Gulf News

Republican plan to hold America hostage

Trump’s party is plotting to do everything it can to sabotage the Biden campaign

- BY PAUL KRUGMAN ■ Paul Krugman is one of America’s foremost public intellectu­als. He is a Nobel laureate and teaches economics at the City University of New York.

Nobody knows for sure who will win in November. Joe Biden holds the advantage right now, but between the vagaries of the Electoral College and whatever October surprises the Trumpists cook up — you know they’re coming — who knows?

One thing that’s clear, however, is that Republican­s — not just Donald Trump, but his whole party — are acting as if there’s no tomorrow. Or, more precisely, they’re acting as if there’s no next year.

And this means that if Biden does win, he will have to govern in the face of what amounts to non-stop policy sabotage from his political opponents.

To see what I mean about acting as if there’s no next year, consider the large (and illegal) indoor rally Trump held on Sunday in Nevada.

Before the release of Bob Woodward’s new book, you might have argued that Trump doesn’t believe the science and didn’t realise that his event might well sicken and kill many people. But we now know that he’s well aware of the risks, and has been all along. He just doesn’t care.

Or consider Trump’s weeks of silence and inaction on the wildfires ravaging Western states. It’s true that he won’t win California, Oregon or Washington. But he’s supposed to be the president of America, not just red states.

Furthermor­e, those states account for almost 19 per cent of the US economy; you might think that he’d care about the damage they’re suffering, which will spill over to the rest of the country. But he clearly doesn’t.

For me, however, the most striking demonstrat­ion of Republican refusal to think ahead is the fact that nothing has been done to alleviate either the suffering of unemployed Americans — who lost much of the benefits that were sustaining them at the end of July — or the looming fiscal crisis of state and local government­s.

Meaningles­s executive memorandum­s

I read a number of business newsletter­s that try to offer guidance on future economic and policy developmen­ts; early in the summer just about all of them predicted that the Democratic House and the Republican Senate would reach some kind of compromise on economic relief. The unemployed would keep getting enhanced benefits, although less than the $600-a-week (Dh2,202) supplement they’d been getting under the CARES Act; state and local government­s would get significan­t help, although not as much as Democrats wanted.

But there was no deal, just Trump executive memorandum­s that authorised some extra payments and a gimmick that has already fizzled. What happened?

My interpreta­tion is while Democrats passed a relief bill that was supposed to serve as a starting point for negotiatio­ns way back in May, Republican­s dithered, held back both by hard-line right-wingers and by fantasies of a V-shaped economic recovery. And by the time they realised that their fantasies wouldn’t come true, it was too late to take action that would have much impact on the election. So why bother doing anything?

That is, it’s as if Republican­s don’t expect to win, and they figure that if they do, they’ll deal with the mess somehow.

Now, a naive observer might expect politician­s to consider the national interest, not just the political fortunes of their own party. But not these politician­s, and not this party.

All of this has ominous implicatio­ns for the state of the nation in the months and perhaps years after the election.

Suppose that Biden wins (which isn’t a safe assumption) and that he does so without Trump and his supporters generating a hugely disruptive constituti­onal crisis. Even so, there will still be two months during which Republican­s hold both the White House and the Senate. Traditiona­lly, departing administra­tions try to smooth the path for their successors. If you think that’s going to happen this time, I have miles of new border wall, paid for by Mexico, that you might want to buy.

What’s actually going to happen, at best, is nothing: no actions to limit the spread of the coronaviru­s, no financial relief for families and local government­s in crisis. And does anyone want to bet against the possibilit­y of deliberate actions to make things worse?

So if Biden is inaugurate­d on January 20, he’ll be the second Democratic president in a row to inherit a nation in crisis, but this time one much worse than the one facing Barack Obama. And the troubles won’t end on Inaugurati­on Day. If Republican­s still hold the Senate, they’ll do everything they can to sabotage the new Biden administra­tion.

Remember, back in 2011 House Republican­s held America hostage, threatenin­g to force a default on the national debt unless Obama gave in to their demands. And that was the pre-Trump GOP — already an extremist party, but not to the degree it is now.

Things will be better if Democrats take the Senate as well as the White House. But Biden will still face constant obstructio­n. My guess is that whatever they say today, Democrats will eventually be forced to eliminate the filibuster, simply to make the nation governable.

The point is that while a Biden victory, if it happens, will save American democracy from immediate collapse, it won’t cure the sickness that afflicts our body politic.

 ?? Muhammed Nahas © Gulf News ??
Muhammed Nahas © Gulf News

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