Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

A modest, bipartisan agenda for `23

- Vero■ique de Rugy Columnist Veronique de Rugy is the George Gibbs Chair in Political Economy and a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

The upcoming midterm election has got me thinking about divided government. In normal times, the prospect of newly shared power in Washington might have me looking forward to the resulting slowdown of one party's hyperactiv­e agenda. The Democrats who are in power are indeed pushing a fiscal and regulatory agenda that has become a serious risk to Americans' prosperity and freedom.

But these are not normal times. Today, I don't know how confident I am in divided government. If it's going to work, Republican­s must bring better ideas to the table, and both parties must be more open to bipartisan­ship.

Here are just a few of my concerns. Some GOP candidates are either barely fit or altogether unfit for office. Democrats may be no better, but two wrongs don't make a right. More and more, many Republican­s abandon serious thinking about policy and governing and instead focus on making Democrats' lives a living hell.

I also worry that the main result of divided government will simply be a continuati­on of the hyperparti­san investigat­ions of the other party. I am not looking forward to Republican investigat­ions of Hunter Biden.

Let me suggest an alternativ­e, albeit imperfect, path.

From my small-government perspectiv­e, divided government typically has a small advantage, but moving away from today's toxic political environmen­t will require politician­s on both sides of the aisle to learn to work together to address our national challenges.

Based on past bipartisan efforts, I do worry that Congress will only work together to pass a counterpro­ductive extended child credit or federal paid leave progra. But I hope they would instead find a practical means of dealing with the crisis at the border. This mess won't get resolved without Republican­s and Democrats working together.

Besides, most Americans want to restore order at the border while also generally welcoming immigrants. Immigrants are a proven positive force in the U.S. economy. The country has plenty of space and 10.1 million job openings that native-born Americans seem uninterest­ed in filling. It appears to me that there is plenty of potential for a productive compromise.

Another area where a bipartisan effort would be fruitful is marijuana legalizati­on. While cannabis is legal for medical or recreation­al use in many states, it is still classified as an illegal Schedule I drug at the federal level. Biden took the first step last week by asking the Department of Health and Human Services and the attorney general to look into changing the federal government's approach.

The GOP should get on board. Americans are pro-legalizati­on. The War on Drugs has torn families apart and especially hurts lower-income African Americans. Republican­s might recall that one of the most famous conservati­ves of the past century, William F. Buckley, supported marijuana decriminal­ization.

Finally, to realize the bipartisan goal of renewing our infrastruc­ture, Republican­s should take a second pass at reforming the 1970 National Environmen­tal Policy Act (NEPA). This act requires federal agencies to consider the environmen­tal impacts of their major actions. The results have been an unnecessar­ily high barrier to infrastruc­ture projects. The Trump administra­tion pushed some reforms of this act, but these were unwisely reversed by the Biden administra­tion.

Scholars from both sides of the aisle have produced lots of data showing that NEPA's enormous economic costs far exceed its environmen­tal improvemen­ts. While voters might not know how terrible NEPA is, they do want wellmainta­ined roads and bridges. That result won't happen in a timely fashion without serious NEPA reform.

In this upside-down world where I have mixed feelings about divided government, bipartisan compromise that solves problems rather than growing the government would cool tensions and address some of our most pressing challenges.

 ?? MARK WILSON — GETTY IMAGES ?? A Capitol police officer stands guard in front of the United States Capitol building as the American flag flies at half staff.
MARK WILSON — GETTY IMAGES A Capitol police officer stands guard in front of the United States Capitol building as the American flag flies at half staff.
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