Will We Keep Hating Government?

by: E.J. Dionne Jr., Op-Ed

Will We Keep Hating Government?
(Photo: seanomatopoeia / flickr; Edited: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t)

Washington - Ever heard the one about the guy who hated government until a deregulated Wall Street crashed, an oil spill devastated the Gulf of Mexico, a coal mine collapsed, and some good police work stopped a terrorist attack?

Rarely has the news of the day run so counter to the spin on the news of the day. It's hard to argue that the difficulties we confront were caused by an excessively powerful "big" government. Rather, most of them arose from the government's failure to do its job in the first place.

The central tasks of democratic government, after all, typically involve standing up for the many against the few, the less powerful against the more powerful. Government is supposed to make sure that corporations are properly supervised when they turn public resources (the environment in the Gulf of Mexico, for example) into private gain. It is charged with protecting those with weaker bargaining positions (coal miners, for example) against the harm that those in stronger bargaining positions might inflict.

Its duty is to keep the private economy running smoothly by preventing fraud, shady dealing and forms of self-interested behavior that threaten the entire system. And yes, it's supposed to keep us safe from physical harm, as it did in New York City.

Especially in the economic sphere, government in recent years failed to carry out too many of these basic functions. That explains why this moment's anti-government feeling reflects two entirely different strains of thinking.

Public attention has largely gone to the strain exemplified by the tea party movement, opposition to government bailouts and an absolute hatred of Congress. This is the old-fashioned, garden-variety conservatism that somewhere between a fifth and a third of Americans have long subscribed to. These are the citizens you see on television at the anti-Obama rallies, the members of Congress who give speeches denouncing "overregulation," and the think tankers who insist that the private sector always performs more efficiently and effectively than "government bureaucrats."

Their views were definitively summarized many years ago by former House Majority Leader Dick Armey, now a tea party friend, who declared: "The market is rational and the government is dumb." Because they have always thought and voted the same way, partisans of this view do not account for shifts in opinion, let alone swing elections.

The more important and dynamic force behind the current disillusionment with government comes instead from those who actually believe it can and should be effective. They do not think that the market is automatically rational or that the government has to be dumb. They are not fed up with government because their ideology or philosophy tells them to be, but because they don't think government has been doing a proper job of promoting prosperity, equity and fair-dealing.

So far, the Obama administration has missed the opportunity to demonstrate to such voters how it is changing the way government works. How is its approach to writing and enforcing regulations different from what was done before? How is its management of the agencies different? How are its priorities different? What specific past failures is it addressing?

As Al Gore understood when he embarked on his "reinventing government" project for President Clinton, such an undertaking is more essential for liberals and progressives than for conservatives. Conservative ideas generally gain ground when government is discredited. But progressives who insist on government's constructive role can't succeed unless they persuade voters that public agencies are up to the missions they undertake.

Starting with the newly urgent threat of domestic terrorism and the environmental disaster in the Gulf, the administration does not lack for obvious challenges to which it must respond effectively. Competence is the antidote to the electorate's sick feeling about public authority.

But President Obama must also press on with the defense of government he offered in his recent University of Michigan commencement address. And he has a new piece of evidence that will help him make his case that government in a free society is not a distant force, but rather something that all of us influence and shape.

We need to remind ourselves that a bomb could have devastated Times Square in the absence of the most basic form of cooperation between an observant merchant and a responsible police officer.

This is what happens when government is seen as being in partnership with democratic citizens. And there's nothing dumb about it.

E.J. Dionne's e-mail address is ejdionne@washpost.com.

(c) 2010, Washington Post Writers Group 

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The main thing I get from

The main thing I get from government is that each year they pass more and more laws that make us less free. How is this organization our friend? I live in a nation where I can be dissapeared or killed on the whim of the President with nothing other than his own morals or fear of public complaint to stop him. Why should I embrace this governmental entity?



Laws are passed to make us

Laws are passed to make us into outlaws.

It isn't government, or "Government," that is bad, it is the laws that are passed in the dead of night, during recesses, at the last minute, as signing statements, and so forth. These laws are onerous. There really is not much excuse for passing laws behind people's backs, and that is how "Government" actually oppresses people. Tea-baggers and "patriots" just don't get that.

