In a
freewheeling speech Thursday afternoon, Republican frontrunner Donald Trump
stumbled into a riff about how great trains are. It's sad, he said, that the
American rail system is so dilapidated while China's is now slicker than ever.
"They
have trains that go 300 miles per hour," the populist billionaire
exclaimed. "We have trains that go chug ... chug ... chug."
The line got
a laugh—it's not often that one sees a presidential candidate imitate Thomas
the Tank Engine—but it also underscored one of the most solid planks in the
billionaire businessman's rickety policy platform: to fund and rebuild U.S.
infrastructure, including its crumbling railways.
The thing
is, that's usually a Democratic talking point.
President
Obama spent the better part of his second term pushing for a $478 billion
infrastructure bill to fund roads, bridges, and rail lines. Before that, Obama
and Vice President Joe Biden, who at one point practically moonlighted as
Amtrak's spokesman, pushed a new U.S. Department of Transportation initiative
awarding $8 billion to states to build new high-speed intercity rail.
"[T]here’s
no reason why Europe or China should have the fastest trains when we can build
them right here in America," Obama announced in a 2010 statement.
“By
investing in high speed rail, we’re doing so many good things for our country
at the same time,” Biden added. We’re creating good construction and
manufacturing jobs in the near-term; we’re spurring economic development in the
future; we’re making our communities more livable—and we’re doing it all while
decreasing America’s environmental impact and increasing America’s ability to
compete in the world.”
Trump's
language, six years later, is nearly identical.
"Our
airports, bridges, water tunnels, power grids, rail systems—our nation’s entire
infrastructure is crumbling, and we aren’t doing anything about it," he
wrote in his 2015 book, Crippled America. He went on to promise that fixing it
would spur economic growth.
"These
projects put people to work—not just the people doing the work but also the
manufacturers, the suppliers, the designers, and, yes, even the lawyers. The Senate
Budget Committee estimates that rebuilding America will create 13 million
jobs," he wrote. Which, incidentally, was Obama's point in 2011, when
Congressional Republicans blocked his $60 billion infrastructure jobs bill.
Republicans
have generally fought efforts to increase federal spending on principle. That
includes vast infrastructure projects, even popular ones. In the hours after
the deadly Amtrak derailment in May 2015, for example, the Republican-led House
Appropriations Committee voted to slash the rail budget by 20%.
In December,
a bipartisan group of lawmakers in the House and Senate joined to pass a less
sweeping $305 billion version of the infrastructure package. But both of
Trump's top rivals for the Republican nomination, Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida
and Ted Cruz of Texas, voted no on the bill.
In a nod to
the fiscal conservative tradition of the Republican Party, Trump has admitted
that rebuilding American infrastructure would cost taxpayer dollars. But then
waved away the concern with Trumpian bravado."On the federal level, this
is going to be an expensive investment, no question about that. But in the long
run it will more than pay for itself," he said. "It will stimulate
our economy while it is being built and make it a lot easier to do business
when it’s done—and it can be done on time and under budget."
No comments:
Post a Comment