After watching President Obama in
last week’s State of the Union layout what is likely the Democratic blueprint
for next year’s presidential race and listening to the legislative agenda of
the Republicans who now have complete control of Congress, this congressional
session could well be meaningful and productive.
Why would this occur
after six years of rancor between the White House and Republicans? For one
reason: the government is divided.
Obama,
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) and House Speaker John
Boehner (R-Ohio) need each other, if they want to accomplish progress on
critical issues such as minimum wage, healthcare, immigration, transportation
infrastructure, etc.
Even
the political calculations – as the two parties’ angle for voter advantage in
2016 – are such that they have to work together. Perhaps it’s the hyper speed
of our technology or the sluggish economic growth, but the old way of politics,
of putting off needed legislation until the time is opportune politically, appears
no longer wise or practical.
Over
the last 60 years some real progress in America has been achieved because of divided
government, and by this I mean one party holds the White House and the other
both houses of Congress.
Still, divided government has often been confrontational more than compatible.
Happier times at the Capitol: A snowball fight in 1930. |
In 1947-49, the
Republican-controlled 80th Congress, which Democratic President
Harry Truman called the “Do Nothing Congress,” sought to roll back New Deal legislation
such as Social Security that was enacted between 1933 and 1946 by Franklin D.
Roosevelt and the Democratic-controlled Congresses. The GOP also rejected Truman’s
Fair Deal legislative agenda. After serving in the minority for 14 years,
during which time labor made great strides, the GOP was eager to re-shape the
national agenda for business.
The
Republicans passed many pro-business bills and looked for ways of undoing the
New Deal, but they had miscalculated in their political strategy. Not only did
it ruin their chance to take the White House after 16 years of Democratic
control – Truman won handily despite polls’ and pundits’ predictions to the
contrary – they lost control of Congress to the Democrats for another four
years. Republicans took power again with Dwight Eisenhower’s election to the
presidency in 1952, but lost it again in the mid-term two years later.
As supreme allied commander during World War II, Eisenhower
understood the need to work with people you disagree with. He easily grasped
the congressional Republicans’ folly, and he knew that the overwhelming majority
of Americans favored the New Deal because those programs improved their lives.
The agenda of the extreme elements in his party left him wary.
On Nov. 8, 1954, a week after the GOP lost
Congress in the mid-term election, Eisenhower said, “Should any party attempt
to abolish social security and eliminate labor laws and farm programs, you
would not hear of that party again in our political history. There is a tiny
splinter group, of course, that believes you can do these things ... Their
number is negligible and they are stupid.”
Divided
government set in once again, but this time the two sides worked together. The
Democratic-controlled 84th Congress of 1955-57 worked with the Republican
president and accomplished significant pieces of legislation such as the Air
Pollution Control Act, at the time establishing just an information role for
the federal government but which started the government on the road toward
eventually adopting more comprehensive laws for clean air, water and soil. The
Democratic Congress and Eisenhower passed and enacted the Federal-Aid Highway
Act, which, at the time, launched the largest public works project in history,
creating thousands of jobs and transforming the American road system and
economy – all those new highway systems needed cars as well as businesses to
serve the tired and hungry motorists.
According to a
biography of the president by the University of Virginia’s Miller Center,
“Eisenhower favored a more moderate course, one that he called Modern
Republicanism, which preserved individual freedom and the market economy yet
insured that government would provide necessary assistance to workers who had
lost their jobs or to the ill or aged, who through no fault of their own, could
not provide for themselves. He intended to lead the country "down the
middle of the road between the unfettered power of concentrated wealth . . .
and the unbridled power of statism or partisan interests."
“As President, Eisenhower thought that government
should provide some additional benefits to the American people. He signed
legislation that expanded Social Security, increased the minimum wage, and
created the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. He also supported government
construction of low-income housing but favored more limited spending than had
Truman.”
Divided
government continued with the 85th Congress, and Eisenhower and the Democrats produced
such legislation as the first civil rights act since the 1860s, paving the way
for subsequent legislation bolstering civil rights, and the National
Aeronautics and Space Act that created NASA, launching the space age.
For
the next 25 years, the Democrats controlled Congress, through Democratic and
Republican presidents. Ronald Reagan’s election in 1980 brought the Republicans
control of the Senate, which they held for six years, but in 1987 Democrats
were again in control of Congress while Republicans held the White House into
the presidency of President George H.W. Bush. Once again, significant
legislation is passed including the High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991, launching the Internet age.