New House Majority Should Find Bipartisan Plans That Can Pass

U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell seems to be reneging on his pledge to bring bi-partisan criminal justice reform to the floor of the Senate for a vote during the lame duck session. It is ironic that Senator Grassley is complaining about McConnell’s so well-established duplicity.

Grassley, as lame-duck chairman of the Judiciary Committee, can put a hold on judicial appointments until McConnell caves in. It will be interesting to see if our esteemed Senator has the guts to play hardball with McConnell or whether, like health care and immigration reform, Grassley positions himself as a reformer, while ultimately backing off when action is required.

McConnell has also denied a floor vote on a bill to block Trump from firing or interfering with the Mueller investigation, while many GOP Senators have stated that the investigation should be completed without interference. It appears Grassley has, again, traded the Common Good for the power of U.S. Oligarchy.

McConnell’s tactics have been a perfect foil to Trump, placing the power of a Senate majority leader over the will of a majority of the Senate. The House has been no better with a GOP policy of never bringing a vote to the floor without a majority of GOP support, soon to be replaced with the bi-partisan policies of the Democrats. The irony is that a bi-partisan House vote will attract few GOP votes because their caucus has become so rigid and a handful of alleged “moderates” have been replaced by Democrats.

We often discuss the need for bi-partisanship as a return to collegial relationships with members of both parties (tempered by a handful of Independents). But bi-partisanship has rarely been the result of social relations between colleagues, but more often about finding a middle ground and allowing voting procedures that are open rather than closed.

Democrats on the left have aspirations for universal pre-school and health care, a minimum living wage, strict controls over corporate financial affairs, etc. But there is a great opportunity for compromise that will ameliorate the issues faced by Americans without exacerbating national debt. Creative solutions such as replacing a student loan system with low interest loans from the U.S. Treasury and financing infrastructure with new revenue sources such as a tiny tax on stock and bond sales can lead to solutions that can find bi-partisan support.

Granting states the freedom to set living wages, to protect migrants from draconian federal intervention and to allow strict gun controls while allowing the courts to settle extreme abortion, egregious gerrymandering and voter suppression laws may be more progressive than fighting impasses with a GOP Senate.

When Cindy Axne and Abby Finkenauer seek middle ground solutions, they should be respected by Democrats who may prefer they grandstand on “principle.” The GOP has abandoned moderation for orthodoxy and opened the door for a coalition of Liberal and Moderate Democrats. Bipartisanship will be the road to returning the Senate and Presidency to Democratic majorities in 2020.

 

by Tim Urban
Posted 11/26/18

2 Comments on "New House Majority Should Find Bipartisan Plans That Can Pass"

  • While I agree that bipartisanship is a good thing – nay; a lofty goal to be seriously strived for – it is rather difficult to be bipartisan with your own caucus. The new House members are going to get zero help from their colleagues on the other side of the aisle. They have had so many years demonizing Nancy Pelosi that, once she is ensconced as Speaker, even her prodigious skills at whipping votes (including from the opposition party) and putting together packages that have bipartisan support, will have a sisyphus-like task in rolling all these recalcitrant boulders up the legislative hill.
    And that’s just to get any legislation through the House. While McConnell is in control of the Senate, pretty much any legislation that the Democratic House passes will be blocked by him – and Grassley, as the new President Pro Tempore, will not stand in his way.
    It will be an “interesting” two years until 2020. I wish the new House all the best wishes. They’ll need all those wishes and then some.

  • Good luck with compromise on anything since the ultra-conservative slash & gut people still control the senate ! The best thing the house members can do is to propose bills that are practical, fiscally responsible, and have a end date to accomplish the intended purpose, or at least a revue date because if it’s not working then it needs changes or a entire new bill . P,S, Don’t impeach just expose Trumps underbelly and block all the stupid things the senate wants to put on his desk . Than in two years get rid of him and the cronies in the senate ! This will be possible if the house democrats show the public that they are open,honest, and practical over the next two years . Being vindictive will not win votes or bring the country back to compromise !

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