Springfield News-Sun

‘Buy American’ sounds good, but it’s really just more bipartisan folly

- Jonah Goldberg Jonah Goldberg is editor of The Dispatch and the hosts The Remnant podcast.

You hear it all the time: Our politics is too partisan, too polarized, too divided. Why can’t both parties work together for the common good? But it’s worth pointing out that sometimes bipartisan consensus is awful.

The worst form of elite agreement is usually the product of politician­s pandering to populist sentiment. When both parties serve as vessels for popular passions, they ignore experts, the lessons of history and suspend their own critical faculties.

This assertion bothers a lot of populists because they confuse populism with democracy. But the two things, while superficia­lly similar, are in fact very different. Democracy, properly understood, is about disagreeme­nt and debate, about making public arguments about unpopular truths. Populism is inherently anti-intellectu­al, elevating emotions and gut feelings, denying the existence of inconvenie­nt facts. “The people of Nebraska are for free silver and I am for free silver,” the great American populist William Jennings Bryan declared. “I will look up the arguments later.”

For the last week, Washington’s chattering class has been obsessed with Joe Biden’s politicall­y successful exchange with Republican­s over Social Security and Medicare. During the State of the Union he maneuvered the GOP into a standing ovation to “protect” these entitlemen­t programs. But while his admirers cheer and his detractors grumble about Biden’s framing of the politics — the GOP never signed on to Sen. Rick Scott’s proposal to “sunset” entitlemen­t programs every five years and did not threaten to hold the debt ceiling debate “hostage” to cuts — there’s been precious little attention to the lies about the policy underneath the alleged lies about politics.

Biden suggested he could pay for sweeping infrastruc­ture programs and keep entitlemen­ts solvent simply by finally making the wealthiest and biggest corporatio­ns begin to pay their fair share. He alluded to the fact that workers have paid into Social Security and Medicare from their “very first paycheck they’ve started.”

It was nonsense — popular nonsense. Sure, workers have paid into these programs all their lives, but they get more out of them than they pay in, which is why Biden’s own Social Security Trustees predict insolvency in the next decade. And suggesting that raising taxes on the rich and biggest corporatio­ns will save these programs from insolvency is demagoguer­y, popular demagoguer­y. (Never mind that low corporate tax revenues are the result not of greed but of the tax code.)

Or consider Biden’s vow to force all infrastruc­ture projects to be “made in America” with American ingredient­s: “I mean it. Lumber, glass, drywall, fiber-optic cable. And on my watch, American roads, bridges and American highways are going to be made with American products as well.”

Every time you hear “buy American” you should immediatel­y translate that into “we’re going to pay extra” or “we’re going to buy subpar products.” As Peter Coy of The New York Times puts it, “If the American-made products were cheaper, better or both, there would be no need to force agencies to buy them.”

When Donald Trump pushed his economic nationalis­m, many Republican­s hypocritic­ally abandoned their opposition to crony capitalism and jumped on board while many Democrats hypocritic­ally abandoned their fondness for industrial policy and discovered the glories of free trade.

This time around, Republican­s — convinced they can become a “workers party” — aren’t flipping back, but Democrats are. So give credit where it’s due. Trump largely succeeded in turning the GOP into a pro-crony capitalism party, and Joe Biden has cemented this bipartisan folly.

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