Symbolism over progressivism: AOC's lone Democratic vote against the omnibus spending bill
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is a polarizing figure among liberals and Democrats. Some, like me, see the New York congresswoman as a useful figure representing young people and progressive politics. Others doubt her intentions and generally see her as a pain in the ass. Others still see her as giving leftwing cover for right-wing goals.
Though I have understood the complaints, and though I haven’t agreed with them, I have thought whatever cons there are have been reasonable trade-offs for the pros. I don’t want Democrats getting comfortable. If AOC gets their backs up with the truth, so be it.
But her latest vote has me rethinking.
She may have reached the end of her usefulness.
Voting against a lot of good
Ocasio-Cortez voted against the nearly $2 trillion spending bill needed to keep the government running through September of next year. That legislation is usually called the omnibus. She was the only Democrat in both chambers of the US Congress to vote against it. We expect that from conservative gadflies like West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin and Arizona Senator Kyrsten Sinema, but they voted for it.
That’s fine, but why? Here’s what she said: “I campaigned on a promise to my constituents: to oppose additional expansion and funding for ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] and DHS [the US Department of Homeland Security] – particularly in the absence of long-overdue immigration reform. For that reason, as well as the dramatic increase in defense spending which exceeds President Biden’s request, I voted no on today’s omnibus bill.”
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Again, that’s fine, but what does the omnibus do for ICE and DHS. According to the Post, “it provides $800 million for shelter and other emergency services for migrants at the Department of Homeland Security, with additional sums meant to improve refugee processing.”
Mmm.
Lucille Roybal-Allard is the chair of the House subcommittee on homeland security. She said in a statement that, “I am especially proud of the work my colleagues and I have done to provide robust funding to support asylum seekers, refugees and other immigrants.”
Uh huh.
According to Government Executive magazine, the omnibus boosts funding for the Border Patrol by “a whopping 17 percent.” But for what? Three hundred new Border Patrol agents Joe Biden says are needed “to handle the record-high numbers of migrants crossing the US-Mexico border.” As for ICE, none of the funds in “those distinct appropriations could be used to hire permanent federal employees.”
All right.
According to the National Immigration Justice Center, the law “requires ICE to make data publicly available regarding its use of solitary confinement for people deemed to be members of ‘vulnerable or special populations,’ including the number of days ICE holds individuals in solitary confinement, the basis for the use of solitary, and the process for re-evaluation of placements.”
That seems like … a good thing.
Moreover, the omnibus provides “$20 million for FEMA to administer the Case Management Pilot Program, a new program currently under development by an NGO-led board that is intended to provide community-based case management services for asylum seekers and immigrants in removal proceedings.” The legislation also raises funding to “$750 million for legal services, post-release services and child advocates for unaccompanied children in HHS custody.”
That’s a lot of good to vote against.
A bonanza for progressive priorities
But OK.
Maybe it was a protest vote. The omnibus does give more money to DHS. Her constituents, many of whom are immigrants, don’t like DHS. She gave them what they wanted. The omnibus was going to pass anyway, what with a handful of Republicans crossing the aisle to support it. There’s nothing wrong with some political symbolism.
I buy that.
Or I would.
If the omnibus were not a bonanza for progressive priorities.
Here’s a list I compiled from public sources. The omnibus:
- Raises the cap on Pell grants by $500.
- Increases the budget for National Labor Relations Board, a labor oversight agency, for the first time in 10 years.
- Boosts funding for the arts and anti-monopoly efforts.
- Gives $3.5 billion to the FDA to fix the baby formula shortage.
- Provides $39 billion to the DOJ to investigate domestic terrorism and prosecute J6 insurrectionists.
- Allots $58.7 billion for “roads, bridges, pipes, ports and internet connections,” per the Post, plus $10 billion for clean water.
- Secures $27 billion to respond to recent natural disasters, including Hurricane Ian, which hit Florida’s gulf coast, and Hurricane Fiona, which devastated Puerto Rico. Ocasio-Cortez’s family heritage is Puerto Rican.
