The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Democrats can’t negotiate with fantasy

- Eugene Robinson Eugene Robinson’s email address is eugenerobi­nson@washpost.com.

Maybe someday the old way of framing our political debate — chastising “both sides” for not seeking “bipartisan” accord through “give-and-take compromise” — will once again make sense.

But not now, and probably not for some time to come. There are no productive deals to broker between objective reality and cynical fantasy, between truth and lies.

President Joe Biden and the slim Democratic majorities in Congress are right to move ahead on a proposed $1.9 trillion covid-19 relief bill, even if Republican­s refuse to come along. The necessary arguments about how much money is really needed and how it will be spent are still taking place. It’s just that the Republican Party will not — and, apparently, cannot — meaningful­ly participat­e.

The Oval Office meeting this week between Biden and 10 Republican senators was a worthwhile exercise in performati­ve bipartisan­ship, a demonstrat­ion that such encounters are once again possible. But everyone in the room had to know that the GOP offer of $618 billion was not a serious opening bid. For example, the Republican­s would provide no help at all for state and local government­s, whose coffers the pandemic has starved and drained; Biden wants to give them $350 billion.

The GOP plan was more of an aspiration­al gesture — and partly, perhaps, a cry for help.

More than 451,000 Americans have died from covid-19, and lifesaving vaccines are taking far too long to be distribute­d and administer­ed. The well-todo have seen their stock portfolios soar while members of the middle class face new risks and the working class desperatel­y struggles to survive the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

Even many conservati­ve economists agree with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen that “the risk is not doing too much; the risk is not doing enough.”

Yet much of the Republican base — encouraged by Biden’s predecesso­r — is oddly blithe about the threat the pandemic poses, compared with their countrymen with different politics. The GOP has become the anti-mask party, the open-everything-up party, the “plandemic” conspiracy-theory party, the anti-expertise party, the anti-science party.

If Donald Trump announced tomorrow that gravity is a fiction invented to keep his supporters from flying, some true believers would hurry to jump off their roofs.

And they would fall to the ground at the rate of 32 feet per second squared. There is no compromise between “gravity is real” (whether described by Isaac Newton’s equations or Albert Einstein’s) and “gravity is a hoax.” It is ridiculous to give equal weight to “both sides” of the question because one is objectivel­y true and one is absurdly, dangerousl­y, life-threatenin­gly false.

Most Republican­s in Congress are not as ignorant, racist, angry and uncaring as they pretend to be. On Wednesday evening, more than two-thirds of House Republican­s voted to keep Rep. Liz Cheney (Wyo.) in her leadership position as chair of their conference, despite her support for impeaching Trump because of his incitement of the Capitol insurrecti­on.

But that impressive support for Cheney came in a secret ballot, shielding her supporters from the ire of Trump and the GOP base.

By contrast, Republican­s took no action at all against

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia,a former — so she says — devotee of the QAnon conspiracy theory and one of the few members of Congress I could imagine actually being some sort of “gravity truther.” At the meeting, Greene reportedly said she was sorry for a few of the insane and offensive views she has loudly expressed, including that school shootings were really “false flag” plots to curtail Second Amendment rights.

But she adamantly refused to apologize publicly for anything at all until Thursday, when it was clear that Democrats were prepared to take away her committee assignment­s.

We should all take the late Maya Angelou’s advice: Greene has shown us again and again who she is, and we should believe her.

At the state level, the Republican Party is, if anything, even less tethered to reality. The Arizona state GOP actually censured former senator Jeff Flake and Cindy McCain, widow of the late senator John McCain, for failing to blindly support Trump. A few Republican governors, such as Jim Justice of West Virginia, are doing well in the vaccinatio­n phase of the pandemic.

Others, such as Ron DeSantis of Florida, continue to put politics over public health.

Trump led the GOP’s base deep into the wilderness. Republican leadership in Washington lacks the skills and the guts to lead the party back to reality — and back to constructi­ve participat­ion in addressing the massive challenges we face. Don’t blame “both sides” for ruining the elegant, strategic, productive political competitio­n we’d like to see.

One party is trying to move the chess pieces. The other is trying to eat them.

LAWRENCE, KAN. (AP) » Kansas dropped out of The Associated Press men’s college basketball poll for the first time in 12 years on Monday, ending the Jayhawks’ record streak of 231 consecutiv­e weeks ranked in the Top 25.

Gonzaga and Baylor held down the top two spots, just as they have all season, with the Bulldogs getting 55 of 63 first-place votes and the Bears getting the other eight. Michigan took advantage of Villanova’s loss at St. John’s to jump into the top three, rival Ohio State climbed three spots to No. 4 and the Wildcats rounded out the top 5.

Illinois gave the Big Ten three teams in the top six after beating Indiana in overtime and pounding No. 21 Wisconsin over the weekend. The Illini were followed by Texas Tech, Houston, Virginia and Missouri, which beat Kentucky and No. 11 Al

abama to reach the top 10 for the first time since Dec. 24, 2012.

The real drama came not at the top of the poll, though, but at the bottom of it.

The Jayhawks began their Top 25 streak on Feb. 2, 2009, when freshman guard Bryce Thompson was 6 years old. Their decade-plus of dominance, which began the season after winning the national championsh­ip, included 10 consecutiv­e Big 12 regular-season titles, five conference tournament titles, two more Final Four trips and a runner-up finish in 2012.

Their game against No. 23 Oklahoma State on Monday night was to be the Jayhawks’ first unranked in 434 games.

“It’s basketball and we have another game to focus on,” Jayhawks guard Jalen Wilson said after a 91-79 loss at No. 14 West Virginia on Saturday, their sixth defeat in the last 10 games. “In basketball you sometimes have to focus on what’s in front of you and not think about the past and what you couldn’t done. Another day, another game we just have to focus on.”

The Jayhawks started 8-1 and climbed to No. 3 by Dec. 28, with their lone loss to Gonzaga and victories over then-ranked teams Kentucky, West Virginia, Creighton and Texas Tech on the road. But they have scuffled since the start of Big 12 play, losing Thompson to an injury and failing to get enough production from an otherwise veteran team.

“We have plenty of games to go win and I know this team can do it,” Kansas guard Christian Braun said. “Everyone’s head is in a good spot, but we just have to do it on the court. We have to stop talking about it and actually be about it.”

Kind of like the Bulldogs and Bears have been this season.

Gonzaga trailed Pacific at halftime last week before a 25-8 finishing run to win the game easily, then had its game against Santa Clara canceled over the weekend. The Bulldogs had a tough test against BYU on Monday night.

“It’s really hard when everybody around them nationally and everything just thinks you’re going to breeze through stuff,” Bulldogs coach Mark Few said after their latest win, “but it’s not reality.”

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 ?? KATHY BATTEN - THE ASSOCAITED PRESS ?? Kansas coach Bill Self meets with players during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against West Virginia, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021, in Morgantown, W.Va.
KATHY BATTEN - THE ASSOCAITED PRESS Kansas coach Bill Self meets with players during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against West Virginia, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021, in Morgantown, W.Va.

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