As a rule, network promotional advertisements tend not to have lasting significance, but as the Trump administration’s response to the coronavirus pandemic falters, I’ve found myself thinking about an MSNBC commercial from 2011.
In fact, it was nine years ago next week when this ad was released, featuring a friend of mine by the name of Rachel Maddow, who filmed a network promo in front of the Hoover Dam. Her message at the time seems relevant anew:
“When you are this close to Hoover Dam, it makes you realize how small a human is in relation to this as a human project. You can’t be the guy who builds this. You can’t be the town who builds this. You can’t even be the state who builds this. You have to be the country that builds something like this. This is a national project. This is a project of national significance. We’ve got those projects on the menu right now. And we’ve got to figure out whether or not we are still a country that can think this big.”
To be sure, the political context has changed over the last decade. When that ad first aired, there was a concerted push in Republican politics to dramatically alter public-sector ambitions. GOP leaders and their allies insisted it was time for the United States, especially at the federal level, to think drastically smaller.
As Dana Milbank recently reminded us, one of the best articulations of the right’s governing philosophy from that era came from anti-tax activist Grover Norquist, who once famously declared, “I don’t want to abolish government. I simply want to reduce it to the size where I can drag it into the bathroom and drown it in the bathtub.”
The political conversation has clearly changed — especially in recent months. Even most Republicans have abandoned their talking points about limited federal responses, the need for drastic spending cuts, and the importance of austerity-focused deficit reduction.
The era of big government has made a dramatic comeback, due entirely to the necessity of the circumstances.
But there’s reason to believe Donald Trump hasn’t fully come to terms with the meaning of the developments. At yesterday’s White House press briefing, for example, the Republican president once again stressed what he sees as the necessity of states taking the lead on coronavirus testing. It was part of a pattern that’s been ongoing for weeks: Trump envisions a policy landscape in which the federal government plays a “backup” role as states, local officials, and the private sector demonstrate — or at least try to demonstrate — real leadership.








