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The Pulse: Imagine this: Ground for compromise

Here are words I don't often get to type: There is good news from Washington. On Thursday, about 70 members of Congress braved brutal heat to stand in the shadow of the Capitol and pledge their allegiance to work together amid a climate of hyperpartisanship.

No Labels: Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman (left), a Republican, and West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, a Democrat.
No Labels: Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman (left), a Republican, and West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, a Democrat.Read more

Here are words I don't often get to type: There is good news from Washington.

On Thursday, about 70 members of Congress braved brutal heat to stand in the shadow of the Capitol and pledge their allegiance to work together amid a climate of hyperpartisanship.

They gathered under the banner of No Labels, a nonpartisan nonprofit that strives to remove compromise from the list of dirty words. When I participated in the group's launch 2 1/2 years ago, I joked that I had attended my first political protest, which was, appropriately, on a college campus (Columbia). But I didn't have to carry a sign, sleep in a tent, or get locked up.

It was a demonstration against gridlock caused by rigid ideology and party identification, and the headliners that day included New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, an independent; then-Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, a Democrat; Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand (D., N.Y.) and Joe Manchin (D., W.Va.); Newark Mayor Cory Booker, a Democrat; and Charlie Crist, at the time Florida's departing governor, a Republican-turned-independent. Their desire to reestablish consensus-building was not well-received among those whose livelihood has depended on the continuation of a divide. The cynicism came from the left and right. Frank Rich wrote in the New York Times:

"The notion that civility and nominal bipartisanship would accomplish any of the heavy lifting required to rebuild America is childish magical thinking and, worse, a mindless distraction from the real work before the nation."

To George Will, it was all just "gaseous rhetoric."

In the intervening time, No Labels has set about organizing supporters in congressional districts across the country, while enlisting elected officials willing to embrace civility and compromise. Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, a Republican, and Manchin are now the cochairmen of No Labels. On Thursday, the group assembled its congressional "Problem Solvers" - Republicans and Democrats from the House and Senate who come together regularly to try to bridge the gap. In front of a crowd of more than 500 people on the Capitol grounds, about 70 of the 81 members of this caucus pledged to compromise. (Full disclosure: My role was to introduce them.)

Six members from Pennsylvania have joined, five Republicans (Charlie Dent, Mike Fitzpatrick, Patrick Meehan, Scott Perry, and Glenn "G.T." Thompson) and one Democrat (Chaka Fattah). None has signed, yet, from New Jersey or Delaware.

Fitzpatrick lamented the "frustrating" change in Congress he has seen in just the last few years.

"I was here, then I was gone for four years, and I came back. I noticed the left had gotten further left and the right had gotten further right and the ... unwillingness of those fringes to listen to others and respect their opinion," he told me.

The regular meetings of the No Labels congressional members have already been productive. Under the heading "Make Government Work," they have hammered out nine proposals to cut government waste and inefficiency, which have now been introduced in Congress. One calls for withholding congressional pay in the event Congress can't make spending and budget decisions on time. Another would enact biennial budgeting. A third would promote energy efficiency in federal buildings.

While they have yet to solve meaty issues, such as immigration, at this stage, we'll take their collaboration as a start.

Evan Bayh (D., Ind.), Olympia J. Snowe (R., Maine), and Joe Lieberman (I., Conn.) have all left the Senate, partly out of frustration with the intransigence of the body. Coincidentally, I spoke to each last week and was amazed at the similarity of the frustration they expressed.

"Unfortunately, it is true that the middle in the U.S. Senate is shrinking, and the moderates, the independents," Lieberman told me. "It's become a much more partisan and much more ideologically rigid body. I was privileged to serve for 24 years in the Senate, I had some great and satisfying experiences. The last two years were by far the least productive . . . and not just in my feeling, but I think fewer bills were adopted the last few years than in any session for seven decades."

His frustration is borne out by the data. The National Journal reports that, in 1982, most (58) members of the Senate fell somewhere between the chamber's most conservative Democrat and most liberal Republican. Today, zero members fill that space. In this year's analysis, and for the third year in a row, no Republican member of the Senate had a more liberal voting record than any Democrat - just as no Democratic senator had a more conservative voting record than any Republican. That leaves those of us in the middle without representation.

Which is why it's great news that 81 members of Congress want to chart a new path. But their willingness to work together now needs support from the part of the electorate that wants them working together, but that has all too often ceded the debate to the loudest voices, who perpetuate the divide in their own self-interest.