Column: So Congress is a mess. It’s supposed to be messy
It’s not exactly a blistering insight into how Washington works, but nothing will get you more praise and respect than being powerful and wielding that power effectively. So, it should be no surprise that Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) finished her tenure as speaker of the House to lavish applause. Many have dubbed her the greatest or most effective speaker in modern history — or even ever.
The contrast with Rep. Kevin McCarthy’s desperate effort to get elected speaker couldn’t be starker. Even if he’s successful, most Hill watchers think he will be weak and many think his speakership will be so short-lived he could go down as the American Liz Truss — the recent British prime minister who served for 49 days. That’s because in order to buy — or at least rent — the support of reluctant Republicans, he’s been promising to weaken the job he covets. For most Congress watchers, it’s apparently a given that a weak speaker would be bad.
While I hold no brief for McCarthy (R-Bakersfield), who has invited his problems on himself, the truth is that a weak speaker might be the best thing for a strong Congress.
Put another way, the Pelosi model of governance is part of the problem. Yes, she was very effective, but her effectiveness came from a centralized, top-down approach — which has its historical roots in, among other things, Newt Gingrich’s “Contract With America†reforms in the early ’90s. This approach is one of the drivers of political dysfunction in Washington and the country.
Congress is supposed to be where politics happens. Representatives from different regions, with different interests, are supposed to hammer out legislative solutions from the ground up. Legislation should come at the end of a process of discovery, in committees empowered to weigh debates between competing experts and constituencies. This process builds consensus. It gives the public an opportunity to hear competing points of view and to be heard.
The Pelosi model reverses all of this. Legislative priorities — including huge undebated omnibus spending bills — are worked out almost entirely by the speaker and the Senate majority leader and then presented as a fait accompli to legislators, like unimprovable stone tablets. And because of the hyper-partisanship that Congress’ dysfunction helps fuel, legislators are expected to vote on a straight party line.
Worse, when some policy changes are too radical or unpopular to pass even on a party-line basis — such as forgiving billions in student debt — Congress simply asks (or allows) the executive branch to do it unilaterally with no legislative support or legitimacy whatsoever. This makes politics ever uglier and more zero-sum because it turns presidents into elected monarchs and leaves unelected judges as the only check on executive power.
When I came to Washington, it was not unreasonable to think that some committee chairs — like Ways and Means baron Dan Rostenkowski — were more powerful than the speaker. Things were hardly perfect then. But over the last 20 years, we’ve come to accept Congress’ dysfunction as normal and celebrate those who capitalize on it.
It’s fine to decry how members of Congress are too partisan and too performative, preferring to denounce “the establishment†from cable news studios or to write meaningless press releases or tweets rather than actual legislation. I’ve been calling Congress a “parliament of pundits†for years now. But it’s worth asking: Where did the incentive structure for this frivolous gamesmanship came from? The answer: Our legislators — and by extension their constituents — have been locked out of the legislative process. Add in the baleful role of primaries and you can see why virtually every Republican congressional challenger rails that their Democratic opponent voted 100% of the time with Nancy Pelosi or why Democrats say their opponents voted in lockstep with former President Trump. They had no better options.
Congress is an attractive platform for frauds like pathological liar George Santos (R-N.Y.) and human Twitter accounts like Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) because it’s an increasingly unattractive choice for serious people.
Former Speaker Tip O’Neill famously said, “all politics is local.†That’s no longer true. All politics is national now because Congress no longer plays its role as the arena where political disputes are settled through a robust legislative process. Congress is supposed to soak up political discord and channel it productively. But the intake valves have been welded shut, the better to impose policies from above. As a result, politics seeps into every other nook and cranny of government and life.
A weak speaker won’t solve these problems overnight. But it would be a step in the right direction.
More to Read
A cure for the common opinion
Get thought-provoking perspectives with our weekly newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.