DRAIN THE SWAMP, INSTALL SAFEGUARDS,
AND PASS PROGRESSIVE LEGISLATION
Democrats took control of the House of Representatives
on January 3. They immediately challenged President Trump on
his government
shutdown by passing bills the Republican
controlled Senate
approved last year. Following loud protests by the right
wing media, Trump reneged on a pledge he’d sign the legislation that
would fund the government while Congress
debates his border wall request.
Speaker Pelosi knows her majority must do much more
than try getting the government open. We agree. House Democrats should act
boldly on oversight and policy change, demonstrating they can “walk and chew
gum at the same time.”
Oversight
Limits exist on what the House can
do, given a Republican Senate apparently more concerned about loyalty to Trump than the country’s wellbeing. Still, after two years of government by scandal
and Tweet, Americans want oversight of the Trump administration. For some, that
means an impeachment
inquiry. While House Democrats acknowledge that possibility, especially after
Special Counsel
Robert Mueller
completes his work, they don’t see impeachment as inevitable. They recognize
the danger in impeachment that appears purely motivated by politics.
We believe, however, the House
shouldn’t wait on Mueller before beginning the oversight process, a
responsibility of Congress, not Mueller. Congress must not only address the
potentially impeachable offenses Muller might find, but also the other harms
Trump has done to our democratic institutions. These include his irresponsible
criticisms of the judiciary, the intelligence community, and the military. In
exercising oversight, we hope Congress calls expert witnesses like former State
Secretary Madeleine Albright,
intelligence officials Malcolm Nance and
James
Clapper, and historians Doris Kearns Goodwin
and Jon
Meacham who can detail the consequences of Trump’s actions. To
anyone who sees this expansive focus as unprecedented and unwarranted, we can
only say how unprecedented and unwarranted Trump’s behavior has been and offer
a reminder that democracy hangs in the balance.
If the Democratic House majority fulfills its oversight responsibilities,
it will have plenty on its plate, including:
·Investigating Trump’s potential
violations of the
emoluments
clause of the constitution through his
business enterprises.
·Securing and reviewing Trump’s tax
returns.
·Examining the ethical
breaches of Trump’s current and
·Conducting a fair, thorough, and
impartial investigation
into Russian
meddling in the 2016 election. The House
Intelligence Committee
probe was a sham because the
Republican majority on that committee protected
Trump.
Under Democrats, Congress must reassert itself as a co-
equal branch of
government.
·Holding hearings on voter
suppression in places like
Florida, Georgia, North Dakota, and North
Carolina as a
predicate for passing voter protection legislation.
This list will keep members of Congress busy during the coming year and beyond. While the House doesn’t confirm
appointments as the
Senate does, the House can and should play a critical role in overseeing
executive departments. It has subpoena power and the
power of the purse.
Republicans wouldn’t use their oversight powers because they feared angering or
endangering Trump. Now, Democrats must use those powers and assure Americans
their government operates fairly, ethically, and efficiently.
Policy
The House members who rode last November’s blue wave
to Democratic control ran on substantive policy issues that
appealed to the young,
voters of color, and suburban women. Now this coalition that “looks like
America” must deliver. We suggest they
focus on:
·Health Care –
The 2018 midterm
elections were, in
general, about health care and, in particular,
about
preserving coverage for pre-existing conditions. The
new House majority
must keep the pressure on the
Senate and Trump on health care. After all, Republican
senators may find it unpleasant
facing the electorate in
2020 after a vote that imperils the Affordable Care
Act
or endangers pre-existing conditions coverage.
·Infrastructure – That the nation must do something
about its crumbling roads and bridges isn't in doubt.
Trump claimed in 2016 he'd offer an infrastructure
program. He hasn't. The Democratic House should
pass a big infrastructure program that includes a fair,
meaningful funding mechanism,
forcing the hands of the
GOP-led Senate and Trump.
·Tax Fairness ---
The House should repeal the 2017 tax
cuts, thereby promoting fairness for middle and working
class
taxpayers, deficit reduction, and protecting Social
Security and Medicare.
·Immigration Reform – Yes, we must secure our
borders (with
something that works, not a wall). Then
we need a path to citizenship for the millions already
here who live in the
shadows. Experience, research,
and common sense say doing this will befit the
economy. Any immigration reform measure should
address
the plight of the Dreamers – the approximately
800,000 people brought to the
United States as
youngsters who’ve grown up here, often serving the
country in
various ways including in the military, but who
Trump and some of his nativist
supporters suggest
deporting even though those individuals have known no
other
home.
The Start
The new House majority has already offered a major reform package aimed at making government more transparent, fairer, and more
responsive to public will. HR 1
concerns voting rights, ethics, campaign finance, and other areas Congress
should address in cleaning up the disgusting mess Trump and his cronies have made
in the last two years. The measures are a good start and suggest Pelosi and her
team are serious about change.
The GOP Senate and Trump will balk at many of these ideas, as
they will balk at much on our list. Let
them balk. There’s another election
in 2020 and the eight-point Democratic victory in 2018 indicates
where the wind is blowing and what’s blowing in it. Balk too much and they
might find themselves on the street two years from now.
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