Friday, 6 January 2023

To Really Understand America Look Beneath The Bad (Very Bad) Amateur Theatrics in Washington

 

Social media as well as the regular press and broadcasters are outdoing themselves in proclaiming the unbridgeable chasm in American social, cultural and political life. According to the blaring headlines the country is about to break out in yet another civil war – Red vs. Blue, Urban vs. Rural or any other opponents one can think of. How much of this hysteria is based on some semblance of reality and how much is merely overblown self-important rhetoric from observers who need to spend more time outside Washington, D.C.?

 Yes, political representation on the national level is evenly balanced between the Republicans and Democrats. That balance in and of itself is not necessarily a bad thing. And each party has its fair share of loons who forgot to take their medication. They yell and scream in front of any media outlet they can find in a vain effort to seem relevant. And the Republican agit-prop nonsense going on now as they try to elect a sane Speaker of the House only strengthens this image of total ungovernable confusion.

 And the media, for its part, is just as guilty. It loves the noise and pseudo-excitement. Instead of bothering to investigate and report on serious trends in American life they focus on the low hanging fruit of the ridiculous antics of some of our elected representatives. Just look at the front pages of national newspapers or banners screaming across many websites. Their whole focus is on superficial politics – who is gaining in the polls, which congressperson was found in unnatural acts with a goat, who is proposing that his or her opponent should take a one-way trip to Mars? And who – hold your breath – was caught in a lie? Who needs the sports pages or comics when we have this entertainment on a daily basis?

 Listen to this cacophony long enough and one can be forgiven for thinking the country is on the brink of disaster. A lot of this noise is due to what I call the ‘Trump Effect.’ Narrowly elected by the revulsion against ‘politics as usual’ Trump soon revealed the truth of the saying by journalist H.L. Mencken more than 100 years ago. ‘On some great and glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach their heart’s desire at last, and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron.’ Now it appears that the worst of the Trump effect may be passing. His faithful, the same ones who have followed every loud-mouthed huckster throughout American history, may cling to him but as we saw in the midterm elections normal Republicans are looking and voting elsewhere. There will be deeply conservative candidates in the future but most of them will not manifest the same deep personality disorders that plague Trump.

 If those Washington-obsessed observers would take the trouble to look beneath the surface they might find something interesting, counter-intuitive – the country tends to work. What the observers miss is that the American federal system means that the individual states, counties and municipalities actually control most of the things ordinary people care about – schools, public safety, transportation, public works, planning permissions, zoning. Unlike most of Europe, almost all the expenses related to those issues are raised through state and local taxes - not from the federal government. Folks in Washington can yell and scream and dominate the headlines, but if you want a road repaired or school improved you talk to local administrators. It really doesn’t matter if you’re in deep red Wyoming or electric blue Massachusetts. The local issues are pretty much the same. The solutions may vary from state-to-state but that’s the strength of the federal system. One size does not have to fit all.


Town meetings work much better than Washington

 If the UK is serious about giving the regions more power the first thing it could do is give those regions more power to raise local taxes.  The much-discussed devolution in the UK is toothless without local taxing power. I once asked the mayor of Atlanta, Georgia how much of the city’s budget comes from municipal and/or state funds. ‘More than 90%,’ he answered. We were seated next to a council member from a large English community. He sighed in envy at his Atlanta counterpart and said those figures were reversed in his town where more than 95% of funding came from the central government.

State Houses like this have as much clout as Congress

 Years ago, I covered local towns in Connecticut as a very junior reporter. I learned first-hand just how much people in those communities cared about town meetings where taxes were determined, school board meetings where difficult budget decisions were made or – most heated of all – zoning board meetings where issues like green space, industrial or commercial space were discussed often until the wee hours of the morning. No one cared that much about what happened in Washington, D.C.

 So the next time some blaring headline hollers about America coming apart at the seams just take a deep breath and find a story about local citizens coming together on a local project. Those stories don’t often make the front page, but they’re much more important and affect many more people than what passes for so-called news these days.

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