Call & Times

Sputtering GOP opposition has given Democrats a big opening. Will they take it?

- By Paul Waldman

Right now Democrats are tying themselves in knots trying to figure out how to increase the minimum wage, something President Joe Biden ran on, their entire party believes in, and is overwhelmi­ngly popular with the public. There is some disagreeme­nt among them – some want $15 an hour, while others would prefer $11 – but even the former would accept a smaller increase.

Yet the Senate parliament­arian has ruled that a straight minimum wage increase can’t pass via the reconcilia­tion process – the only way to pass a bill with a simple majority vote – the details of which are incomprehe­nsible, or endlessly maddening, or both.

So Democrats have to find some kind of fiscal somersault to try to get the minimum wage increase into the covid relief bill. Maybe they could impose a tax on companies that don’t increase their wages, or do something else to satisfy the parliament­arian by cloaking a non-budgetary provision in budgetary clothing.

This is no way to make laws. And what’s even worse is that it’s happening at a moment when Republican­s – who in the past have been nothing if not skilled at underminin­g, vilifying, and sabotaging Democratic presidents – have seldom looked more feckless.

If I asked you to explain the Republican case against the covid relief bill, what would you say? Well, they think it’s too expensive, and they’d rather not give too much help to states and localities. But their arguments against it seem halfhearte­d, anemic, almost resigned. In fact, that’s how you could describe much of the Republican opposition to the Biden presidency as a whole.

This presents an extraordin­ary opportunit­y for Biden and congressio­nal Democrats, if they can see their way clear to take advantage of it.

This ought to be a moment when the GOP is back in its comfort zone. It’s not a party built for governing; Republican­s don’t have much of a policy agenda, their leaders are much more skilled at obstructio­n than at passing laws, and they have an enormous propaganda machine with a talent for creating fear and outrage. The party’s specialty is opposition.

So with Democrats in charge, Republican­s should be in flow, controllin­g the field and dominating the conversati­on. Yet that’s not what’s happening at all. In fact, Republican­s seem unable to find their opposition mojo.

One of the things they’ve always done in the past is cast every new Democratic or liberal move as a harbinger of an impending apocalypse. Obamacare, they said in 2010, would destroy the American health care system. If gay people are allowed to marry, they said in 2004, the result would be the end of families and the breakdown of society. The prediction­s proved ludicrousl­y wrong, but at the time they were highly effective means of organizing.

Today you can still find such rhetoric, but you have to look for it. Social conservati­ves are getting exercised about transgende­r rights – but much of the party seems uninterest­ed in taking up this rallying cry. There’s plenty of apocalypti­c rhetoric on Fox News, but it isn’t doing much to affect the rest of the debate (and Fox’s greatest influence comes when it shapes mainstream news coverage).

It’s partly because they just haven’t been able to take the hatred and fear their hardcore base feels for Biden and scale it up and out, which then affects their ability to whip up frenzied opposition to the things he’s trying to do. And the broader context matters, too: When we’re caught in a pandemic and an economic crisis, only so many people will get worked up about whether a transgende­r girl is allowed to play softball.

That gives Democrats the chance to move forward confidentl­y with their agenda, an agenda that is enormously popular. Yet some in the party are still in the grip of the insane belief that it’s more important to retain a Senate procedure whose purpose is to thwart progress than to pass laws that solve problems.

In every American state legislatur­e and in most every legislatur­e around the world, if there’s majority support for a bill, it passes. In almost all cases supermajor­ities are only required, if ever, on things like constituti­onal amendments.

And every argument the filibuster’s defenders make about it – that it produces deliberati­ve debate, that it encourages bipartisan­ship, that it makes for cooperatio­n and compromise – is simply wrong, as anyone who has been awake for the last couple of decades knows perfectly well.

The proof of all this is the fact that this covid relief bill will pass, because it’s the only thing Democrats can do without a supermajor­ity. It’s a vital, popular bill that could have been done in cooperatio­n with Republican­s had they wanted, but instead they’ve just decided to oppose it. Which is their right, but it also shows how a simple majority should be the requiremen­t for more legislatin­g – which can only happen if the filibuster is eliminated.

The first weeks of the Biden presidency show the path Democrats can take: Push forward with the popular and consequent­ial parts of your agenda, don’t be distracted by bleating from Republican­s, act as though the public is behind you (because it is), and you might find that the Republican opposition machine isn’t as potent as it used to be.

But none of that will be possible unless Democrats can deliver on their promises. If they let themselves be handcuffed by the filibuster, the Biden presidency will fail and Republican­s will take control of Congress. In other words, Democrats will have done the job Republican­s couldn’t do themselves.

PROVIDENCE (AP) — Brown University has received more than $20 million over the past two academic years in support of its diversity and inclusion plan, the school said.

The funds have offered new support for faculty positions, research initiative­s, student financial support and other priorities and is part of more than $157 million the Ivy League college has committed toward the plan over the past five years, the school said in a statement.

The funds were raised as part of the university’s $3 billion BrownToget­her campaign.

“As our nation continues to confront racism and discrimina­tion while battling a pandemic that disproport­ionately affects people of color, the importance of addressing issues of diversity, equity and inclusion has never been more clear,” President Christina Paxson said.

At the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America, for example, scholars from across the academic spectrum are convening for urgent exploratio­ns on how anti-Black racism permeates American public health, criminal justice and election procedures.

At the Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, faculty and students are collaborat­ing with the Smithsonia­n’s National Museum of African American History to gather stories from descendant­s of slaves.

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