Mr. President, your election was a testament to our country's amazing
capacities for self-correction and reinvention. Those national
qualities have manifested themselves not a moment too soon.
With our country mired in war and a worsening economic crisis, Americans
across the political spectrum sense that hyperpartisan grandstanding is
a luxury they can no longer afford. They seek a new era of competence and
comity, in which our people reach across old divides to find new solutions to
the urgent challenges of our time.
The purpose of this book is to offer you and our fellow citizens some
constructive ideas on how we can meet those challenges. It is a collection
of short policy pieces the Progressive Policy Institute (PPI) published as
Memos to the Next President starting last September, before we could be
sure who our next president would be. Our work continued through the
transition, and this book -- with the updated title of Memos to the New
President -- collects all 25 memos in a volume that we respectfully commend
to your attention.
Taken together, these ideas constitute a new progressive agenda, one that
we believe is entirely consistent with your vision for transcending outdated
boundaries, forging new coalitions, and governing in a spirit of radical
pragmatism.
This is a "big ideas" book in the tradition of PPI's Mandate for Change
(1992) and Building the Bridge (1996). Those earlier volumes spelled out
the policy innovations that defined President Clinton's modernizing agenda
during the 1990s. This new collection features the creative contributions
of a wide array of analysts and policy experts. It reflects PPI's belief in the
power of ideas to overcome the forces of inertia, stasis, and partisan orthodoxy
that hold our country back.
We do not seek merely to advance ideas for the sake of novelty. This
book rests on the same core tenets that have always undergirded PPI's work:
equal opportunity for all -- and special privilege for none; a social compact based on mutual responsibility and civic reciprocity; and the vigorous defense
of individual liberty at home and abroad.
We see the progressive tradition in American politics as the continual struggle
to apply and modify such classically liberal ideals in the light of changing
economic and social conditions. At a time when uncertainty haunts our financial
markets, our Main Streets, and the international landscape, the need
for modernized approaches to policy and governance is as great as it has ever
been. You have called for transformative change, and this book is intended as
a source of ideas for making it happen.
Memos to the New President is organized into six main parts, each of which
pertains to a broad challenge facing your administration and our country.
We start where any serious project for fundamental change must start -- a
candid assessment of our broken political system. Americans' confidence in
Washington has reached low ebb. Restoring trust in the basic integrity and
problem-solving capacity of our federal government is the indispensible
prerequisite for sweeping reform. In his memo, Ed Kilgore offers creative
proposals for reducing the power of special interests in Washington and
restoring genuine political competition in congressional elections.
Part II of the book grapples with what may be the most urgent substantive
challenge you face: saving America's free-enterprise system from the
greed and myopia lately exhibited by far too many financiers and corporate
leaders. You will find here sage advice from Gene Ludwig, former Comptroller
of the Currency, for building a new regulatory framework to stabilize
U.S. financial markets. Other memos offer novel ideas for stimulating our
ailing economy; rebuilding the nation's aging transportation infrastructure;
overhauling our regressive tax code; and rebalancing the intergenerational
compact embedded in Social Security. All of these prescriptions share an
emphasis on reviving a dynamic, entrepreneurial economy that can once
again deliver broad-based national prosperity.
While addressing the concerns of the middle class must be central to
our economic policy, we must also redouble our efforts to help low-income
Americans enter the middle class in the first place. Part III focuses on reviving
our nation's promise of upward social mobility for all. This section
of the book offers a set of highly specific prescriptions for closing persistent
gaps in educational attainment. It also explores ideas for bringing low-income men into the workforce, and for ending the scourge of childhood
hunger in the wealthiest nation on Earth.
Part IV presents strategies for building a clean-energy economy and restoring
America's leadership in green technology innovation. By now, there
is a broad consensus on the need for energy policies that can heal our natural
environment, rebuild our job base, and wean us from dependence on
foreign oil. These memos offer specific plans for accelerating development
of clean cars; unleashing the economic benefits of energy efficiency; contending
with the problem of nuclear waste; and creating a new international
body to foster cooperation on climate change and other threats to
the global commons.
Part V addresses a longstanding challenge for progressives: spelling out
clear, credible principles on national security and foreign policy. Sen. Evan
Bayh proposes a Nuclear Fuel Bank to curb the spread of nuclear materials
and technology. Other memos call for spurring economic growth and opportunity
in the Greater Middle East; modernizing the concept of collective
security; reforming the military acquisitions process; striking a better balance
between military and civilian power; and establishing a legitimate legal
framework for trying terrorist suspects.
Finally, in Part VI, we delve into one of our most vexing domestic challenges:
a health-care system that absorbs about one-seventh of our national
wealth; imposes onerous financial burdens on the public and private sectors;
and leaves more than 45 million of us uninsured. These memos elaborate
a broad argument for reducing costs by raising quality. They affirm PPI's
longstanding support for covering all Americans, while suggesting ways that
reform can pay for itself. The book ends with an in-depth analysis by David
Osborne of how the nation's governors can join forces with you and the federal
government to break the back of medical inflation -- an essential step
toward creating a distinctly American approach to universal health care.
We would like to conclude by thanking our PPI colleagues, particularly
Debbie Boylan, Beth Kennedy, Tyler Stone, Maria Bello, Alice McKeon,
and Moira Vahey. We also thank the writers who contributed to this collection.
These memos are offered in the hope that they may reinforce the
call for transformative change at a time when our country faces daunting
challenges. The last election was an expression of this nation's keen desire to meet those challenges in a new spirit -- a constructive spirit that transcends
the tired ideological distinctions of the past, and seeks to renew the finest
elements of our national character.