“Just say no.” That
anti-drug campaign response coined by First Lady Nancy Reagan has become the
motto of opponents of government policy.
Critics can reject a policy without proposing an
alternative. Their aim is to stop
government action, not to solve problems.
To avoid the label of being nothing more than naysayers,
opponents may claim they are offering an alternative, though they know it is
either impractical, impossible or both.
The obvious recent example was the speech by Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu before a joint session of Congress. His purpose was to use an American national
platform to reject the unfinished nuclear negotiations between the United
States plus five other world powers with Iran.
The goal shared by the so-called “five plus one” countries and
Israel is to block Iran from gaining nuclear weapons. The Iranians claim that they only seek
peacetime uses of nuclear energy but almost nobody believes them.
Netanyahu argued there should be no deal with Iran, even if
it froze its nuclear development for at least 10 years. His alternative, without providing any assurance
that it could possibly work, is to break off talks immediately and keep
pressing Iran so that it gives up any chance for nuclear energy.
His optimism about the effects of squeezing Iran is shared
by no world power. Breaking off the talks
could leave only the option of a military attack on Iran to destroy its
facilities. That amounts to the Israeli
Prime Minister saying to the U.S.: “Let’s you and them fight.”
That alternative is obviously unacceptable. In the absence of a realistic alternative, Netanyahu’s
position amounts to “just say no.”
Why did the Republicans invite him to speak? They knew he would attack President Obama’s
negotiating policy, giving them yet another way of undermining the president.
How about U.S. immigration policy? Opponents of allowing most of the illegal
immigrants to remain in the country offer no alternative about what to do with
them. Instead, they insist the
government must first seal the borders.
That’s not an alternative when it comes to those already in
the U.S., and it is impossible. So the opponents’
response amounts to saying that matters should be left in their currently
confused state without even trying to resolve the problem.
One answer might be to throw out as many of them as
possible. That’s just what the Obama
administration has done by deporting two million immigrants.
The Affordable Care Act – Obamacare? House Republicans have voted more than 50
times to repeal it without providing an alternative for the millions of people
unable to find reasonably priced health insurance.
The only alternative half-heartedly advanced is to retain
coverage that people have gained under Obamacare temporarily and then leave it
to the states to come with health care insurance plans. Opponents must know that many states will do
nothing.
Not all the “just say no” fault lies with the GOP. Take the Keystone XL pipeline.
Though the now-completed government review has taken many
years instead of the usual several months, Obama is still hiding behind the
regulatory process and refusing to make a decision. It seems clear he is against it. Congress has tried unsuccessfully to force the
hand of man seemingly determined to leave no fingerprints.
The threats worrying Obama already exist; other pipelines
transporting Canadian fuel into the U.S. carry the same kind of oil. And there is an alternative to Keystone: far
more dangerous rail transportation of oil.
A fuel train derailed just last week.
The ‘just say no” policy may be producing a worse result
than allowing Keystone XL, which has developed into an environmental rallying
point more than constituting a major new threat.
None of this “just say no” discussion is meant to take sides
on the substance of the issues. Maybe there
are better outcomes than are now foreseen for Iran, immigration, health care
and oil pipelines.
But Americans will never get to work out the best solutions
to the problems to the issues they raise so long as opponents insist on playing
“gotcha.” These issues are not merely
matters of political debate. The
political system needs to produce results.
Policy makers should understand that no solution is perfect
and that people want workable compromises, not endless and sometime dangerous
political battles.
Perhaps it is time to show some courage and repeat what
House Speaker John Boehner did on immigration: put together coalitions to produce
results regardless of party. He was
willing to pass a bill depending on votes of both parties, not only the
majority Republicans.