Congress will return from its summer recess next week to another record low in approval ratings. Blaming Congress for the dysfunction in Washington, however, lets off the hook another culprit: us.
According to the most recent Gallup poll, just 14 percent of Americans hold a favorable rating of Congress; 81 percent disapprove. If it were a product, Congress would be discontinued. But Congress is a product of the people. We chose the lawmakers we claim to despise for their unwillingness to compromise.
Whose fault, though, is it, really? Not all theirs. What Americans claim to want in principle we reject when it comes to details.
It's accurate to blame the parties for some of the tribalism in the House of Representatives. Nate Silver, who wrote the FiveThirtyEight blog for The New York Times, concluded last December that since 1992 the number of "swing," or competitive, House districts had decreased from 103 in 1992 to 35 last year.
Two decades ago also marked the introduction of increasingly sophisticated technology that enables the ruling party in a state legislature to draw political maps with demographic precision, maximizing the influence of its voters and minimizing those of the minority party.
Safer districts are more partisan districts. Whatever national polls may say on a big issue what matters to the lawmaker is what the district thinks. The top priority of every House member and senator is re-election. What plays at home will be the lawmaker's position. As in:
Every objective, credible study concludes that Medicare needs significant changes to avoid insolvency. The eligibility age will have to rise, as the age for full Social Security benefits is rising. Those who can afford to pay more will have to pay more.
Social Security is less of a problem, but also needs changes to avoid insolvency. One idea is to use a different Consumer Price Index to calculate cost-of-living adjustments. A new formula would mean smaller adjustments.
Those would be tough choices. But fixing the nation's finances involves nothing but tough choices. Reps. Lois Frankel and Ted Deutch, Democrats who represent South Florida districts with disproportionately high numbers of older residents, aren't hearing calls for self-sacrifice from constituents. So they can get away with talking of lifting the payroll tax cap, asking more of younger people paying the tax and nothing of those collecting the benefits.
The only competitive district in this area is District 18, which Democrat Patrick Murphy represents. Covering northern Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast, it is 36 percent Democratic, 38 percent Republican and 26 percent independent. His chief of staff says Murphy still is seeking the so-called "grand bargain" in which entitlements and taxes are on the table and both sides give more than a little.
Republicans are as unreasonable on taxes as Democrats are on entitlements, also against all reason. They argue that raising taxes kills the economy. Yet Congress raised taxes in 1990 and 1993, before and during the longest peacetime economic expansion in our history.
How about just "tax reform?" Is the public stepping up? During the recess, Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., and Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., toured the country touting tax reform. They asked one woman which tax exemptions she favored eliminating. All of them, she said, except those that help her. The combined cost to the treasury of all tax exemptions is roughly $3.5 trillion, or about five times what this year's budget deficit will be.
Congress won't compromise because we tell lawmakers not to compromise. Congress won't make hard choices because most Americans won't. If we rated the public based on willingness to sacrifice and unselfishness, we probably would come out somewhere around 14 percent.
Schultz is editorial page editor for The Palm Beach Post; rschultz@pbpost.com.