Over the last week, many on both the left and the right have made suggestions to the GOP on what they should try and accomplish with their newfound majority in the Senate. So in keeping with the punditry spirit, here are my suggestions as to what I would do if I were the GOP leadership:
1.) Repair the damage to the Senate.
Harry Reid inflicted damage to the Senate as an institution in an attempt to gain partisan advantage. As their first step, the Republicans should restore the 60 vote filibuster rule for judicial nominations, and restore all other procedural rights for the minority party that were stripped by Harry Reid and the Democrats. The reason to do this is that it really doesn’t cost the Republicans anything. The Republicans can still block Obama’s judicial nominations on a party-line vote, and anything else can already be filibustered. Repairing the damage allows the Republicans to position themselves for the 2016 run as the mature political party. It allows them to show the moderate and swing voters that they will need in 2016 to hold their majority and capture the White House that they are about making sure all sides get heard (in implied contrast to Harry Reid Democrats who are only about making sure that their side gets heard).
2.) Approve the Keystone pipeline.
This is a project that has been languishing for years. It has broad support and would pass easily, likely with some Democrat support. Most importantly, it will create good middle-class jobs in a way that can be easily understood by voters. If Obama vetoes it, especially if the project has some Democrat support, he (and by extension a Democrat in the White House) becomes viewed as the obstructionist. If he doesn’t, then the Republicans look like the party that can get things done.
3.) Reduce environmental regulation, but change the messaging.
For years, Republicans have been harping on “small government/less regulation”, which many have interpreted to mean “no government”. Rather, Republicans should talk about eliminating “excessive regulation”. One reason (among several) that many manufacturing jobs have been offshored is the excessive environmental regulation here. While environmentalists may imagine that they are helping the environment by piling more regulations on American businesses, sending factory jobs to China or other places with laxer environmental controls does nothing for the environment, and perhaps might even end up hurting it. Often what happens is that we export our pollution. While the air over Cleveland might be cleaner, the industrial impact on the climate is the same whether the pollution is “Made in China” or “Made in the USA”. The American people want more middle class jobs, and the environment is one of their lesser concerns. A program of reducing regulations along with a PR campaign promoting the reason for reducing regulations (increase well-paying industrial jobs), could be a win for the economy and a win for the Republicans politically.
4.) Prepare an immigration reform bill.
The Republicans should be ready with some sort of immigration reform bill that is in line with their party’s priorities as well as being based on reality. While some in the Republican caucus want to shut down the southern border, round up all illegal aliens, and shove them on a bus back to Mexico, such an action simply isn’t going to happen. However, the fear of many on the right is that if you couple legalization first and border security later, you will see the legalization and not the border security. This is a legitimate concern. Consequently, the Republicans should expand immigration allowances for high skilled workers from other countries, who the U.S. desperately needs. At the same time the bill should contain a solid, guarantee- to-happen, border security provision with acceptable verification. Upon verification (which should likely require that the governors and legislatures of the border states sign off that the border is acceptable secure), all illegal aliens should be legalized. While this would grate on law-and-order types (they are rewarded for breaking the law), they will have to be ignored. Stopping the flow of illegal aliens (i.e. low-skill labor) will reduce downward pressure on wages at the low end of the scale (a concern of the labor leader Cesar Chavez), and make the U.S. more secure.
While such a bill would be unlikely to be signed by Obama, it would mark a real attempt to fix the border. Furthermore, it would allow the Republicans to combat any executive action Obama takes on the subject, as it would show that Republicans were willing to put forth a serious bill and Obama wasn’t willing to work with them. It would also show the Republicans to be the more mature political party. In addition, such a bill would be a signal to the Hispanic community that Republicans are willing to work with them and aren’t just a “go back home where you came from” type of party where illegal immigrants are concerned.
5.) Work to mitigate the worst effects of Obamacare.
Let’s face it. Obamacare isn’t popular and isn’t going to be popular. At the same time, a full repeal isn’t going to happen as long as Obama is in office. Consequently, the Republicans should pass bills that would mitigate the worst effects of the law. At the same time, Republicans HAVE to develop an alternate plan. “Repeal And Replace” can’t be allowed to simply be “Repeal And Maybe Someday In The Distant Future We Will Think About Coming Up With Some Reforms”. By working to mitigate the worst effects, which is also likely to undermine the law, the Republicans will again show that they are serious about governing.
6.) Put A Muzzle On Ted Cruz.
The Republicans won the Senate and Ted Cruz did not dominate the airwaves. There is a reason for this. The American people as a whole simply do not respond well to rhetorical “bomb throwers”, and Ted Cruz (and people like him) are the sort of people who can take a good idea and turn people off to it. It doesn’t mean that Cruz or others like him have no good ideas, but a political party that has strident people like that as its face is not one that is going convince anyone and will turn a lot of the moderate and swing voters off. The Republican Party, if it wants to be the majority and win the White House in 2016, has to be seen as a responsible governing party, not a party that wants to blow up the government.
In short, neither political party has much trust from the American people. The Democrats have squandered the trust that they had in 2008. The Republican Party has been given another chance, not because voters necessarily like them better, but rather there is no other major political party that voters can turn to at this time. If Republicans want to improve their standing in the eyes of the American people, they need to show that they are the party of responsible governing, and that they have honest solutions to offer. If they do this, they may convince many of the moderate and swing voters (partisan Democrats will never be convinced) that they can govern. If they do this, they may find 2016 may be a good year for them as well. If not, then the voters will likely turn back to the Democrats in 2016 and the Republicans will deserve their defeat.