The Sun (Lowell)

Democrat agenda unites the GOP

- By Jonah goldberg

American politics is caught in a perverse paradox. The bases of both parties would like nothing more than to destroy the other party. But it is precisely this animus that prevents them from accomplish­ing their goal. That’s because the best strategy for partisans to wreak havoc in the other party is to pursue bipartisan­ship when they’re in power.

When Barack Obama came into office with majorities in Congress, he opted to push his agenda on a party-line basis, starting with the 2009 stimulus package that passed the Senate with only three Republican votes and the 2010 Affordable Care Act that got no Republican support in the Senate.

Obama’s unilateral approach allowed Republican­s to stay unified in opposition and ultimately to take back the House in 2010, leaving Obama to spend the rest of his presidency governing with his “pen and phone” without more major legislatio­n.

The Trump presidency offers a similar lesson. If Trump had opened with an infrastruc­ture plan — as some of his advisers initially wanted — he could have split the Democrats, won over some moderates in that party and made it more difficult for the Democrats to sell their “resistance” messaging for Trump’s entire term.

President Biden has a different interpreta­tion of recent history. For him, the lesson of the Obama stimulus wasn’t about the importance of bipartisan­ship. Rather, it proved the need to go much bigger and then brag about the bigness.

“Barack was so modest, he didn’t want to take, as he said, a ‘victory lap,’” Biden told House Democrats in early March. “I kept saying, ‘Tell people what we did.’ He said, ‘We don’t have time. I’m not going to take a victory lap.’ And we paid a price for it, ironically, for that humility.”

There’s a kernel of truth there, though “humility” is not a word I would use to describe the Obama administra­tion.

It’s definitely not the right word for the Biden presidency so far. A group of historians and advisers have reportedly convinced him this is his shot at being another FDR — something every Democratic president since FDR has wanted to do.

The idea is to cram through as much transforma­tional change as quickly as possible, pressing

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