The Commercial Appeal

Ambitious ideas tend to backfire politicall­y

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Americans say they want politician­s to tackle the big issues and get things done. In 2008, they even elected a presidenti­al candidate who said he was interested in “fundamenta­lly transformi­ng the United States of America.”

Yet almost every time elected officials have tried bold problem-solving in the past 20 years, it has produced a backlash against them. The more ambitious the attempt, the worse the political repercussi­ons have been.

The pattern has persisted now through three administra­tions. President Bill Clinton’s attempt to ban assault weapons succeeded, and his attempt to reform health care failed; both of them contribute­d to his party’s loss of the House and Senate in 1994.

President George W. Bush’s ambitious initiative­s also backfired. The education reform called No Child Left Behind, although it passed on a bipartisan vote, became unpopular as parents blamed it for schools’ “teaching to the test.” Bush’s attempt to make Social Security solvent arrested any momentum he had after his re-election. And a lot of the Congress members who voted for the 2008 legislatio­n that rescued the financial system now probably wish they could have done it by secret ballot.

The two most important pieces of legislatio­n proposed under President Barack Obama — the 2009 fiscal stimulus and the 2010 health care law — passed but got mostly negative reviews. The health law seems to have cost the Democrats congressio­nal seats in 2010 and may again this fall.

There have been exceptions to the rule under each president. Bush’s tax cuts and Obama’s financial regulation­s don’t appear to have either helped or hurt the politician­s behind them very much. And both welfare reform under Clinton and a prescripti­on-drug benefit for seniors under Bush actually paid off politicall­y.

The successful cases are instructiv­e. In both, a president was playing on the other side’s turf: scaling back an entitlemen­t in the Democrat’s case and expanding one in the Republican’s.

The British politician Enoch Powell once remarked that “in the welfare state not to take away is more blessed than to give.” In the 1960s, it may have been possible for a politician to offer voters benefits, seemingly for free, and rise in the polls as a result. But the sense that our government is now overextend­ed may have made such expansion seem less feasible without making retrenchme­nt appealing. People are markedly unhappy with the status quo, but they’re even more fearful of what might take its place.

That’s a coherent set of attitudes built on distrust for the political class in Washington. If voters think politician­s have made a lot of messes, they may presume that their solutions will only make things worse. That kind of skepticism creates a high hurdle for ambitious free-market and limited-government reforms just as much as for liberal ones.

Whatever the explanatio­n for this legislativ­e curse, it must have something to do with how frequently power has gone back and forth between the parties over the past two decades. It also helps explain the fond memories people have of Clinton’s presidency.

If voters think politician­s have made a lot of messes, they may presume that their solutions will only make things worse. That kind of skepticism creates a high hurdle for ambitious free-market and limited-government reforms just as much as for liberal ones.

Americans think better of Clinton’s time in office than they do of either Bush’s or Obama’s. In part that’s because the 1990s were a time of relative peace and prosperity. Perhaps it’s also because Clinton’s health care law failed and he undertook no grand initiative­s during the six years he governed with Congress under opposition control. He came back from the 1994 congressio­nal defeats by blocking the Republican­s’ big plans and undertakin­g small-scale efforts, such as encouragin­g public schools to adopt uniforms.

When Bush ran to replace Clinton, he scorned his predecesso­r’s lowered ambitions. “So much promise, to no great purpose,” was one of his refrains about Clinton at the Republican convention in 2000. Bush famously derided “small ball” politics.

But maybe in our era small ball is what people like. If so, then activists with more far-reaching agendas will have to resign themselves to advancing them in small bits. And people considerin­g running for office should know that politics, for the foreseeabl­e future, is probably not going to be much fun. Ramesh Ponnuru is a columnist for Bloomberg View.

 ??  ?? DAVID HORSEY OF THE LOS ANGELES TIMES
DAVID HORSEY OF THE LOS ANGELES TIMES

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