TRANSPARENCY is good government. That is NOT what we got from Reagan or Thatcher, not what we got from Clinton or Obama or Tony or any of the rest of them. We got precisely the opposite.

Government IS necessary, and IS a good thing. Otherwise, it's anarchy all the way, and who wants that?



I doubt that Aron W rather

I doubt that Aron W rather would rather live in a nation where any of these things could be done to him by anyone?

It's a deeply flawed country, so we need to fix it, not trash it. We've let big money shift the wealth and buy itself all the voice and control it wants. Time to stop them.

If anything drives us to socialism, it will be the unfettered greed of capitalists, and the Tea Partyers who blindly dance to their tunes.



Eric has it right. But a

Eric has it right.

But a large part of the problem, the divisions, in America is a failure to clearly define "free". Are you inhibiting freedom by banning actions against other people based on hate, bigotry or racism? Are you inhibiting freedom by refusing to allow any particular religion to write laws and dominate society without regard to the freedom of all religions?

And of course are you stifling liberty by insisting that how people make money is not a private but the most public of affairs and that the public has an absolute right and obligation to oversee economic activity?

Too much of conservative "ideology" seems to be a deliberate twisting of reality in order to justify greed and corruption. No one is free to pursue their personal or public lives in such a fashion.



The Founding Fathers of the

The Founding Fathers of the USA were predominately businessmen and lawyers. They were good men who tried to use their positions in society to improve upon everyone's well being. They also inadvertently doomed us. They set up a legacy of who would be the leaders of this country, but the businessmen and lawyers who came after the founders were/are not the same type of people of equal moral fiber. If the government followed the constitution to the letter of the law, how do we end up with 2 political parties? How does this bill help the people? Well it allows us extract precious resources from the earth, charge the people outrageous sums for it, ruin the environment for thousands of years and not pay any taxes. According to the constitution I believe such a thing would be wrong. But they do it to us all the time.



I'm old enough to remember

I'm old enough to remember when the US worked well for the majority, when there was a viable and strong middle class, supported by a gov't that regulated commerce, inspected food and drugs, banned DDT,taxed income progressively, enforced workplace safety,etc. I remember when public libraries and education were adequately funded. Then came Ronald Reagan and the conservative onslaught. Most all the ills we suffer today are the end result of three decades of "smaller gov't" and "free market" economics, which enabled corporations to take over the governance and reap record profits, no matter how it harmed the populace or the environment. Gov't is not the problem, gov't unresponsive to "the people" is. The challenge now is to take back gov't from corporations and make it : a) responsive to the will of the electorate and b) strong enough to effectively confront big business. It will not be an easy task, and it will require an electorate that is not so easily duped by Big Money spin. Is there any chance?



Will We Keep Hating

Will We Keep Hating Government? ABSOLUTELY! UNTIL IT STARTS REPRESENTING US, THE PEOPLE.... It is the government of the CEOs, corporate officers, high ranking officials, bankers, rich merchants. Working people and small business owners are the peasants of the 21st century. The controllers are the czars, lords, and slave owners.... When government becomes a leveler of opportunities instead of protecting monopolies, duopoly, oligopolies, and other bullies (military industrial complex), it will be a hated institution like the Sheriff of Nottingham. We need a Robin-hood and men in tights to change the balance.



Our government is radically

Our government is radically failing the people. It is sold out to the corporations.

This has been especially evidenced in our endless Middle East military adventures, first in Iraq, now in Afghanistan.

When most Americans commonsensibly know we should get out.

Next, by the debacle called "health care reform," when most Americans commensibly know they should pass single payer legislation opening up Medicare to all Americans.

Now, by this escapade against Miranda rights. As if there were no presumption of innocence in the American judicial system.

I didn't dislike government before.

But, by this point in life, I do now.

As 16:31 points, out, it does not represent WE THE PEOPLE. It represents THEM THE CEOS, THE CORPORATIONS, THE MONEY HUNGRY GREEDY MURDERING ANTI-AMERICAN CORPORATIONS WITH NO NATIONAL ALLEGIANCE WHATSOEVER. ONLY TO THEIR GLOBAL PROFITS.