America’s Dysfunctional Superpower Status Attributed to Congressional Paralysis

America’s Dysfunctional Superpower Status Attributed to Congressional Paralysis



Paralysis in Congress makes America⁣ a dysfunctional superpower

Editor’s note (October 12th): Steve Scalise, the Republican congressman who won his party’s nomination to⁢ be speaker of America’s House of Representatives, withdrew from the race⁤ after failing to secure broad Republican⁤ support.

ROBERT GATES, a former defence secretary who served Republican and Democratic presidents⁢ alike, recently ‌issued ‌a bleak warning. America faces an unholy⁤ alliance of China, Russia, Iran and North Korea, yet cannot muster a coherent response. “Dysfunction has made American power erratic and unreliable, practically inviting risk-prone autocrats to place dangerous bets—with potentially ⁢catastrophic consequences,” he wrote in Foreign Affairs.

The next ⁣day, Congress seemed⁣ to prove him right.‌ Having danced ⁤on⁤ the brink of a ⁢government shutdown, ⁣on September 30th lawmakers adopted a stopgap budget ⁣to keep the federal government ⁣open for⁤ another 45 ⁣days. ⁢The reprieve came‌ at ​the cost of halting further military and economic aid to ⁢Ukraine, at ​least temporarily.‍ And despite worries⁢ about war​ over ‍Taiwan, new Pentagon programmes are ​also ‌on hold. Now Israel, too,⁢ is asking for American help to fight back‍ against Hamas, after a terrorist onslaught on October 7th ⁣killed ‍more than 1,200 people.⁢ At least 22​ Americans died, and an unknown number are held hostage.

2023-10-12 09:04:45
Post from ​ www.economist.com
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