- Averts a lapse in Medicaid funding for US territories, including Puerto Rico. It matches funding on the island for five years. It makes permanent that matching for other US territories.
- Allots $10 billion for the Environmental Protection Agency, “a $576 million increase from current funding,” the Post said, and $46.5 billion for the Energy Department. Ocasio-Cortez is the chief architect for the progressive “Green New Deal.”
- Includes the Growing Climate Solutions Act, which helps farmers to store and contain carbon emissions on their land.
- Activates the Electoral Count Reform Act, which is throws up more obstacles against objections to state electors.
- Requires businesses to create policies so workers are enrolled in 401K retirement account unless they opt out.
- Activates the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act. It outlaws workplace discrimination against pregnant people. That’s a BFD. It requires employers to make time and space for those who breastfeed to pump. That’s another BFD.
- Provides $8 billion in assistance to poor people who can’t afford childcare. It provides nearly $12 billion for Head Start.
- Appropriates $5 billion to help poor people with energy costs.
- Establishes permanent summer food assistance programs. It provides a grocery stipend of $40 a month per child tied to inflation. It changes rules for summer meals in rural areas.
There is virtually nothing in the omnibus that meets the Republicans’ spending priorities, first because they don’t have many, and second, because the ones they do have mostly focus on military spending.
So yes, the omnibus bill provides more funding for defense than Biden asked for, but that’s a reasonable trade-off for a bonanza of money for progressive priorities that will help people who need help.
Outlived usefulness
Which brings us back to Ocasio-Cortez.
The most generous reading of her statement explaining why she voted against the omnibus still must account for why she chose to omit any or all of the facts above, especially items related to issues that she says are dear to her, such as climate and women’s rights.
The most generous reading must also account for her voting against programs at the Department of Homeland Security that are intended to lend aid and comfort to asylum seekers, refugees and migrants. She said he honored her campaign promise to vote against the government’s abuse of immigrants while failing to vote for them.
But the most generous reading cannot account for these things.
Indeed, on considering the full context, we are left to ask why the most progressive member of the Congress (arguably) voted against the most progressive spending bill that anyone can remember.
The answer should be obvious.
California Congressman Ro Khanna, a staunch progressive, told Bloomberg recently that Joe Biden has “worked to earn a lot of trust from progressives. He’d have the support of the party, of many of us in the party, if he runs again, and I expect him to run again.”
The Democrats have assimilated progressive politics. It is now a feature of the party, where it was once a bug. Joe Biden has no serious challengers from the left, despite hysterical concern-trolling about his age and fitness, because he has evolved into a progressive president who does not appear progressive to most Americans.
In 2018, progressives like Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez seemed fresh, even revolutionary. I believed they were a much-needed solution to the Democrats’ tendency to preemptively cave to GOP demands. With Donald Trump as president, and with the Republicans careening toward outright fascism, the party needed progressives.
But a lot has changed. They don’t seem as useful.
Perhaps Ocasio-Cortez can sense it.
That’s why she chose symbolism over progressivism.
In The Liberal Imagination (1950), Lionel Trilling explained why European society collapsed under the weight of fascism and “totalitarian communism.” How could a free and democratic culture destroy itself? Trilling said, because it was “bankrupt of ideas.”
Europe’s collapse “revealed the dangers of a society that puts limits on the free play of the intellect,” wrote Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen, explaining Trilling’s views. He said that “in the modern situation,” meaning the early 20th century, “it’s just when a movement despairs of having ideas that it turns to force, which it masks in ideology.”
I applied Trilling’s concept in a piece last week to anti-trans laws and the American imagination. But it can be applied to the GOP, too.
For years, Republican talking points were strictly enforced. New ideas were suspect. Fealty to tax cuts and deregulation was binding. Independent thinking was verboten. Modern conservatism began with a profusion of ideas. Four decades later, it has devolved into a means of rationalizing Donald Trump’s cult of personality.
Over time, there were severe limits on the free play of the intellect if only because expedience demanded it. But eventually, as those limits got tighter, the GOP became “bankrupt of ideas.” The only ideas remaining were vestiges of the past and resentments of the present.
