Elmo's solution to the budget crisis: Play dates
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Back in October, CNN鈥檚 Erin Burnett interviewed Sesame Street鈥檚 Elmo, getting his advice on how Congress might actually stop bickering and get their work done. (CNN replayed this interview recently following the super committee鈥檚 disappointing failure.) From the CNN transcript of the original airing:
ERIN BURNETT, HOST, CNN鈥橲 鈥淓RIN BURNETT鈥橲 OUTFRONT鈥: Elmo, you could solve the world鈥檚 problem right now.
ELMO: Really? How?
BURNETT: OK. So, in Washington 鈥
ELMO: Yes?
BURNETT: 鈥 everybody hates each other. Nobody will do anything together.
ELMO: Really?
BURNETT: And it鈥檚 hurting America. How do you fix it, Elmo?
ELMO: Play dates.
BURNETT: Play dates?
ELMO: Yes, everybody has play dates.
BURNETT: Like put a Democrat and Republican play date?
ELMO: Play dates.
BURNETT: Harry Reid, John Boehner, play dates?
ELMO: Yes, play dates. And everybody brings their own food.
BURNETT: OK. Yes.
ELMO: And they have to sing songs.
BURNETT: I think that might solve it. It鈥檚 better than anything we tried so far, Elmo.
This reminds me of the Concord Coalition鈥檚 new 鈥淭wo by Two鈥 initiative, where鈥揳s Bob Bixby explained, also back in October (anticipating, like Elmo, that the super committee in the end would not play so well together):
Just as they did for the State of the Union Address, members of Congress should pair up. They should join together in 鈥渢wo-by-two鈥 fiscal forums in which they present agreed-upon facts and engage with each others鈥 constituents about policy options. Public engagement is of little value if it just means listening to people who already agree with you鈥
Any number of formats could work so long as the goal is to broaden understanding of the issues and seek consensus solutions 鈥 and not to score a partisan 鈥渧ictory.鈥
A good example was set earlier this year by Senators Mark Warner (D-Va.) and Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.), who held joint forums in Richmond and Atlanta. And this is just one model. Over the past six years, The Concord Coalition has brought together analysts and political leaders of diverse perspectives on our 鈥淔iscal Wake-Up鈥 and 鈥淔iscal Solutions鈥 tours.
Audiences across the country have been very receptive. They often express the wish that their political leaders would talk about the issues with the same appreciation of each other鈥檚 point of view. More importantly, audience members begin to accept the need for compromise.
The public is hungry for a nonpartisan dialogue on such big issues as the long-term fiscal challenges, and elected leaders need political cover to 鈥渄o the right thing.鈥 Two-by-two forums fit both needs. Indeed, if President Obama and Speaker Boehner had made their case for a 鈥済rand bargain鈥 to the American people instead of vetting it with other party leaders, they surely would have found a more receptive audience.
In other words, playdates with 鈥減arallel playing鈥 are not enough. You have to communicate and engage with your playmate鈥揻ind out what toys and games he likes and what he does not, reconcile those preferences with yours, and find ways to play together that make both of you happy. As all parents and preschool teachers know, moving on from the parallel playing mode takes some maturity鈥揼etting beyond the 鈥渢errible twos鈥 actually. We鈥檝e been talking about the need for 鈥渁dult conversation,鈥 but maybe we can set the bar even lower for starters and just try to get past the temper tantrums!