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Tag: politics (page 6 of 23)

The political version of the bike shed discussion

The metaphor of the bike shed discussion has served me well over the years. Here’s a theory of how it applies to politics:

In the book “Stealth Democracy” (which I previously blogged on here), John Hibbing and Elizabeth Theiss-Morse argue that voters have very weak policy preferences. Indeed, you can get a lot of people to change their mind on policy by asking them whether, thinking through the potential consequences of that policy, they’d like to change their mind. You can get even more of them to change their mind if you pay them a compliment first.

Which makes sense. People don’t know very much about policy. The twist in Hibbing and Theiss-Morse’s argument, however, is that people do know quite a bit about process, or feel they do, and in contrast to their weak policy preferences, they have very strong process preferences. The strongest among them is the belief that the people sent to do the people’s work shouldn’t be working on behalf of special interests, which explains the fury over the Nelson deal. Similarly strong is the aversion to partisan conflict, as most people think that these problems have common-sense solutions, and too much conflict suggests the two parties are deviating from that middle path.

People may not know the details of the health care reform bill, but the know that the legislative process that produced it stinks.

The Republican fundamentalists

Since it was posted yesterday, I have been both horrified and fascinated by the results of this DailyKos/Research 2000 poll of Republicans. It’s impossible to cherry pick the results from the list to make my point because so many of them are so very distressing. Andrew Sullivan posted a great explanation of what this is about:

It has a parallel in the way in which non-violent Islamists have doubled down on medievalism as they feel an overwhelming sense of their own failure to succeed in modernity. There is a profound insecurity and dysfunction in these subcultures which cannot make the transition to modern life and thereby surrender more totally to the ancient past and to hatred of those who succeed. The hatred of Obama – a clearly decent and obviously Christian man – is not about him. It’s about them. It’s about their resentment of a man who has integrated his own identity and made a place for himself in a pluralist world. They cannot do that – so, like Palin, they invent a world of ancient virtues and moral absolutes that they routinely fail to live up to in reality. I mean: look at Palin’s family and Obama’s. Whose is the more traditional? And yet Palin is allegedly the avatar of family values – and Obama is a commie subversive.

I just don’t know what you do with a person who believes that ACORN stole the 2008 election on behalf of a foreign-born socialist who hates white people and should be impeached. These same people are ready to ban openly gay teachers from public schools unless they agree to teach the book of Genesis in science class. I don’t think education is the answer.

One engaged Republican

I beat up on the Republicans a lot, but I want to point out the alternative budget proposal put forth by Wisconsin Republican Paul Ryan. His proposal eliminates the deficit and takes care of the entitlement crisis. It does so by eliminating Medicare and giving seniors vouchers they can use to buy health insurance. If health insurance premiums go up at a higher rate than the voucher amount, it will fall to seniors to make up the difference. His proposal is not something I’d support, but it is an honest attempt to engage with the budget problems the country faces long term, which is more than you can say for most of what Republicans put forth. He argues in favor of his proposal in this interview with Ezra Klein.

The new Republican dystopia

Every day we see a lot of boneheaded proposals from Republicans at every level of government, arguing that taxes are too high and that government spending is basically a big waste. Most Republicans seem to be content to argue that we should cut taxes and eliminate the deficit, and also that military spending should be held at the same level or raised, and, more recently, that Medicare cuts are off limits. There doesn’t seem to be any concern over whether this philosophy is in any way coherent.

Colorado Springs is helpfully providing a working example of Republican governance at work, which the rest of us can learn from. The Denver Post has the details:

More than a third of the streetlights in Colorado Springs will go dark Monday. The police helicopters are for sale on the Internet. The city is dumping firefighting jobs, a vice team, burglary investigators, beat cops — dozens of police and fire positions will go unfilled. The parks department removed trash cans last week, replacing them with signs urging users to pack out their own litter.

Neighbors are encouraged to bring their own lawn mowers to local green spaces, because parks workers will mow them only once every two weeks. If that.

Water cutbacks mean most parks will be dead, brown turf by July; the flower and fertilizer budget is zero.

City recreation centers, indoor and outdoor pools, and a handful of museums will close for good March 31 unless they find private funding to stay open. Buses no longer run on evenings and weekends. The city won’t pay for any street paving, relying instead on a regional authority that can meet only about 10 percent of the need.

The list goes on in the article.

Colorado Springs has the same problem as government at every level. The recession has driven tax receipts way down and employee benefits continue to get more expensive. It seems to me that liberals and conservatives seem to share largely the same expectations of what services shout government provide, but Republicans believe that the amount of taxes the government collects are not relevant to that level of service.

The real State of the Union

Whats truly depressing, however, is that as a country we seem to have completely lost the will and the capacity to collectively confront these challenges. Our union has been torn asunder by a clash of ideologies and special interests and brigades of power-hungry partisans that has resulted in a paralyzing political stalemate. In response, our citizens have become angry, cynical, distrustful and dispirited.

From Washington Post business columnist Steve Pearlstein’s The State of the Union speech Obama would give in a more honest world.

Why transparency won’t save us

The response to people worried about the Supreme Court’s cataclysmic decision to lift any limits on political spending by corporations has been that we can be saved by transparency. That’s what the majority argued in their decision, and that argument has been taken up by conservatives who think that more corporate influence on the work of government is a good thing. But transparency involves only corporations documenting how much they spend, and money that goes unspent is really the crux of the matter.

