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For all his many political struggles, President Joe Biden is quietly delivering on one of the central — and most implausible — promises of his campaign: restoring a sense of normalcy and bipartisanship to the legislative process.
The latest example is the bipartisan deal on gun regulation, which finally puts vague Republican rhetoric on school security and mental health into action while also embracing modest Democratic proposals on such matters as background checks and red flag laws. The measure will probably not dramatically alter the level of gun violence in the United States. But it should do some good, and re-establishes the idea that Congress can act in response to dramatic events.
Before the gun deal, of course, Biden worked with Congress to deliver the kind of bipartisan infrastructure legislation that both his predecessors only talked about. There have also been many more obscure bills, ranging from legislation changing the regulation of ocean shipping to a major overhaul of the U.S. Postal Service.
Bipartisan science funding legislation has been languishing for months now, but that's due to boring House-Senate disagreements that are being worked out by a conference committee — a process so old-school it had become basically forgotten in Washington. Progress also is being made on bipartisan bills about such thorny issues as Chinese investment in U.S. companies and antitrust scrutiny of big technology companies.
Much of this work is happening through a process I like to call the Secret Congress: Members quietly working together while allowing the political press to focus on Hunter Biden's laptop, which books are in which school libraries, the latest Marjorie Taylor Greene tweet or any of the million other controversies that engage the body politic.
The Secret Congress dynamic, of course, is one reason why it's difficult for Biden to secure credit for delivering on this promise. During Barack Obama's presidency, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was open about the fact that he was reluctant for Republicans to engage constructively on any topic lest the passage of bills come to reflect positively on an incumbent president he hoped to defeat.