While the Republicans were tightening the circles of innovation, the Democrats and their intellectual allies were expanding them, churning out new and useful ideas and policy proposals for years, some of which reached their zenith in the Biden administration.
The president is known for having pushed back against the left flank of his party, but in reality, he assimilated their best ideas, especially the belief that spending spurs economic growth. Bringing them in, instead of pushing them out, has instilled trust among progressives.
“He’s worked to earn a lot of trust from progressives,” California Congressman Ro Khanna told Bloomberg, adding that if Biden seeks to run for reelection “he’d have the support of the party, of many of us in the party, if he runs again, and I expect him to run again.”
Progressive economics peaked just in time. The covid pandemic, and governments’ reactions to it, shut down everything. Some Republicans were still clinging to the old ways – supply-side economic or “neoliberalism” - but the fallout from the pandemic, such as inflation, made thinking that way impossible to sustain.
“From Washington to Tokyo, policymakers are going above and beyond to cushion the blow from surging prices on consumers and businesses,” wrote BloombergBusinessweek’s Alan Crawford.
“Some of this is tactical — fuel subsidies and food assistance programs can win votes — but the spending is also motivated by strategic considerations about economic competitiveness.”
Suddenly spending wasn’t a bad word. Indeed, it was another way of describing statecraft, an old way of thinking about economics that lost its appeal after “movement conservatism” ascended in the 1980s.
In Land of Promise, Michael Lind described the “political economy was a form of statecraft, not a science modeled on physics that could identify ‘laws’ of economics that would be valid in all societies and all times.” It
developmental capitalism associated in the first half of the nineteenth century with Hamilton, Clay, Raymond, Carey, and others. The American progressives of the 1900s who imported German histori- cal school ideas were thus, in a sense, reimporting the modified themes of the earlier American school of political economy. They went on to found the institutional school of American economics, which had a profound influence on American reform in the first half of the twentieth century, even though it
The Democrats, however “extreme,” still believe ideas are crucial to governing. The Republicans stopped caring about governing after the election of the country’s first Black president. They stopped caring about ideas, too. Some still cling to the old thinking – supply-side economic or “neoliberalism” - but most favor the politics of lib-owning. That development inevitably resulted in Trump.
Is the GOP set to destroy itself the way Europe did?
Probably not, but bankruptcies have consequences.
Trump’s shadow looms over Kevin McCarthy, the California congressman who wants to be House Speaker. He has said Senate Republicans should vote against a nearly $2 trillion bill to keep the government running. He vowed Tuesday to kill any future bill sponsored by any Senate Republican who supports the omnibus.
“When I’m Speaker,” McCarthy said, “their bills will be dead on arrival in the House if this nearly $2T monstrosity is allowed to move forward over our objections and the will of the American people.”
In response, Senator Kevin Cramer, a Republican from North Dakota, said something to suggest a crack in the party’s united front against ideas and accountability. He said that “statements like [McCarthy’s] and statements coming from House Republicans is the very reason that some Senate Republicans feel they probably should spare them [the House Republicans] from the burden of having to govern.”
To be sure, Republicans in the Senate and the House are very good at the two-step: They pretend to disagree for the press corps’ sake so that senators can appear sober and the representatives can appear passionate while actually agreeing on the issues the entire time.
But Cramer was speaking in the context of a spending bill that must pass to keep the government running. He was also speaking in the wake of a midterm election that failed to produce a washout virtually all of Washington was expecting. Indeed, it signaled problems ahead.
Since the Obama era, the Republicans have become the party of no, refusing to support a Democratic initiative even if the Republicans initiated it first. They have become the party of anti-governance.
But midterm voters rewarded the Democrats after their most productive and significant streak of legislation in 40 years, creating the best economy and wages of our lifetimes despite inflation.
Such success might give the party of no, or some of them anyway, incentive enough to get back into governing. It might give them incentive to start thinking again in terms of policy and putting away the conservative orthodoxy that put them on the road to bankruptcy.
That may be the real Republican fault line.
Not between Trump allies and elites, but between anti- and pro-governance Republicans. After all, that winning streak?
They had almost nothing to do with it.
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