With no middle ground, the opinions of most Americans are ignored
President Joe Biden called for unity in his inaugural address. Many interpreted this as a commitment to bipartisanship. But what exactly is bipartisanship?
Does it mean legislation that both parties support? Or legislation that includes ideas from both parties, regardless of who ends up voting for it? And does one’s party really matter when it comes to whether an idea is a good one or not?
Good ideas are not intrinsically “left” or “right.” They are rooted in common sense. Thomas Jefferson said, “I can never fear that things will go far wrong where common sense has fair play.” Ralph Waldo Emerson commented that “nothing astonishes people so much as common sense and plain dealing.”
And I think that is the romance, so to speak – or the attraction – of bipartisanship for so many. From December, a Politco poll revealed that nearly 70% of Trump voters and 76% of Biden voters say that the best leaders “reach across the aisle to make compromises.”
Even 50% of Trump voters say congressional Republicans should seek compromises and work with the new administration.
Despite
this and Biden’s clarion call for unity in his inauguration speech,
Biden has sought anything but unity, issuing more executive orders in
his first week in office than any of his 45 predecessors. Even the New York Times penned
an editorial with the headline, “Ease Up on the Executive Actions,
Joe,” and admonishing Biden by saying these many executive orders are a
“flawed substitute for legislation.”
The
American people know this, too. But this helps explain why an ABC News
and Ipsos poll from late last month found only 22% of Americans “have a
great deal of confidence” in the president’s ability to make progress on
unifying the country over his term in office.
But coming together – working together – implies that we have a common goal to achieve. And sometimes we do (or have, at least).
For
example, in the 1950s and 1960s, Republicans voted in favor of the
Civil Rights Act at a much higher rate than Democrats. Still, there was
bipartisan support to end segregation in public places and make
employment discrimination illegal.
In
1983, Democrat House Speaker Tip O’Neill, Republican Senator Bob Dole
and Democrat Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan worked together on a
compromise to save Social Security and ensure its solvency (at least,
for the next 75 years).
More recently, the CARES Act passed both houses of Congress with nearly unanimous bipartisan support and was signed into law by President Trump last year.
But
how do you work together – across the aisle – when there are so few
common (and often diametrically opposed) goals being pursued by the
party leaders? For example, the Democrats in Congress favor open borders
and the elimination of ICE and Homeland Security, even though this will
only increase cartel violence, drugs and other forms of illegal human
trafficking into our country. 76% of Americans oppose open borders, yet
Representative Alexandria Ocasio Cortez says only Nazis oppose open
borders.
The
Democrat Party supports infanticide, opposing any medical care for
babies born alive after abortion, even though 94% of Americans oppose
such. They seek to eliminate the 2nd Amendment, even though a solid
majority of the U.S. public believes the 2nd Amendment to the
Constitution guarantees Americans’ rights to own guns.
Democrats
support exporting jobs overseas and increasing higher unemployment here
at home. Just look at their opposition to the Keystone pipeline and the
moratorium on drilling for oil – hundreds of thousands of jobs at stake
– not to mention weakening our national security and raising the cost
of every gallon of gasoline for working Americans.
Democrats support higher taxes, even though this
results in less federal tax revenue. In fact, Biden will raise taxes on
80 percent of Americans, cut annual income by $6,500 per household, and
we’ll soon be on our way from collecting the highest federal tax
receipts to the lowest.
Democrats
support government-run health care, reducing the military, eliminating
the electoral college, packing the U.S. Supreme Court with additional
justices, and are silent to the silencing of those with whom they
disagree through social media.
You
see, the goals of the Democrat Party are not just different from
Republicans across the aisle; they are not representative of the
American people across the country.
Members
of Congress used to understand that “conservative” and “liberal” were
just labels and that governing was more important. These days, being
labeled one way makes you part of the ruling elite, while the other
makes you “the enemy within.”
So much for unity – or governing – at all.
Louis
R. Avallone is a Shreveport businessman, attorney and author of “Bright
Spots, Big Country, What Makes America Great.” He is also a former aide
to U.S. Representative Jim McCrery and editor of The Caddo Republican.
His columns have appeared regularly in 318 Forum since 2007. Follow him
on Facebook, on Twitter @louisravallone or by e-mail at [email protected], and on American Ground Radio at 101.7FM and 710 AM, weeknights from 6 - 7 p.m., and streaming live on keelnews.com.