Qatar Tribune

Federalism In The Time Of Coronaviru­s: A Comparativ­e US Advantage

At the national level, the United States has indeed performed poorly in response to the pandemic, but state and local authoritie­s have shown courage and leadership that remain models for the rest of the world

- CAROLINE CHANG, SCOTT MOORE, AND ALI WYNE

IN the eyes of many foreign observers, America’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic has been mediocre at best. Even though it received early warnings about the pandemic’s potential dangers first from China and then from European countries, including Spain and Italy the coronaviru­s spread rapidly and swiftly overwhelme­d the US healthcare system: the United States accounts for almost a third of all cases worldwide and nearly 30 percent of all deaths. Many of its Asian and European allies have performed far better, acting more quickly to impose lockdowns and more aggressive­ly conducting testing and contact tracing.

To many of the United States’ friends abroad, the results have been catastroph­ic not just for the American people and the US economy, but also for its standing in the world. Timothy Garton Ash, a leading historian of transatlan­tic ties, seemed to speak for many others when he said: “I would like to think that the world’s leading democracy gave an example of how well it dealt with the coronaviru­s pandemic, better than China. But it doesn’t look good.”

At the national level, the United States has indeed performed poorly in response to the pandemic. At the state and local level, however, it has provided countless examples of preparatio­n, courage, and leadership that remain models for the rest of the world. As Washington charts the United States’ post-pandemic recovery, federalism remains a decisive comparativ­e advantage one that should play a central role in efforts to renew its soft power and counter China’s attempts to burnish its own. No amount of messaging can or should obscure the fact that federal inaction has cost the United States dearly. Over 100,000 Americans have died. More than 36.5 million have filed for unemployme­nt benefits over the past two months, and Goldman Sachs projects that the unemployme­nt rate could rise to over 25 percent the highest figure by far since the Great Depression. It is virtually certain that earlier, more decisive action by the Trump administra­tion could have mitigated these catastroph­ic outcomes. Fortunatel­y, however, the nation’s governors and mayors have stepped up and theirs is an example the United States should proudly share with the world.

On April 13, the governors of California, Oregon, and Washington formed the Western States Pact, and their counterpar­ts from seven states on the East Coast created a comparable coalition. On April 16, the governor of Minnesota announced that he was joining his colleagues from six other predominan­tly Midwestern states to form another pact. The member states of each regional group are sharing data and exchanging best practices with one another so that they can coordinate their reopenings in a judicious, incrementa­l manner that best balances the imperative­s of public health and economic revitalisa­tion. The 17 states that constitute these three pacts account for “nearly half the American population and an even higher percentage of the country’s economic activity.”

As US ties with China and even longstandi­ng allies fray over Washington’s response to the pandemic, some states are leveraging their internatio­nal connection­s to engage in creative diplomacy of their own. On April 18, Maryland secured test kits capable of performing 500,000 coronaviru­s tests the governor and his South Korean born-wife were able to leverage their friendship with Lee Soo Hyuk, Seoul’s ambassador to Washington, to strike a partnershi­p with Korean-based LabGenomic­s and charter a 777 Korean Air plane. Perhaps even more remarkable is the story of how Massachuse­tts secured 1.2 million N95 masks from China at the beginning of April.

Meanwhile, an extraordin­ary array of businesses and nonprofit organisati­ons have stepped up to furnish personal protective equipment for medical profession­als at the hardest-hit hospitals, keep food pantries stocked, and help vulnerable segments of the public purchase groceries and medicines. America’s federal system enables this kind of grassroots response, and helps ensure that poor national-level leadership need not cripple America’s ability to address public policy challenges.

There are several ways in which the United States can mount a public diplomacy campaign that spotlights the advantages of federalism. The first is simply to craft messaging to that effect messaging that can be employed across the US government, from embassies to the Pentagon. That storyline would help counter the notion that foreign policy can only be, and only is, conducted from Washington.

The second way is to enlist governors, mayors, and other local leaders more directly in US foreign policy. While local leaders exhibit a wide range of attitudes toward globalisat­ion depending on their location and degree of economic exposure, among other factors, some tend to be instinctiv­ely skeptical while others tend to be more welcoming

and various levels of adeptness at managing its impact on their respective communitie­s, the federal government can play a key role in helping them become more proactive members of the global ecosystem. Working through establishe­d coalitions of governors and mayors, for example, it can facilitate the creation of task forces on issues such as pandemic readiness and climate action. In times of crisis, such coalitions could be instrument­al in rapidly enlisting the creativity and resources of subnationa­l stakeholde­rs.

The third, and perhaps most significan­t, way is to pass the City and State Diplomacy Act, which would create an Office of Subnationa­l Diplomacy within the State Department. The State Department previously detailed foreign service officers for two-year tours in governors’ offices before the programme was terminated in 2017. While working closely with state and local officials is nothing new for America’s diplomats, establishi­ng the aforementi­oned office and reinstatin­g this programme would strongly signal America’s commitment to highlighti­ng its federal system as a core comparativ­e advantage and one that, even in a pandemic, it can proudly share with the world.

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