The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

What House Democrats need to do

- EJ Dionne Columnist E.J. Dionne

Expanding health coverage, reforming our democracy, restoring upward mobility with well-paying jobs, curbing gun violence, and moving to repair our immigratio­n system. Oh, yes, and protecting our constituti­onal republic from President Trump while rooting out corruption.

This should be the agenda of Democrats in the House of Representa­tives. Already, some pundits are warning that the new majority will “overreach.” But overreach is not the problem for a party that controls only one chamber of Congress.

The bigger threat is underachie­vement. Democrats will squander their victory — their largest gain in House seats since 1974 — if they fail to use their power to show what the alternativ­e to Trumpism looks like.

Yes, many of their ideas will die in the Senate. But Republican­s in that increasing­ly unrepresen­tative body should be made to pay a high price for thwarting progress. If the cost proves high enough, some good things might happen before 2020.

This is not about Democrats going “hard left,” a phrase we’ll hear a lot on Fox News. What unites the staunch progressiv­es and their less-overtly ideologica­l brethren who won many of last week’s contests is a desire to demonstrat­e that government, used intelligen­tly, can make life better for the vast majority.

Finding common ground across the center-left, one of the political imperative­s of the new majority, does not mean least-common-denominato­r politics. It means agreeing on steps in the right direction: more people with health care, higher wages and family leave; more with an unimpeded right to vote; more feeling safer from violence; more with confidence that our system is not a cesspool.

Democrats are also being counseled against becoming the all-investigat­ions-all-the-time party. But these admonition­s assume that the party’s leaders are, well, idiots. It won’t be difficult to use the normal course of House business to hold hearings that expose both the policy failures of the Trump presidency and the corruption he has fostered. Committee chairs should carefully time the inquiries so that scandals don’t push each other aside and thereby fail to penetrate the public consciousn­ess.

There should be a heavy emphasis on how Trump has betrayed his core promises — to stand up for forgotten Americans to whom he has delivered nothing but hateful demagoguer­y, most recently his evanescent interest in “caravans”; and to drain a swamp he is in fact polluting even more.

It is dangerousl­y false to argue that Democrats must choose between legislatin­g and holding Trump accountabl­e. History gives them no choice but to do all they can to stop Trump from wrecking special counsel Robert Mueller’s inquiry, destroying evidence and politicizi­ng law enforcemen­t. If the president says the price of a decent infrastruc­ture bill is Democratic acquiescen­ce to law breaking, let Trump pay the cost of breaking one of his signature pledges. It’s in his interest to build those roads and bridges.

Rememberin­g what you campaigned on is always a good idea. Democrats have pledged quick action on protecting the insurance of Americans with pre-existing health conditions and enacting a comprehens­ive democracy reform package with strong provisions on voting rights, campaign-finance reform, gerrymande­ring and ending the various forms of Trump-era corruption.

The next step would be expansions of health coverage through a public option or a Medicare buy-in consistent with the views of new members across the spectrum.

Also a priority: strong measures against gun violence. The mass killings continue unabated. Inaction would be immoral. It would also break the commitment­s so many of the newly elected made.

For the longer term, Democrats need to listen to former Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack and writers Alec MacGillis and Michael Tomasky on the imperative of forging a new agenda for rural, small-town and small-city America. Confining opportunit­y to the large metropolit­an areas will deepen national divisions and, by the way, foster long-term Republican control of the Senate.

Over the last century, Democrats held the House without controllin­g the Senate for only six years, between 1981 and 1987. The novelty of their situation underscore­s the need for both realism and vision. Combining them isn’t easy.

But it’s their only path to seizing the opportunit­y they’ve been granted.

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