Houston Chronicle Sunday

The return of the chastened establishm­ent is what we need

David Brooks says both sides have more in common with each other than they do with extremists and that the working class must be prioritize­d.

- Brooks is a New York Times columnist.

What should we do during the next two years of divided government? We could spend them as we’ve spent the last two: React to every Trump outrage. Keep Trump’s narcissist­ic provocatio­ns at center stage. Express daily contempt from within the safety of our political silos.

This seems to be the business model for cable news and online media. There’s a big, reliable audience of people who will tune in to feel appalled by and superior to President Donald Trump, and who are addicted to their daily rituals of moral onanism.

On the other hand, we could put the Trump soap opera off to the side and pay attention to actual Americans and actual solutions. We could acknowledg­e that we are an evenly divided country. We could build the bipartisan governing coalitions and agendas suited to that reality.

Fortunatel­y, many people are opting for plan B. For example, the Convergenc­e Center for Policy Resolution gathers stakeholde­rs across the political spectrum and gets them working together on common visions — union bosses with Walmart executives, teacher union leaders with charter school heads.

Washington think tanks are undergoing a fundamenta­l evolution. A lot of them, like the American Enterprise Institute and the Brookings Institutio­n, were built to advise parties that no longer exist. They were built for a style of public debate — based on social science evidence and congressio­nal hearings that are more than just show trials — that no longer exists. Many people at these places have discovered that they have more in common with one another than they do with the extremists on their own sides.

So suddenly there is a flurry of working together across ideologica­l lines. Next week, for example, the group Opportunit­y America, with Brookings and AEI, will release a bipartisan agenda called “Work, Skills, Community: Restoring Opportunit­y for the Working Class.”

Written by a wide array of scholars, the report starts with the truth that the working class has been mostly ignored by the rest of society. Government has welfare programs to serve the poor and they have programs like 529 savings accounts to subsidize the rich. But there’s little for families making, say, $50,000 a year.

Businesses like Amazon will invest in rich places like New York and Northern Virginia, but they won’t invest much in workingcla­ss communitie­s in Ohio or Kentucky. Universiti­es, religious organizati­ons and activist groups will recruit from the affluent suburbs and serve those in dire poverty, but they barely touch the working class.

What you get is a layer of society that has been denuded of institutio­ns and social bonds. Working-class men have been dropping out of the labor force at alarming rates. A generation ago, working-class families were about as likely to be part of religious communitie­s as affluent Americans, but now their participat­ion rates have plummeted. A generation ago, working-class families were nearly as likely to be married as affluent people, but now only half the children in working-class families will be raised in adolescenc­e by stably married parents. From the 1970s to the 2000s, the share of working-class people aged 25 to 60 who were involved in a neighborho­od organizati­on fell from 71 percent to 52 percent.

As the authors of the Opportunit­y America report lay out the evidence, you see how the debate has evolved over the past few years. First, there used to be relatively little research attention paid to the working class at all. Now it’s the epicenter. Second, there used to be a silly debate over whether economics or culture explained social breakdown. Now these two elements are woven seamlessly together. Third, geography plays a much bigger role. Social problems are concentrat­ed in specific places.

The authors of this report dismiss the policy slogans coming from the extremes. Building a wall is not a policy. Universal basic income degrades the work ethic that is at the core of working-class life. Free college is a massive subsidy for the upper middle class.

Instead, the authors come up with a broad left/right agenda that 70 percent of Republican­s and Democrats could support: wage subsidies, improved parental leave, work requiremen­ts for some federal benefits, child care tax credits.

I especially like their point that we have overemphas­ized four-year colleges as the only route to success. In 2016, the federal government spent $139 billion on postsecond­ary education and training. Only a sliver, 14 percent, went to career education and training. Private sector employers fetishize the college degree even where it’s unnecessar­y. Twothirds of the job postings for production supervisor­s now require a college degree. But only 16 percent of the people currently holding those jobs have such a degree.

One of the core questions before us is this: Who is going to lead this country? Is it perpetual outsiders like Trump, with no governing or policy competence, who say the establishm­ents have forfeited all credibilit­y? Or are there enough chastened members of establishm­ents, who have governing experience, who acknowledg­e past mistakes, who take the time to reconnect with the country and apply their expertise in new ways?

I don’t know about you, but I’ll take a chastened establishm­ent any day.

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