Miami Herald

Punishing lawmakers who compromise ensures we’ll never fix our most enduring problems

- BY PATRICIA MURPHY The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on ©2021 The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on

Holding his first campaign-style rally in months, an out-of-practice Donald J. Trump forgot to strand attendees in a parking lot Saturday night.

When I tell people that I cover politics for a living, the response I almost always hear is that people want Congress, or the Legislatur­e, or fill-in-the-blank-government-entity to “put politics aside and solve problems.”

“Why can’t they just do that?” people want to know.

For a perfect example of why it’s harder and harder to “just do that,” especially in Washington, look at the For the People Act that Democrats tried to move through the Senate.

The federal elections and campaign overhaul started life in 2019 as a 706-page message bill, meaning a best-casescenar­io, in-a-perfectwor­ld proposal. It wasn’t designed to pass, so much as to illustrate the values Democrats hold when it comes to campaigns and elections.

As usually happens, after an even-larger proposal came forward in 2021, someone, in this case Sen. Joe Manchin, put forward a trimmeddow­n concept that the Democrat said he could sell to his voters at home in West Virginia.

Georgia’s U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock told NBC News he thought Manchin’s overall compromise was “significan­t.”

Stacey Abrams, who has become a national leader on voting rights, called Manchin’s concepts “a vital first step,” adding that it was “absolutely” the kind of compromise she could support.

Abrams never said she would support only the Manchin proposal, or that she would stop fighting for more. But, within hours, fellow Democrats and votingrigh­ts groups were on Abrams, pushing her to say Manchin’s proposal was not nearly enough.

While Democrats were balking at Abrams from the left, Republican campaign operatives started circulatin­g yearsold Warnock statements, when he equated state voter ID cards to a poll tax. The Republican National Committee accused Warnock of flip-flopping, since Manchin’s framework would have included a voter ID provision.

“Warnock is blatantly lying.” the GOP attack said.

A review of the senator’s statements shows he wasn’t lying. Instead his openness to Manchin’s idea was, wait for it, compromisi­ng. Not caving, not flip-flopping, but being willing to consider an idea that’s half of what most Democrats wanted, but much more than what they got in the end.

Shot down from the start, Manchin’s idea never got off the ground. And Republican­s in the Senate blocked the larger bill, calling it a partisan power grab.

But the entire episode showed how few incentives for compromise exist in modern politics, and how many incentives there are for elected officials to simply dig in their heels.

Not long ago, Sen. Johnny Isakson occupied the Senate seat that Warnock is in now. Before Isakson was Sen. Paul Coverdell. Both Republican­s were known to be conservati­ve, but also ready to work with Democrats when it advanced their goals.

As conservati­ve as Coverdell was, he teamed up with Sen. Ted Kennedy on the education overhaul known as No Child Left Behind.

If you have ever put money into a 529 savings account for a child’s education, you can thank Coverdell and Kennedy for the compromise that created it.

Very few voices in the political process today whisper in the ear of a politician, “Put politics aside and solve the problem.” But a handful of leaders do it anyway.

Every one of the most important legislativ­e achievemen­ts in Congress has been the result of some kind of compromise, from education to healthcare to military bases to nuclear nonprolife­ration.

Over the next week, members of Congress are working to negotiate compromise­s on everything from police reform to voting rights to a massive infrastruc­ture package.

If you want progress on any of those issues before the next presidenti­al election, don’t fall for the partisan talking points or the fundraisin­g appeals.

Pick up your phone and make the case to the ones who need to hear it.

“Put politics aside and solve the problem,” you can tell them.

If we keep punishing leaders for simply being open to compromise, we’ll keep the partisan, brittle Congress we have and the dysfunctio­nal government we deserve.

 ?? Getty Images ?? In Congress, the lack of compromise has stalled important legislatio­n.
Getty Images In Congress, the lack of compromise has stalled important legislatio­n.
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