Baltimore Sun

Dems rally for robust government

Pandemic leaves party retooling decades-old beliefs

- By Bill Barrow and Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — When he stood before Congress in 1996 and declared “the era of big government is over,” President Bill Clinton gave voice to a doctrine that permeated Democratic politics for more than two decades. Government, while necessary, shouldn’t be celebrated if the party wanted to win elections.

The coronaviru­s changing that.

Democrats are enthusiast­ically embracing the idea of a robust role for government in American life, abandoning concerns they might alienate the relatively narrow slice of independen­t voters. Instead, they argue, the pandemic is a once-ina-lifetime opportunit­y to show voters how government can play a positive role in responding to a global health crisis and economic slowdown.

Joe Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee, has gone from backing a balanced budget 25 years ago to supporting trillions of dollars in emergency spending. He and other Democrats have proposed a new public health corps and a national infrastruc­ture plan reminiscen­t of New Deal programs. Biden has also urged President Donald Trump to use war powers to direct how banks disperse federal small-business loans.

Democratic calls for further government interventi­on will likely intensify

is after the U.S. unemployme­nt rate for April skyrockete­d to 14.7% — the worst figure since the Great Depression.

“The American people need their government,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said recently. “They need their government to act strongly, boldly and wisely.”

Biden, limited to virtual campaign events because of the pandemic, has hammered Trump for deflecting pandemic responsibi­lities to the states and private sector. In one attack, Biden paraphrase­d a letter from President Abraham Lincoln to a Union general during the Civil War: “If you don’t want to use the army, may I borrow it?”

The dynamics set up key contrasts for voters going into the November election.

Many Republican­s, notably Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, are resisting Democratic calls for additional aid. The GOP is especially split on how much help to give struggling state and city government­s.

Trump, meanwhile, remains difficult to frame in clean ideologica­l lines: He signed the $2 trillion-plus coronaviru­s aid bill and supports an infrastruc­ture program in theory. But he’s threatened to veto anything that helps the U.S. Postal

Service, continues to shift the onus to the states and has made clear that he will cast Biden and all Democrats as “socialists,” regardless of anyone’s actual record or proposals.

Of course, Democrats still have their own philosophi­cal tussle.

Biden, Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi draw fire for not going as far left as the progressiv­es would prefer. Even before the coronaviru­s struck, Biden noted his policy slate was further left than any modern Democratic nominee, including Hillary Clinton in 2016 and President Barack Obama, who plucked Biden from the Senate to serve as vice president for two terms. Pelosi, D-Calif., had panned Republican­s before because they “do not believe in government.”

Yet Biden and Pelosi have held their ground against progressiv­es’ demands for single-payer health insurance, complete student-debt forgivenes­s and the most sweeping climate policies. Democratic congressio­nal leadership also hasn’t endorsed calls for $2,000 monthly checks for all Americans for the duration of any pandemic recession.

“We don’t want any more government than we need,” Pelosi said amid congressio­nal negotiatio­ns. “But we know that governance has evolved.”

Biden’s tack is clear in recent online conversati­ons with party luminaries. Appearing split-screen with former presidenti­al rival Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., Biden hailed the scale of the Depression-era New Deal as a road map. Talking with Hillary Clinton, Biden recalled how they’d have detailed public policy discussion­s when she was secretary of state and he was vice president.

Obama summed up the new Democratic ethos that the distinctio­n is about more than budget numbers. “This crisis has reminded us that government matters, that good government matters,” he said in his endorsemen­t video of Biden.

The question is how voters interpret that, and the electorate has proved fickle and inconsiste­nt.

Polling generally found much broader support for the aid Trump signed into law last March than for the recovery spending Obama signed into law following the 2008 financial collapse. The difference, however, comes mostly in Republican­s joining Democrats in thinking the latest package — signed by a Republican president and adopted by a Republican-run Senate — was the right course.

By comparison, when Democrats controlled both houses of Congress and the presidency in 2009, a majority of Republican voters found that spending to be a bad idea.

That conservati­ve angst fueled the tea party wave that handed the House to Republican­s for the rest of Obama’s presidency and then the Senate for his final two years.

 ?? GREG GIBSON/AP 1996 ?? Democrats embrace a robust role for government, a far cry from President Bill Clinton’s declaratio­n nearly 25 years ago.
GREG GIBSON/AP 1996 Democrats embrace a robust role for government, a far cry from President Bill Clinton’s declaratio­n nearly 25 years ago.

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