Senate Democrats' Shameful Cave on Flight Delays
Try to do something about senseless gun violence and you’ll
quickly see tumbleweeds blowing across the Senate floor. Try to make life a bit
less stressful for the average business traveler and you’ll have no trouble
finding backup. Since the sequester forced the FAA to furlough 10 percent of its air traffic controllers this week,
leading to average flight delays of roughly an hour, pretty much every senator with a mileage-club
departure lounge in her state (and even some without one) had rushed to undo
the cuts. Democrats Amy Klobuchar, Mark Udall, Kirsten Gillibrand, Tom Carper,
and Richard Blumenthal—all weighed in with legislation or quick-fix ideas. Last
night, Jay Rockefeller, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Commerce
Committee, struck a deal with his Republican counterpart, John
Thune, to end the great trail of tears in the sky, and the Senate quickly
approved it. We could be out of our misery by Friday afternoon.
I can understand why Republicans like Thune
were desperate for a way out of this: The politics were brutal for them. The
GOP not only leans heavily on the business-class demographic for money and
votes. The party’s fingerprints were all over the knife that made the cuts. As
even a Fox News report conceded, Republicans effectively
triggered the sequester by refusing to negotiate with the president over tax
increases.
That’s the reason why GOP pols, who until very
recently dismissed the sequester as an overhyped non-event, were suddenly
sputtering with rage. A “shocking lack of management,” House appropriations
committee chairman Hal Rogers hissed at FAA administrator Michael Huerta on Wednesday.
“You didn’t forewarn us that this was coming; you didn’t ask advice about how
we should handle it.” (Right, if only someone had warned us of the “calamity in air service” the sequester
would bring about...)
What I don’t understand is why on earth
Democrats went along with this. Pretty much the only response conservatives
could muster was to cry cynicism—that Obama could have shielded air traffic
controllers from the cuts, but simply chose not to in a Marxist effort to
heighten the contradictions. “The White House claims … it lacks flexibility,” The Wall Street Journal bleatedon Wednesday. “Not so: This is a political pose to make
the sequester more disruptive.” Alas, in the history of PR fights, “you caused
this” (the Democratic argument) has never lost to “you didn’t do enough to stop
this” (the Republican claim). I doubt this would have been the episode that
broke the streak. If Democrats had held firm, they wouldn’t just have won this
particular sequester skirmish. They may well have forced the GOP to junk the
entire godforsaken sequester itself.
But if the political case for holding firm on
the FAA furloughs was solid, the moral case was overwhelming. Consider where we
stand with the sequester: As my colleague Jonathan Cohn pointed out Thursday, the cuts have been hurting a lot of
vulnerable Americans for several weeks now thanks to their effects on programs
like Head Start, Meals on Wheels, and unemployment insurance. As of this week,
the cuts were also nicking a lot of non-vulnerable Americans by forcing them to
watch an extra loop of Headline News at Hartsfield International. At the risk
of revealing my warped moral sensibilities, this strikes me as roughly in line
with what you’d want in a set of budget cuts. If the political class insists on
sacrifice, the sacrifice should, at the very least, be distributed among both
poor and affluent. (Of course, it would be even better if they disproportionately
affected the affluent, but let’s not get crazy.) This is just a basic principle
of justice.
But there’s an even more important principle
at work—which is that, once we’ve decided on spending cuts, the affluent must
be made to understand that they lead to an increase in suffering. If they’re
too insulated from the pain, they’ll be too eager to support more cuts in the
future. (And by “too eager” I mean an eagerness to cut more than is justified
by any economic rationale. I’m not suggesting that cuts per se are bad.) The
logic here is similar to the moral logic of a military draft: The people who sit
out the fighting shouldn’t labor under the delusion that wars are relatively
costless, or that the costs are far-removed from their daily lives. A democracy
can only function if most of us have skin in the game.1
As it happens, this was basically the reasoning behind the White
House posture while negotiating the sequester in 2011. The thinking back then
was that it wasn’t sufficient to protect the most vulnerable (the poor, the
disabled, and the elderly—meaning no Medicaid or Social Security cuts, and few
Medicare beneficiary cuts). You also needed to impose pain on the politically
powerful (most notably the Defense establishment). If the GOP wanted to go
ahead with crude, automatic cuts that obeyed those rules, that was their
prerogative. But the wealthy and connected shouldn’t be allowed to stick other
people with a burden they wouldn’t shoulder themselves.
The problem with the deal to end the airport
delays—as with so many of the other ways the sequester has been eased—is that
it does away impact of the dreaded FAA cut without an alternative that would be
roughly as painful for the affluent.2 It
treats the delays as a kind of gratuitous sideshow to the sequester fight when
in fact they’re really the whole point. "The public's going to be furious
when they find out that this could have been prevented," Republican
Senator Dan Coats complained to the Journal. Exactly.
And it was only then that they would have had the moral standing to judge the
rest of the sequester.
Nancy Pelosi @NancyPelosi
ReplyDeleteAirports shouldn't be subjected to politics, neither should our seniors or children. Rs need to end the sequester, appoint budget conferees.
GOP only cared about FAA flight delays because they depend on flights to get out of D.C.
ReplyDelete