John Kasich speaks to reporters after a town hall meeting in Davenport, Iowa.

John Kasich speaks to reporters after a town hall meeting in Davenport, Iowa. Mary Altaffer/AP

The Frustrations of Divided Government Play Out in Iowa Races

Voters don’t agree on the country’s biggest problems, never mind the solutions.

AMES, Iowa—It doesn’t take much time with voters in Iowa to re­cog­nize that the 2016 pres­id­en­tial race is be­ing fought in the chasm between the tower­ing chal­lenges fa­cing the coun­try and the crimped re­sponses that our po­lar­ized and para­lyzed polit­ic­al sys­tem can now pro­duce.

Re­pub­lic­an and Demo­crat­ic audi­ences here di­verge wildly in their pre­ferred solu­tions for the coun­try’s biggest prob­lems—and even over what is­sues qual­i­fy for that list. But they are united by a com­mon con­vic­tion that Wash­ing­ton is now in­cap­able of mov­ing very far in any dir­ec­tion. As next week’s Iowa caucuses form­ally be­gin the 2016 vot­ing, each party is di­vid­ing over how to break that im­passe—with evol­u­tion­ary change that works with­in today’s lim­its or with the prom­ise of a re­volu­tion that some­how washes those lim­its away?

On both sides, the en­ergy is with can­did­ates (Bernie Sanders for the Demo­crats, and Don­ald Trump and Ted Cruz for the Re­pub­lic­ans) of­fer­ing the dream of a clean sweep and a blank sheet on which to re­write the na­tion’s pri­or­it­ies. Yet be­cause the can­did­ates of­fer­ing such fun­da­ment­al change are largely mis­dia­gnos­ing the reas­ons for today’s im­passe, it’s un­likely they could break it even if they cap­ture the pres­id­ency. Giv­en the na­tion’s un­der­ly­ing par­tis­an di­vi­sions, the only way to ad­vance big­ger ideas may be through com­prom­ises across party lines that neither side is dis­cuss­ing much yet.

In both parties, this elec­tion is al­most phys­ic­ally vi­brat­ing with the ac­cu­mu­lated frus­tra­tion of polit­ic­al life un­der a di­vided gov­ern­ment. By Elec­tion Day, one party will have sim­ul­tan­eously con­trolled the White House, Sen­ate, and House of Rep­res­ent­at­ives for just 12 of the 48 years since 1968. By con­trast, one party held uni­fied con­trol of all three branches for fully 58 of the 72 years be­fore then.

Dur­ing his first two years, Pres­id­ent Obama achieved big le­gis­lat­ive break­throughs with uni­fied con­trol (and the biggest, if fleet­ing, Demo­crat­ic Sen­ate ma­jor­ity since Jimmy Carter). But after Re­pub­lic­ans re­gained the House (in 2010) and the Sen­ate (in 2014) it’s been trench war­fare in which Obama has in­creas­ingly turned to uni­lat­er­al ex­ec­ut­ive ac­tion (on is­sues like cli­mate and im­mig­ra­tion) to fur­ther his goals. That’s left lib­er­als frus­trated that Obama couldn’t achieve more—and con­ser­vat­ives steamed that the Re­pub­lic­an Con­gress couldn’t undo more of what he did achieve.

The 2016 can­did­ates are di­ver­ging over how they would break this stale­mate. Demo­crat­ic Sen. Bernie Sanders has built his cam­paign on prom­ising to mo­bil­ize a trans­form­at­ive move­ment against the “bil­lion­aire class.” When he ap­peared at Iowa State Uni­versity here Monday, his first words were, “So, you guys ready to make a polit­ic­al re­volu­tion?” In Sanders’s vis­ion, a massive grass­roots up­ris­ing will shat­ter the con­strict­ing lim­its of today’s polit­ic­al de­bate and thrust for­ward long-time lib­er­al goals such as single-pay­er health care and free pub­lic-col­lege tu­ition. 

For Sanders’s grow­ing army, it’s an ex­hil­ar­at­ing pro­spect. But even some who cheer his goals ques­tion how he will over­come op­pos­i­tion from Re­pub­lic­ans ir­re­voc­ably op­posed to them. “My only ques­tion is does he have the abil­ity to carry some of these rad­ic­al ideas through?” said Mark Bergstrom, an en­gin­eer from Min­neapol­is, who drove down to hear Sanders.

Hil­lary Clin­ton in­creas­ingly is present­ing her­self as the prag­mat­ic doer to Sanders’s po­et­ic dream­er. Her core case is that she can push more pro­gress­ive gains through the cur­rent clogged sys­tem—even if her goals aren’t as sweep­ing as Sanders’s. Bergstrom is like many Demo­crats who find Sanders’s ar­gu­ment more in­spir­ing and Clin­ton’s more real­ist­ic. Still un­de­cided, he says that along with his wife he’s weigh­ing, “Do we vote for smal­ler changes in a dir­ec­tion we be­lieve in [with Clin­ton], or make a big­ger gamble [with Sanders]?”

How oth­er Demo­crats an­swer that ques­tion will de­term­ine wheth­er Sanders can truly threaten the front-run­ner.

Among Re­pub­lic­ans, the can­did­ates largely prom­ising to work with­in the sys­tem (Jeb Bush, John Kasich, Chris Christie, and, up to a point, Marco Ru­bio) are all strug­gling. Those prom­ising to raze the sys­tem lead the field: Cruz, and above all, Trump.

While Sanders prom­ises bot­tom-up change powered by a grass­roots move­ment, Trump of­fers the op­pos­ite: top-down change cata­lyzed by his force­ful per­son­al­ity and deal-mak­ing acu­men. Trump seems genu­inely con­vinced he could ne­go­ti­ate with Con­gres­sion­al Demo­crats if elec­ted. “That’s the way the coun­try is sup­posed to work,” he in­sisted in Mar­shall­town this week.

But Trump’s key goals, such as build­ing a bor­der wall or massively de­port­ing un­doc­u­mented im­mig­rants, of­fer little basis for bi­par­tis­an agree­ment. And apart from tout­ing his own skill at “the art of the deal,” he of­fers no plaus­ible path through the many leg­al and polit­ic­al bar­ri­ers any such ef­forts would face, such as the need for big fund­ing in­creases from Con­gress.

In fact, from Sanders to Trump, all of 2016’s re­volu­tion­ar­ies in­ac­cur­ately blame today’s im­passe on weak lead­ers or strong spe­cial in­terests. In­stead, it per­sists mostly be­cause the coun­try is now di­vided al­most evenly between two polit­ic­al co­ali­tions with an­ti­thet­ic­al vis­ions of Amer­ica’s fu­ture. Neither is go­ing away after the next elec­tion. To achieve big change in 2017, the party that wins the White House still will al­most cer­tainly need to forge reas­on­able com­prom­ises with the los­ing side—even if that’s not a mes­sage that’s warm­ing many par­tis­an hearts in the blustery Iowa chill be­fore next week’s fiercely con­tested vote.