Mandate for the Middle
November 30, 2002
By JAMES M. JEFFORDS
WASHINGTON.
I have listened to a lot of people discuss what went right
and what went wrong in the 2002 midterm elections. In the
final tally, there is no question that President Bush did a
masterful job engineering victories for the Republican
Party.
But I worry that the list of issues that dominated the
election season was woefully incomplete. As we respond
daily to the latest threats of terror highlighted by the
administration, I believe other issues that bear directly
on the security of our homeland are being dangerously
obscured.
Our slumping economy, our threatened environment, our
underfunded schools, our corporate scandals - these are not
issues that you will hear discussed by the White House, but
they are being talked about by people who don't have the
power to define the nation's agenda.
In Congress we have just passed a law that will bring about
the largest restructuring of our government since World War
II. We are telling the American people that a new
Department of Homeland Security will protect them. But
Americans are losing their jobs and their ability to
support their families. In less than two years, more than
two million private sector jobs have been lost, while our
economic growth is the weakest it has been in 50 years.
We should be addressing that homeland security issue.
Too
many hard-working people are stuck in low-wage jobs,
wondering how they will make the rent payment and cover
child-care costs. The Census Bureau's recent income and
poverty report stated that 1.3 million Americans slipped
below the poverty line in the last year. This increase
means that 11.7 percent of the United States population is
living in poverty. The Census Bureau also reported that
median household income decreased for the first time since
1991.
What's more, many workers who are fortunate enough not to
have to worry about their jobs are now worrying about their
savings. More than 50 percent of Americans have investments
in the stock market, and they have seen the value of those
investments decline by more than $4.5 trillion since last
January.
We should be addressing that homeland security issue.
Coal plants in the Midwest continue to spew toxic
pollutants into the air, yet the administration does not
see the wisdom in regulating these emissions, preferring to
rely on the good-faith efforts of plant owners to police
themselves. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of people are
dying prematurely every year from such pollution.
I was proud to work with President George H. W. Bush on the
Clean Air Act amendments of 1990. He called our work "a new
chapter in our environmental history, and a new era for
clean air." Now, President George W. Bush insists on moving
us backward, undoing his father's legacy and our nation's
environmental policy. Last week the administration issued
regulations to ease clean air rules to allow power plants
to avoid having to install new antipollution equipment when
they modernize their plants.
We should be addressing that homeland security issue.
The
lack of funding for our schools is disgraceful. Of the
major industrial nations, the United States ranks among the
lowest in terms of financing education at the federal
level, providing only 7 percent of the cost. The
president's education plan is long on new federal mandates
but short on the resources to make them work. The
government promised more than 25 years ago to pay 40
percent of special education costs for children with
disabilities; it now covers only 18 percent.
There's no question that we are living in a dangerous time.
Some of the threats we face are being met with judgment and
careful deliberation. But others, namely the steady erosion
of economic opportunity here at home, are being ignored.
If the new, razor-thin Republican majority abuses its power
and moves forward with an extreme agenda that overlooks the
concerns of the many and benefits only the privileged few,
there will be repercussions.
Since the election, my decision to leave the Republican
Party last year has been subject to new scrutiny. The
attention on my personal decision, while understandable, is
misplaced. If the Republicans read the recent election
results as a rejection of moderation and a mandate to
steamroll opposition from within the party, they will be
making a grave mistake.
James M. Jeffords, an independent, is the junior senator
from Vermont.
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/30/opinion/30JEFF.html?ex=1039669198&ei=1&en=f1d964106aa05aa0
For general information about NYTimes.com, write to
help@nytimes.com.
Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company