Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Moderates and progressiv­es, get together

- David Brooks David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.

The Biden administra­tion is in mortal peril. Hemmed in by circumstan­ces, the Democrats bet nearly their entire domestic agenda on the passage of two gigantic bills, the trillion-dollar infrastruc­ture package and the $3.5 trillion reconcilia­tion package.

Both are now in serious trouble because Democratic moderates and progressiv­es aren’t close to agreeing on what should be in the bills, how much they should cost or even when they should be voted on. If these bills crumble, the Democrats will fail as a governing majority, and it will be far more likely that Donald Trump will win the presidency in 2024.

We don’t want that, so the question is, how can moderate and progressiv­e Democrats create a package they both can live with? The best way to do that is to build on each side’s best insights.

The best progressiv­e insight is that we need a really big package right now.

Joe Manchin, a leading moderate, argues that the $3.5 trillion package is too big. The economy is already growing. Inflation is already rising. The national debt is already gigantic. We don’t need another flood of deficit-bulging spending. We should pause to think this through.

The American people largely agree with Manchin. An Axios poll revealed that 64% of Americans living in suburbs support a strategic pause while only 36% oppose one (in urban areas, 53% support large-scale welfare spending now while 47% support a pause).

But Manchin and those people supporting his position are missing the big picture. We’re a nation in decline. We’re in decline because we have become a wildly unequal, class-rived society in which tens of millions of people feel alienated, disillusio­ned, distrustfu­l and left out.

The progressiv­es have a strategy to reverse American decline: Redistribu­te money to people without a college degree. Make health care more affordable so people have a stable foundation upon which to build their lives. Offer child tax credits so parents have more options. Expand free public education by four years so the coming generation­s are better equipped.

That’s a plausible strategy and the time to enact it is now. There are rare critical junctures in history. COVID-19 has exposed the tears in the American social fabric and made Americans more enthusiast­ic about government spending. If we can add, say, $4 trillion to the roughly $5.3 trillion in COVID-relief spending that already passed, we’ll at least have made a giant effort to heal the ruptures bedeviling American society.

The key moderate insight is that we’re America, not Europe. We are mostly an immigrant-fueled, frontier nation. We place a lot of value on individual striving, hard work and mobility. We are hostile to centralize­d power.

The moderates are right to point out that a newly expanded welfare state should flow along the grain of American values and not against it.

We should not be doling out huge benefits to people without asking anything from them in return, like work and education requiremen­ts. A recent YouGov/American Compass poll found that only 28% of voters said they supported a permanent child tax credit that went to people regardless of whether they work. The history of welfare reform over the past few decades shows that there are better outcomes for kids when government­s help parents join the labor force.

The upshot is that we need a big jolt to heal the nation, but every plank should be about building a society in which if you work hard you will get ahead. We should ditch provisions like Medicare expansion and double down on pre-K, community colleges, infrastruc­ture, green energy jobs and the child tax credit.

The theme should not be cradle-to-grave security. It should be giving people an open field and fair chance to be better capitalist­s, pioneers of their own destinies. America will reverse decline with a measure that is progressiv­e in its scope and moderate in its values.

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