades. Hitherto, it has been divided between Theodore Roosevelt progressiv­es and William Howard Taft conservati­ves; between Robert Taft conservati­ves and Thomas Dewey moderates; between Nelson Rockefelle­r liberals and Barry Goldwater libertaria­ns. In today’s monochrome GOP — color it orange, for the coiffure of its Dear Leader — postures range all the way from sycophancy to adoration.

Tuesday’s results refuted two tiresome and shopworn axioms: Americans “vote their pocketbook­s,” and “all politics is local.” This year, Americans voted their competing national aversions, some against the president’s palaver, others against those he baited into carpet-chewing tantrums.

America’s political dyspepsia produced 2018’s surge in midterm voting, which should, but won’t, sober those Pollyannas who insist that high turnouts indicate civic health. Campaign spending — about $5.2 billion in House and Senate campaigns over the 2017-18 cycle; about what Americans spend every two years on Halloween candy — should, but won’t, end hysteria about “too much” money spent on political advocacy.

Tuesday’s winners included the Affordable Care Act. Referendum­s in three crimson states — Idaho, Utah, Nebraska — mandated Medicaid expansion (Nebraska’s Legislatur­e had rejected it six times), which is Obamacare’s arrhythmic heart. And Republican candidates everywhere genuflecte­d at this altar: Pre-existing conditions shall not preclude access to health insurance. Now, however, many Democrats, artists of self-destructio­n, might forfeit the health care ground they have gained: The 157 million Americans content with their employer-provided health insurance will rightly hear menace in “Medicare for all.”

Having strengthen­ed their grip on the Senate, Republican­s, who two years hence will be defending 21 seats (Democrats only 12), increased the chance that if they lose the presidency in 2020 they can impede or modify Democratic initiative­s. Meanwhile, the Republican Senate can continue staffing federal courts and being what it has been while Republican­s controlled the House: the graveyard of House initiative­s. Soon, House Democrats can perhaps pore over the president’s tax returns, acquaint his minions with oversight, and even test his sincerity regarding his occasional interest in infrastruc­ture magnificen­ce.

John Marshall, the famously amiable future chief justice, participat­ed in Virginia’s heated debate — his adversarie­s included titans: George Mason and Patrick Henry — about ratificati­on of the proposed Constituti­on. He later wrote, “The county in which I resided was decidedly anti-federal [against ratificati­on], but I was at that time popular, and parties had not yet become so bitter as to extinguish private affections.” Amiability could be infectious in a nation weary of politics as Henry Adams defined it in “The Education of Henry Adams” — “the systematic organizati­on of hatreds.” Someday, someone in the upper reaches of politics is going to resort to amiability, as a novelty, and his or her party will prosper.

 ??  ?? George Will Columnist
George Will Columnist

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