I’ve seen some fairly amusing explanations for Congress’ inability to govern, and I’ve heard some people rationalize why so many lawmakers seem so dumb, but leave it to [tag]Peggy Noonan[/tag] to offer a unified theory of politicians’ problems: they just can’t keep up.
I am thinking about the huge and crushing number of issues we force politicians to understand and make decisions on. These are issues of great variety, complexity, and even in some cases, many cases in a way, unknowability.
All of us, as good citizens, feel that we must know something about them, study them, come to conclusions. But there are too many, and they are too complicated, or the information on them is contradictory, or incomplete.
For politicians it is the same but more so. They not only have to try to understand, complicated and demanding questions, they have to vote on them.
For Noonan, we’re in the midst of a “[tag]complexity crisis[/tag]” in which we ask “too much of our politicians.” Lawmakers are expected to make the right decisions on everything from health care to national security, taxes to the environment. They just aren’t smart and wise enough to keep up. Or so the theory goes.
Isn’t this just a lazy cop-out?
Lawmakers aren’t required to have encyclopedic knowledge of everything; the system isn’t even set up that way. There are committees and subcommittees to focus lawmakers on specific policy areas; there are office and committee staffers who help keep members informed; there are policy papers and studies that lawmakers can reference to keep up on the details; and when all else fails, there’s the Internet. (If memory serves, Washintgon also has a massive lobbying industry filled with frriendly faces who are always available to lend a hand.)
I’m afraid there are plenty of reasons DC is a dysfunctional mess, not the least of which is a Republican machine that’s desperate for government power but equally anxious not to use it. For that matter, I’ll concede that a surprising number of lawmakers appear to be completely uninformed about far too much.
But Noonan’s “complexity crisis” is an attempt to justify incompetence. Policy making is difficult — it always has been — but there’s no reason lawmakers should be overwhelmed by their duties. There’s plenty on their plate, but considering the fact that these guys don’t seem to tackle anything of substance anyway, they shouldn’t get lost this easily.
Besides, if they can’t hack it, they should head home.