Extreme Partisanship Prevents National Solutions
Could political reforms improve the state and national political system?
Over coffee one recent morning at the Square Rigger Café in Door County with some wise old birds, there was a consensus that excessive partisanship in American politics is holding our country back.
The rigid ideological positions of the two major parties has prevented resolution of the biggest problems facing the country:
* Soaring health costs and the resulting lack of coverage for 14% of Americans.
* Immigration and corresponding shortage of workers.
* The disparity between the haves and have-nots and the resulting resentment.
* Crime rates and dysfunction in central cities.
* Threats to the Great Lakes from invasive species, algae blooms and dead zones.
The Republican and Democratic parties once had big umbrellas that each accommodated a wide range of solutions to issues. That just isn’t true anymore. Major big money on the right and left edges of the two parties has forced candidates to the extremes to win primary elections.
Once there, the winners have a hard time getting back to center for the general elections and beyond. The center –no-man’s land – is where the solutions lie on the complex national and state issues.
A perfect example of debilitating ideology trumping pragmatic problem solving can be seen in the Wisconsin election for U.S. Senate. Incumbent Sen. Tammy Baldwin has lined up with Sen. Bernie Sanders on “Medicare for All,” even though there is no way that the country could afford the Sanders air ball.
Her opponent, state Sen. Leah Vukmir rejects Obamacare and the Sanders proposition, blandly stating her support for market-based solutions, even though there is no effective market place for health care.
Talk-show hosts love the divisions in the country as they yak and rant for ratings. But few serious adults do.
The coffee klatch conversation turned to ways to blunt the hyper-partisanship that is proving so divisive across the country.
This short column admittedly is broad brush, but, on an optimistic note, there are structural reforms that could be brought to bear.
One would be to re-engineer the primary system that generate extremism and wedge politics. Some states, including California, advance the top two candidates to the general election, regardless of party. That forces all candidates to play to the center where the swing independent voters lie. The impact of extremists is dampened.
A top-two contest mitigates the impact of big monies spent on TV ads for candidates on the outer edges of the parties.
Another device to take power from the parties is by promoting direct democracy. Let the people decide the big issues by referendum. Switzerland promotes consensus with direct democracy.
Referenda are used effectively in Wisconsin at the school district level to decide building plans and whether to override state revenue and spending limits to put more local tax dollars into the classrooms. Why shouldn’t local voters decide? It’s their tax dollars.
In the first half of 2018, 85% of 71 school referenda passed.
A third reform would be term limits, which work well in Colorado. If politicians know they are going to be in office no more than eight years, they are going to be more concerned with a legacy of getting something done while in office, rather than being stuck in partisan gridlock.
If a legislator has an office virtually for life, there is little urgency to accomplish anything. Sen. Fred Risser has been in office in the Wisconsin Assembly for 60 years, going on 62. Good grief.
Sen. Jim Sensenbrenner is a career politician, running for his 20th term. He will have 40 years in office. Good grief! How about some fresh blood and ideas?
So would taking districting out of the hands of the majority party leaders, which always set up safe districts where candidates don’t have to play to the center to get elected or reelected. Competitive districts would encourage more candidates to compete for office.
Another tool that promotes serious thinking about complex issues is the Wisconsin Idea. Bipartisan or nonpartisan blue ribbon commissions, task forces or legislative councils do the deep dig and then make recommendations to citizens and politicians in office. They have been under-utilized since Tommy Thompson left office.
These reforms would all generate a return to political compromise, where solutions lie. An example is immigration where a ready compromise is available: tighten our borders, give kids born here citizenship; never give their illegal parents citizenship, but give them work permits.
Recall that welfare reform and school choice both passed in Wisconsin with votes from both sides of the aisle.
Reformers like the Door County crew would like to see all or most of these structural concepts put into place. But any combination would help to create a more effective democracy. Any one of them would be an improvement over the current partisan, simplistic, sound-bite dysfunction.
John Torinus is the chairman of Serigraph Inc. and a former Milwaukee Sentinel business editor who blogs regularly at johntorinus.com.
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In the catagory of “sound-bite dysfunction”, I have long advocated the banning of political advertising on TV and radio for 60 days prior to any election. (Versions of this have been done in some countries in Europe). Not only would concerned voters need to actively learn about the candidates via their own efforts, but a measure such as this could result in the resurrection of newspapers.
Also, the under utilization of blue ribbon commissions can be traced directly to Walker. He, after all, tried to eliminate the Wisconsin Idea.