Los Angeles Times

A crisis of competence

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Elected officials in the nation’s capital have spent the past several weeks demonstrat­ing that they can’t do the jobs voters sent them there to do. On Capitol Hill, lawmakers got into an extended spat that shut down much of the government for 16 days and threatened to turn Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew into the world’s biggest deadbeat. Meanwhile, the Obama administra­tion launched a website for the new federally operated health insurance exchanges that failed epically, with so many design flaws and technical problems that it may take weeks to reach a basic level of reliabilit­y.

Granted, the government shutdown and the HealthCare.gov meltdown happened for very different reasons. The former was a result of a cynical and ill-conceived gambit by House Republican­s, who tried to force changes in Obamacare that they didn’t have the votes to win. The latter stemmed from the administra­tion’s inept management of a complex project, a problem exacerbate­d by political imperative­s that repeatedly trumped technical ones.

The overarchin­g message to the public, however, is the same in both instances: Your leaders are incompeten­t.

And the people are listening. Gallup reports that Congress’ approval rating sank to an abysmal 11% during the shutdown, after rebounding slightly from its low of 10% in February. President Obama, meanwhile, has seen his approval rating slide steadily this year to 39%, nearing the low point of his tenure. Dwindling faith in government has contribute­d to a pessimism about the economy that discourage­s consumer spending, the lifeblood of U.S. growth. The relentless stream of bad news out of Washington last month coincided with sharp drops in consumers’ hopes for the economy and their confidence about the future.

The administra­tion can undo some of the damage by fixing HealthCare.gov soon, giving people time to shop before policies are supposed to go into effect Jan. 1. But Washington faces another potential shutdown and default early next year, when the temporary measures enacted in mid-October expire. The best way for lawmakers to avoid a replay of last month’s debacle, would be to strike a deal before the end of the year that keeps federal agencies operating and the Treasury paying its bills.

That’s easier said than done, considerin­g how far apart House Republican­s and Senate Democrats are — and how polarized their constituen­ts are too. Yet the lesson of Tuesday’s gubernator­ial elections in New Jersey and Virginia may be that ideologues are in less demand than leaders who can work across the political aisle to get things done. Having failed in three previous attempts to reach a bipartisan “grand bargain” on taxes and entitlemen­ts, lawmakers need to show their constituen­ts that they can at least handle the simpler task of funding the government without resorting to yet another manufactur­ed crisis. We’re not asking for miracles here, just competence.

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