Corporations have powerful levers to pull without spending a dime, given that they have the opportunity to spend as much as they like. First of all, they can threaten to withhold contributions they might otherwise make unless a legislator does their bidding. Secondly, they can threaten to spend on behalf of a politician’s opponent unless they get their way. Neither of those threats must be reported in any way. And, in many cases, the threats do not even need to be made. Politicians know what corporations want, and they now know that they can spend whatever they like to get it. Does a lobbyist for a coal company really need to call a legislator and tell them not to vote to ban mountaintop removal mining?

So we are now in a situation where the influence of corporations has been magnified to an incredible degree even before the first dollar is spent. And no amount of transparency is going to fix that.

Why term limits are a bad idea

As a California budget-watcher pointed out to me, when you get Arnold Schwarzenegger in a room with the leadership of the Senate and Assembly, Schwarzenegger has the most budget and legislative experience in the room. A guy who was starring in Terminator films as recently as 2003 is now the most seasoned elected official during one of the worst crises California has ever had.

Ezra Klein in The folly of term limits.

Why passing laws is not like making sausage

The crux of the difference, I would say, is that comparing the operations of the US Congress to those of a sausage-maker is a huge insult to the sausage industry. You may or may not think that the sausage-making process looks “gross” in some sense, but the fact of the matter is that sausage is delicious.

Matthew Yglesias in Sausage is Delicious, Mediocre Legislation is Problematic. Read the whole thing.

Huge problem, no solutions

As has been mentioned many times, what we’ve learned in the health care debate is that our government is currently hapless to really engage with the huge problems our country faces. First, let’s look at the magnitude of the health care crisis. Andrew Sullivan links to a chart from National Geographic that illustrates the problem in stark terms. Americans spend a whole lot more on health care than any other country, have ultimate outcomes in the mediocre to poor range, and don’t even go to the doctor very much. We’re spending an awful lot of money and not getting a lot for it. And the second order effect is that our future obligations to continue spending ever increasing amounts of money on health care are going to bankrupt the federal government and eat away at wage growth indefinitely, unless things change in a pretty radical fashion.

As has been mentioned any number of times, this is just one of our really big problems. We also have structural deficits in the federal budget that must be addressed at some point, we have climate change to deal with, and we have any number of other smaller, but still important problems that are also going to require attention.

What we have seen this year is a federal government that is unequipped to grapple with any of these problems in a serious way. Republicans refuse to attempt to solve any of these problems at all. Not only have the Republicans declined to work with the Democrats in moving any bills through the Senate or House this year, but in the six years where they were in charge (not counting 2007 and 2008 where Democrats ran Congress), they opted not to address any of these problems at all. They continue to deny that global warming is even an issue, and the only thing they did on the health care front was work with Democrats to pass an unfunded prescription drug benefit for seniors. And the only thing they did while they were running things was expand the budget deficit to a massive degree through tax cuts without offsetting spending cuts, new programs (like the Medicare drug benefit), and of course, multiple wars that they chose not to fund through revenue, either.

When President Bush was in charge, it was pretty obvious that the most acute problem facing the country was his administration. Now that he’s out of office, it’s clear that we can zero in on the de facto supermajority requirement in the Senate as the largest obstacle to progress. Liberals are angry with President Obama (for some good reasons and some bad ones), but it’s clear that the Senate is the biggest problem. President Obama could be twice as committed to the progressive agenda as he is, and Harry Reid would still need every member of his caucus plus both independents to vote for every bill to make progress. Ezra Klein has an op-ed today that explains just what a liability this is for effective government.

So the health care reform bill that the Senate passed will, I think, be good for the country, but it’s almost devoid of ambition. Beyond expanding coverage, it doesn’t take on any of the biggest problems we face going forward. And it seems clear it was the best bill we could possibly get from the Senate given the rules it operates under. Had Al Franken lost the recount battle in Minnesota, we would probably have nothing. It’s hard not to be pessimistic about the future of the country when one political party has as much power as any has had in decades, and it’s still unable to make real progress on its agenda.

Head to head on health care

If you’re a liberal or progressive or whatever, chances are you fall into one of two camps today when it comes to health care reform. Either you’re in this camp (with Ezra Klein):

It’s difficult to conclude that these things slip backwards rather than marching forwards. The $900 billion for people who need help, the regulations on insurers and the exchanges that will force them to compete, the structure that will make health care nearly universal and the trends that suggest more people — and more politically powerful people — will be entering the new system as employer-based health care erodes — it all makes this look even more like the sort of program that will take root and be made better, as opposed to the sort of common opportunity people should feel comfortable rejecting. It doesn’t feel like that now. But then, it rarely does.

Or you’re in this camp (with Howard Dean):

If I were a senator, I would not vote for the current health-care bill. Any measure that expands private insurers’ monopoly over health care and transfers millions of taxpayer dollars to private corporations is not real health-care reform. Real reform would insert competition into insurance markets, force insurers to cut unnecessary administrative expenses and spend health-care dollars caring for people. Real reform would significantly lower costs, improve the delivery of health care and give all Americans a meaningful choice of coverage. The current Senate bill accomplishes none of these.

Nate Silver has 20 questions for people in Howard Dean’s camp.

Update: Nate Silver offers his elevator pitch for health care reform.

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