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Dilan Esper's avatar

The one saving grace here is Congressional Dems are running well ahead of Biden. Root for some split ticket voting.

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Allan Thoen's avatar

I don't think these ordinary policy questions are reason enough to vote for an empty chair or blank check for President. The only thing that can justify that is concern about a serious even if low-probability threat to democracy.

For example, many of these federal safety net programs could stand to be rethought and redesigned. A real debate over that in itself isn't something to fear to shy away from. The problem is that, on their own, Democrats won't do it. And on their own, Republicans will do it badly.

So, if we're setting aside democracy concerns for a moment, the key to all of this -- whether it's an opportunity for good changes or just bad ones -- seems to be whether Democrats keep enough seats in Congress to keep a seat at the negotiating table. And then assuming they have leverage, whether they use it well.

For example, if funding is kept constant, what exactly is the problem with changing Medicaid to a block grant program, and letting states do more experimentation to find better ways of funding healthcare for those of limited means? There are many ways to skin that cat, and the way Medicaid currently does is just one way, by no means the only or best way. But Democrats treat even the mention of change as a threat to be demonized, and Republicans just want to slash and burn. And so nothing productive ever advances, just stasis and political trench warfare nobody is happy and neither side is able to break out of a status quo that everyone seems to agree isn't that great.

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