Why a divided government could be good for the markets

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Yahoo Finance’s Julie Hyman, Brian Sozzi, and Myles Udland discuss the Georgia Senate Runoffs with Brian Gardner, Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist.

Video Transcript

JULIE HYMAN: Well, while there are a lot of questions about what's going on with coronavirus, there are also a lot of questions about what may happen in Georgia tomorrow. That's when we get that special election to determine who will be seated as the next two senators from that state. And ahead of that, over the weekend, there was a leaked audio of a phone call that President Donald Trump made to the Secretary of State of Georgia effectively pressuring him to change the votes there as the president continues what looks to be his futile efforts to get the election switched around.

To talk about all of this, we are joined by Brian Gardner. He is Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist. Brian, thank you for being here. Now, it looks like the markets are largely shrugging off this phone call over the weekend. I want to get to the special election in a moment. But I do wonder, as we start to see this sort of schism developing in the GOP between those who seemingly are supporting the president's efforts and those who are not, are there any implications for lawmaking in the next Congress in terms of whether this is going to create divides beyond just divides by the aisle?

BRIAN GARDNER: Well, look, I think there is-- we've been living through this period of populism now for several years. And it is intensified during the Trump administration. He is kind of the ultimate populist. There are populists in both parties. So it's kind of a break between the populists and the establishment in both parties. So that does have implications for lawmaking going forward beyond the end of the Trump administration.

Being seen as part of Washington is still a problem. Ironically, the country just elected really what is one of the most establishment type figures of the modern era in Joe Biden. But he's going to confront this tone of populism going forward within his party, within the Republican Party. So it's going to be a challenge for him to get things through Congress and govern.

- And I guess, Brian, along those lines, I'm curious just about, like, the overall arc of policymaking in the US right now. There hasn't been a whole lot of it happening in the last couple of years. Since the tax cut, not a ton got done in the Trump era. Obama's second term was kind of bereft of any material policy changes. What do you see as the next catalyst for something big getting through? And what kind of areas do you think are workable at this point, given the state of things in Washington?