It’s little wonder why 77 percent of Americans across the
political spectrum disapprove of Congress’ job performance, according
to the latest survey from Gallup.
On January 3, Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) took over as Speaker of
the House for the second time in her career. In the four and a half
months since, Americans have gotten another close look at what career
politicians do best: anything but solve real problems.
For more than two years, Congressional Democrats excused
inaction by attacking President Donald J. Trump every day for a crime
he did not commit. The Mueller Report—a 400-page document
that cost American taxpayers at least $35 million—recommended no
charges against the President. That should have ended the matter.
Instead, Democrats have a new obstruction
strategy: weaponize the subpoena powers of Congress to fish for
political ammunition to use against the Trump Administration.
It’s a cynical ploy and a dangerous precedent, but cynical
ploys make for good TV drama. So while President Trump asks
Congressional Democrats to set politics aside and work with him on
infrastructure, immigration, stronger trade deals, and more, Democrat
leaders know they can keep the media focused on political theater, not
policy.
Washington loves the distraction tactic because it works in
the short-term. The mainstream media always plays along, and it denies
any accomplishments or progress that could risk making an opponent look
good. The price tag—broken trust—comes later.
Here is the real cost of Washington’s never-ending
obstruction drama:
·
Today, 4
percent of Americans say they have a great deal of trust in
Congress.
·
In
2016, Americans’ confidence in mass media hit its lowest level in
history.
·
Between
1958 and 2015, public trust in Washington plunged from 73 to 18
percent.
|
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