“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>The limits of compromise

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“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>Before we make political

partisanship a felony, let’s remember that some choices are real,

consequential and mutually exclusive.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>I’m not talking about the kind of

scorched-earth partisanship that Senate Minority Leader Mitch

McConnell espouses – the notion that Republicans should favor

anything that’s politically harmful to Democrats, never mind what

the impact on the country might be. “The single most important

thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term

president,” McConnell said last year.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>I’m talking about partisanship

based on issues, policy options and incompatible philosophies about

the nature and purpose of government. Powerful forces are pulling

the nation in opposite directions. The danger of too much

compromise is that we end up not moving at all.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>A classic example is the attempt

to restart the economy following the worst downturn since the Great

Depression. When Obama took office, the crisis was acute; consumers

and businesses were shell-shocked, and there was real danger of a

self-reinforcing downward spiral. Any follower of British economist

John Maynard Keynes – and Obama was being advised by dedicated

Keynesians – had to recommend a very large pulse of government

spending.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>In the spirit of compromise,

however, one-third of the stimulus package put forth by the White

House consisted of tax cuts – which a Keynesian would say are much

less stimulative than direct government spending. History will note

that this nod toward bipartisanship did not inoculate the stimulus

from constant criticism by Republicans, despite their eternal love

for tax cuts. However, it likely diminished the effectiveness of

the stimulus, thus giving Republicans ammunition for their claim

that it didn’t work.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>We are at a similar juncture

right now. Conservatives and progressives should be able to agree

that the long-term national debt of $14.3 trillion is a serious

problem. Effective solutions, however, do not lend themselves to

meet-in-the-middle compromise.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>There are basically two ways to

reduce the debt as a percentage of GDP: Cut government spending or

make the economy grow. The problem is that doing more of one means

doing less of the other.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>Consumers are still wary of

spending – understandable, given unemployment of more than 9

percent and real estate values that have not recovered from the

crash. Businesses are sitting on an enormous hoard of cash that

they are reluctant to spend.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>Government, quite rightly, has

stepped in to fill the gap. If we cut government spending too much,

we pull the rug out from under the recovery – and increase the

demand for costly government services such as unemployment

insurance. We have to make a decision: Is the most important task

right now to grow the economy or cut spending? If we pretend to do

both, we’ll end up doing neither.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>Do we want a government that

ensures medical care for senior citizens and the poor? According to

a recent Washington

Post poll, 72 percent of Americans oppose cutting spending on

Medicaid as a way to reduce the debt; 54 percent oppose raising the

eligibility age for Medicare from 65 to 67.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>Do we want a government that

provides retirees with an adequate baseline income? Fifty-three

percent of Americans oppose changes to Social Security that would

reduce the rate at which benefits rise over time, according to the

Post poll. These

entitlements are sacred cows not just for Democrats but Republicans

as well. Across both parties, Americans would rather see increased

taxes on the well-to-do.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>Far-right conservatives who

harbor a radically different vision – of a much smaller government

without the wherewithal to provide this kind of safety net – now

control the House of Representatives and the Republican Party. In

the debt- ceiling debate, they have rejected long-term solutions

that have conceded most of what they demand. They want it

all.

“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>Progressives who say no – who

acknowledge that we must reduce the debt but in ways that do not

kill economic growth or gut entitlements – are being partisan for

the best possible reason: Much is subject to compromise, but not

our future as a great nation.

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“line-height: 115%; font-family:”>Eugene Robinson’s email address

is eugenerobinson@washpost.com.

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