Nice bit of history. No answers, but it raises some interesting questions. And 
possibilities...

Imagine a Congress That Can Do Great Things
http://www.newamerica.net/publications/articles/2012/imagine_a_congress_that_can_do_great_things_65270

With just months to go before the presidential campaign ends all meaningful 
activity on Capitol Hill, members of Congress are struggling to move a few 
must-pass pieces of legislation. One of the most pressing is the highway bill, 
which Congress is considering this week. Not only does all federal funding for 
transportation depend on passing a bill by March 31; the highway trust fund 
itself is scheduled to go broke in 2013 and the deal in the making pays for 
only two years. This is essential national maintenance. Yet Congress is - you 
guessed it - gridlocked. We all know Washington is broken. What’s less clear: 
Did it ever work better? If it did, what was different? What ingredients have 
been lost, and can we recapture them? One place to look, especially apt in this 
instance: The 1956 congressional debate that created the interstate highway 
system. The 1956 Federal Aid Highway Act was the health-care legislation of its 
day, an epic Washington battle. The pressure had been building for decades as 
the number of cars exploded. Traffic was a national nightmare. Many intercity 
roads were hardly passable, and most Americans recognized that new highways 
were essential to continue the unprecedented growth the country had been 
enjoying since the end of World War II. What no one could agree on was how to 
pay for the new system. The 1950s were a more consensual era, of course. Both 
Democrats and Republicans had wanted to nominate Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower for 
president in 1952, and during the debate over the highway bill, his approval 
ratings rarely dipped below 70%. But that doesn’t mean there were no 
disagreements. Ideological divisions were if anything sharper than they are 
today — Republicans were the party of big business, Democrats the champions of 
the people and the New Deal. Elections were just as competitive, partisan 
jockeying just as intense. And the debate about how to pay for the highway 
system — tolls, taxes, bonds or some other way — wasn’t just about money. It 
was about values - what kind of country we wanted to be. The debate built in 
intensity through the early ’50s. There were blue-ribbon commissions, competing 
proposals, an array of shifting alliances and armies of lobbyists. The 
president’s proposal and a rival Democratic plan were both shot down in early 
summer 1955. The main obstacles: truckers, motorists and the oil industry, all 
resisting new gasoline, tire and vehicle sales taxes. While the American 
Trucking Association worked behind the scenes in Washington, a national 
grassroots campaign whipped truck drivers into a frenzy, producing thousands of 
phone calls and telegrams to Congress. But something strange happened over the 
next nine months — a last, pivotal round of deal-making — and a compromise 
package passed easily in April 1956. The biggest public works program since the 
pyramids, all told — highways plus local connecting roads — came in at $50 
billion, more than two-thirds of the federal budget in 1956. But the years of 
negotiating paid off, and the deal held. In the end, only one Senator voted no, 
and the bill passed on a voice vote in the House; approval was so overwhelming, 
there was no need to count. What changed in those nine months? Part of it was 
leadership, with sheer determination by lawmakers. The bill had dozens of 
moving parts and many fathers on both sides of the aisle. But the last, 
critical puzzle piece was the highway trust fund, which set aside the taxes 
paid by truckers and motorists for the highway system and nothing else. And the 
two men who worked together to advance the trust fund could hardly have made an 
odder couple: Treasury Secretary George M. Humphrey, a Midwest Republican and 
former corporate executive who came to Washington to cut government spending, 
and U.S. Rep. Hale Boggs of Louisiana, a glad-handing, big-spending, 
bring-home-the-bacon liberal Democrat. Both were more interested in 
problem-solving than ideological purity, in part because in 1956, only 
problem-solving would win votes. Both parties knew they needed to deliver a 
highway system. But America was different, too. The truckers and motorists who 
blocked the highway bill in 1955 changed their minds in 1956. Flouting one of 
the nation’s most ingrained traditions, they accepted a voluntary tax. They 
recognized that though they would pay, they would also benefit, and in the end 
the roads would be more than worth the cost. This was partly because of the 
trust fund. But that wasn’t all. Truckers, motorists, auto manufacturers, oil 
companies and others understood that better highways would mean more commerce. 
More commerce meant industry would produce more goods. More production would 
put more people to work. And their increased consumption would lead to yet more 
growth. This was the win-win-win perpetual-motion machine that had been driving 
the economy since 1945. And based on the prosperity of the previous decade, 
most voters believed a rising tide would still lift all boats. Can we apply 
these lessons today? I’m not sure.
So much is so different, and we can’t turn back the clock. Still, it’s 
something to ponder as Democrats and Republicans shout past each other on 
Capitol Hill in coming weeks. It doesn’t have to be this way.
 

Copyright 2012, CNN

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