OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
A Pyrrhic Victory in a Broken Senate
Aug. 6,
2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/06/opinion/senate-infrastructure-bill-bipartisan.html
By Alex
Pareene
Mr. Pareene
has covered politics and the Senate since 2004.
Around the
time of the enactment of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act,
in March, the political commentariat devoted a lot of airtime and column inches
to a telling question: What lessons had President Joe Biden and the Democratic
Party learned from the Obama era? Congressional Democrats passed the relief
bill on a party-line vote. Watering it down to achieve bipartisan support would
have been a “mistake,” Senator Chuck Schumer, the majority leader, said at the
time, one that Democrats would not be making again. The administration only had
so much time, after all, to try to pass the most pro-worker labor reforms in a
generation, or to put an end to congressional malapportionment.
Well, now
it’s August, and Congress has not passed either of those things (or a serious
climate bill, or major health care reform, or immigration reform). Instead, we
might soon get a larger than usual bipartisan highway bill, if the Senate
manages to pass it before heading off for recess.
What may
appear to be an imminent victory for bipartisan deal-making was in fact a
drawn-out demonstration of how broken the Senate is as an institution. The
Senate (with the White House’s support) wasted months cajoling and
rehabilitating a handful of key Republicans only to pass a smaller version of
something Democrats could theoretically have passed entirely on their own.
Moving the bill forward only looks like a victory if one accepts the sclerosis
and dysfunction of the Senate as a natural obstacle to be overcome with cunning
and patience, not a self-imposed limitation on effective and responsive
governance.
The
Democrats, of course, have the slimmest possible Senate vote margin, and the
party’s right flank — Senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema in particular —
made it clear that they did not support eliminating the Senate’s de facto 60
vote requirement for legislation. Mr. Biden’s full infrastructure plan would
not have passed with 51 votes the day after the Covid relief bill even if he
had tried to do it that way.
So the
White House, early on, threw itself into trying to hash out a bipartisan bill
(and then, they promise, a more ambitious reconciliation attempt) with the
gusto of a group very used to brokering bipartisan megadeals that (more often
than not, in recent history) fall apart at the last moment. Any White House
effort to get two Democratic senators, Mr. Manchin and Ms. Sinema, on board
without also bringing along at least 10 of their Republican friends was quickly
thrown aside. In fact, as White House insiders told political reporters last
spring, holding extended bipartisan negotiations that fall apart at the last
moment was the plan for winning the support of Mr. Manchin and Ms. Sinema.
From a
policy perspective, splitting the proposal in two makes little sense. If the
Democrats manage to carry out the second half of their plans, and pass a
broader bill with even more funding for infrastructure later this fall, they
will have achieved the same result — just a lot slower than if they had allowed
these negotiations to die months ago and moved forward with reconciliation on
their own. Keeping the two bills separate really only makes sense to those
whose minds have been warped by spending multiple years in that strangest
legislative body, the United States Senate. There politicians learn that the
deal is the goal in and of itself, and whatever it does or doesn’t do is of
secondary importance.
Mr. Biden
and Senate Democrats set out to prove that their preferred way of doing
business still works, and they did: The Senate can still function, not by just
doing something but by taking a very long time to do half of something, on a
bipartisan basis, with a dubious promise to finish the rest later.
This
bipartisan infrastructure bill is popular (and much of the spending is urgently
needed throughout the country). Infrastructure spending, like bipartisanship,
usually is. But having to spend so much time tortuously wringing support from
the minority party to spend money on things people need and want is not
actually a sign of a healthy system of government. Doing what’s necessary and
popular shouldn’t be the hard part of governing, requiring painful compromise.
As for
whether the Biden administration has learned from past mistakes, it’s now clear
that the urgency and speed shown in his first 100 days was not a sign of a
definitive break with past Democratic-controlled governments. Whatever lessons
the president and his team learned from the Obama years, “Don’t let the Senate
hijack your entire legislative agenda with protracted bipartisan negotiations
that constantly threaten to break down entirely” wasn’t one of them.
Welcome to
‘Healing Girl Summer’
If the
reconciliation scheme fails, the price of bipartisanship will have been many of
this infrastructure plan’s most important climate elements, like a federal
clean energy standard to speed the national transition to zero-emission
electricity. Even if the scheme works, the opportunity cost will end up being
lost time that could have been spent trying to achieve all the other things Mr.
Biden promised to get done if elected. The time spent finding a way to get 60
votes for the infrastructure bill was time not spent hashing out versions of an
infrastructure bill, and the PRO Act, and the For the People Act, that could
win 51 votes. A party that seemed briefly to understand the urgency of the
moment abandoned any sense of it for the vanity of senators who seem to take
pride in spending months trying to find an agreeable midpoint between a large
number and a small number.
After all,
that was the actual lesson of 2009. Laying the blame for the stimulus act’s
inadequacy on the pursuit of bipartisan support, as Mr. Schumer did in March,
was always unfair to both Barack Obama and Senator Susan Collins (and too kind
to the person primarily responsible for the size of that stimulus, former White
House economic adviser Larry Summers). Mr. Obama and the Democrats acted with
plenty of urgency. The Recovery Act passed in February of 2009, a month earlier
than Mr. Biden got his relief bill done. It was only after the stimulus that
Mr. Obama’s entire first term agenda ran aground on the shoal of bipartisan
negotiation. Then the Senate got to work.
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