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By Lisa Lerer /NYT/ May 1, 2021 National Political Correspondent |
Hi. Welcome to On Politics, your
wrap-up of the week in national politics. I’m Lisa Lerer, your host. |
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Forty years ago, a new president stood
before a joint session of Congress and delivered a simple
message: “Our government is too big, and it spends too much.” |
Sitting in the audience, the junior senator from
Delaware — a young Joseph Biden — couldn’t possibly have predicted how
President Ronald Reagan’s words would come to define politics for
generations. But for the decades that followed, Biden, along with most of his
party, would operate in the shadow of Reagan, believing that an outright
embrace of big government would be politically detrimental. Like so many
Democrats, he joined efforts to curb deficits, fretted about government
spending and generally favored more incremental kinds of policies that could
attract bipartisan support. |
Until now. |
This past week, four decades to the day after
Reagan’s address, Biden put forward a very different approach, one that
historians, political scientists and strategists in both parties believe
could signal the end of fiscal conservative dominance in our politics. In his
speech before Congress, Biden sketched out an agenda packed with “once in a
generation” investments that would touch nearly every corner of American
life, everything from cancer research to child care to climate change. |
“It’s time we remembered that ‘we the people’ are
the government. You and I,” he said. “Not some force in a distant capital.” |
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With Biden’s early agenda, his administration is
making what amounts to a $6 trillion bet that the dueling crises of the
coronavirus pandemic and the economic downturn, paired with the political
upheaval of the Trump era, have rekindled the romance between Americans and
their government. Through his Covid relief bill and infrastructure proposals,
Biden is striving to prove that government can craft policies that tangibly
improve our daily lives, delivering benefits like improved roads, more
education, better internet, paid time off to care for a sick family member,
and help supporting older parents. |
White House aides say that Biden also sees
government as the solution for a more abstract kind of problem: a deeply
polarized country that might be unified around a national response to a
series of crises involving climate change, racial justice, public health and
the economy. The administration is hardly hiding its effort — Biden has
self-consciously cloaked himself in the legacy of Franklin D. Roosevelt, an
attempt to hark back to an earlier age of liberalism when government pulled
the country out of despair. |
“We have to prove democracy still works,” he said in
his speech on Wednesday. “That our government still works — and can deliver
for the people.” |
Succeeding in that mission will mean accomplishing a
sea change in American politics. The idea that Reagan put forward in his 1980
campaign — that Americans were sick and tired of government — was
internalized by both parties. |
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For Republicans, it became a core belief. Democrats,
for their part, tried for decades to co-opt the idea. |
President Bill Clinton’s strategy of triangulation
was essentially an effort to lift pieces of Reaganism for Democratic gains.
“The era of big government is over,” he famously declared in his 1996 State
of the Union address. |
Deeply aware of the role Reagan played in shifting
American views on spending, President Barack Obama took office in 2009
believing that his administration could help end the country’s adherence to
conservative economic policy. |
“Ronald Reagan changed the trajectory
of America in a way that, you know, Richard Nixon did not, and in a way that
Bill Clinton did not,” Obama said during his 2008
campaign. “He put us on a fundamentally different path because the
country was ready for it. I think they felt like, you know, with all the excesses
of the ’60s and the ’70s, and government had grown and grown, but there
wasn’t much sense of accountability in terms of how it was operating.” |
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Yet Obama also struggled to escape that path,
eventually moderating his agenda and spending months making fruitless efforts
to get bipartisan support for his ideas. Even the health care law that would
come to be named after him was a compromise between liberals, who wanted a
single-payer system, and moderates, who feared the size of such a huge new
program. |
There’s some evidence that Biden may
be able to accomplish what Obama could not. Since the start of the pandemic,
polling has found Americans expressing more positive sentiments about their
government over all. Nearly two-thirds of Americans supported Biden’s relief
bill, with similar numbers backing his infrastructure plans. The most recent NBC News polling found
that 55 percent of Americans said government should do more, compared with 47
percent who said the same a dozen years ago. |
Unlike in 2009, when the government
response to the Great Recession helped ignite the Tea Party movement, there’s
been no backlash so far to the big spending in Washington. After Congress
passed the $1.9 trillion relief bill, many Republican voters told
me that they were supportive of the legislation. Republicans
in Washington have struggled to find a cohesive line of attack against the
policy. And some who voted against the bill now highlight its benefits,
an implicit acknowledgment of public support. |
Former President Donald Trump, too,
helped hasten the death of limited government, undercutting Republican
credibility for making the case against federal spending. He drove the
national debt to the highest level since
World War II, pushing through a $2 trillion tax cut that did
little for middle-class families. |
While Republicans spent, Democrats embraced a
liberal wing of their party that had long argued that free-spending proposals
like universal health care, free college and raising the minimum wage were
popular with voters. The enthusiasm within the party for Senator Bernie
Sanders’s presidential primary bid in 2016 helped drive that case. By the
time he ran again in 2020, most of his rival primary candidates had adopted
some of his ideas — including Biden. |
Razor-thin Democratic margins in the
Senate mean that Biden can pass some of his program without Republican
support. Those efforts have their limits: Senate budget rules curtail what
Democrats can push through with simple majority votes. But so far party
leaders show little sign of restraining their ambitions. “Big, bold action,”
Senator Chuck Schumer, the majority leader, promised in an interview this
week. |
“The center has moved,” said Faiz Shakir, a
political adviser to Sanders who managed the senator’s 2020 presidential
campaign. “And Biden is aware, as a politician, of the progressive moment in
history that he’s operating in.” |
That was clear as Biden made his way up the aisle of
the House chamber after his speech on Wednesday, shaking hands and schmoozing
with a small group of lawmakers who attended in person. After the president
left the podium, one of the first lawmakers he greeted in the hall was Sanders. |
For a brief moment, it wasn’t totally clear which
one of the two former primary rivals was the real winner. Sure, Biden has the
presidency. But like Reagan, Sanders seems to be winning the political
revolution. |
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