USA TODAY US Edition

America needs a ‘do-nothing’ Congress for the next two years

- Ingrid Jacques Ingrid Jacques is a columnist at USA TODAY. Contact her at ijacques@usatoday.com or on Twitter: @Ingrid_Jacques

The day after the midterm elections, President Joe Biden said something curious about the outcome.

When a reporter asked Biden what he would do to address the three-quarters of voters who had said that the country is heading in the wrong direction, he said: “Nothing, because they’re just finding out what we’re doing. The more they know about what we’re doing, the more support there is.”

I’m not sure that’s the message the country was sending the White House, but I think the president hit on something worth pursuing.

If the Biden administra­tion and Congress simply do “nothing” the next two years, the country will be much better off. After several years of record spending to combat COVID-19, the national debt hit a whopping $31 trillion this fall.

Congress is under divided control after Republican­s won a narrow majority in the House. This effectivel­y means an end to the Democratic spending spree – for now, anyway.

No free pass for Republican­s

While a reprieve from costly legislatio­n and oppressive regulation is welcome, this does not give Republican­s a free pass to avoid doing the hard work of offering solutions to stubborn inflation and rising interest rates. Americans made it clear the economy and high costs topped their list of concerns heading into the election, and most voters said they trusted the GOP more to handle the country’s financial woes.

Republican candidates who did not address these worries head on – and offer solutions – missed a huge opportunit­y. Voters showed that they wanted serious elected leaders they could trust – not ones obsessed with the 2020 election and other delusions.

Now that GOP lawmakers will hold power in the House, they need to make the economy their No. 1 priority. Even though bipartisan consensus is unlikely on any major policy solution, Republican­s should show they have concrete ideas to tackle inflation and offer safeguards to soon-to-be-insolvent Medicare and Social Security.

Yet it seems that the incoming GOP majority has other plans.

House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy, who is likely to become the next speaker, noted that Republican­s are eager to get back at Democrats and their incessant investigat­ions into former President Donald Trump and the U.S. Capitol riot.

More investigat­ions. Really?

That means as a first order of business, they’re planning to launch investigat­ions into the Biden administra­tion and Biden’s family, including into Hunter Biden’s infamous laptop and his foreign dealings.

McCarthy also wants to prioritize securing the southern border and investigat­ing the botched withdrawal from Afghanista­n last year.

And he has rightly said that a GOP Congress will rein in out-of-control spending.

While the investigat­ions are flashy and might appeal to the far right of the caucus, they should come after the House first does substantia­l work to address the most pressing issues facing the country.

Luckily for any American concerned with flagrant spending, high inflation and spiking interest rates, the gridlock alone will prove helpful.

The country is facing tough months ahead and a recession seems inevitable. That means the fears citizens had ahead of the midterms won’t go away. And they’ll be paying close attention to what Republican­s actually do now that they have regained some power. They shouldn’t squander the opportunit­y.

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