Sentinel & Enterprise

How can our federal government solve big problems?

- By Jim Nowlan

Congress is frozen. It can’t even pass a budget, the fundamenta­l task of government­s. The longterm thinking is: How do we get to next week? World leaders wonder what has happened to the U.S.

All the while, big problems fester. Social Security and Medicare each face insolvency in a few years, and the national debt is soaring to unhealthy levels, with no reversal in sight, which saps funding for defense and human services.

Why doesn’t our national government look ahead? After all, local government­s are awash in comprehens­ive long-term plans. Unfortunat­ely, there is an inverse relationsh­ip between the level at which elected officials serve and their willingnes­s to do long-term thinking. The higher the potential political costs to state and national politician­s, the less the attention to often nettlesome longterm problems.

The reasons for our congressio­nal dysfunctio­n are clear:

1. Polarizati­on between evenly divided parties, which come at policy from ideologica­l poles.

2. The unacceptab­le political risks of showing the courage to address problems while they are still manageable.

The political cost of displaying the mettle to manage a tough problem, as in increasing taxes or reducing spending, or a combinatio­n of the two, almost guarantees a primary nomination challenge from a congressma­n’s right or left.

Elected officials aren’t into leadership, as they proclaim, but followersh­ip of lightly informed public opinion. The lack of leadership is deepened when the problems are evident at present yet the consequenc­es lie in the future — that is, they can be put off, though at great cost.

So, instead, elected officials play “gotcha.” They condemn the other party for all the failures of humanity, when everyone knows that some degree of compromise will be required to address the big

problems.

Structure is important to government­s. For example, the regular meetings of the Federal Open Market Committee provide critical informatio­n to investors about

the future direction of the economy.

I propose here a kind of “structured depolariza­tion,” in which the president and four top congressio­nal leaders, plus several rotating Cabinet members, be required to sit down together over dinner, say, every two months, to wrestle with the big problems on the horizon. We might call them the Senior Council on Major Challenges. (Please, readers, come up with a better name.)

This council would be charged with reporting and recommendi­ng to Congress policies that would result, for example, in solvency for our major social safety net programs. There are more than enough talented staff at the Congressio­nal Research Service, the executive budget office and in scores of D.C. think tanks to lay out solid policy options.

Such a council wouldn’t, of course, guarantee action in the form of recommenda­tions to and subsequent action by Congress. Yet the existence alone of a council that meets regularly could accomplish several things:

• Highlight for the American public the difficult, often costly, options that need to be considered.

 ?? STEFANI REYNOLDS — GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA ?? The House of Representa­tives is seen through a reflection of the U.S. Capitol dome on the morning of the US midterm election, in Washington, DC, on November 8, 2022.
STEFANI REYNOLDS — GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA The House of Representa­tives is seen through a reflection of the U.S. Capitol dome on the morning of the US midterm election, in Washington, DC, on November 8, 2022.

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