A few days ago I wrote about a question that has quietly been hanging over politics here at home in the Hudson Valley:
Is our government governing… or is it grandstanding?
That column focused on a recent vote in the Dutchess County Legislature that, on its surface, had very little to do with governing Dutchess County at all.
The resolution in question opposed the construction of a federal immigration detention facility operated by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
But here’s the detail that raised more than a few eyebrows:
The proposed facility is not in Dutchess County.
It’s in another county entirely, under federal jurisdiction, and outside the authority of the Dutchess County Legislature.
So what exactly was accomplished by the vote?
It didn’t stop construction.
It didn’t change federal immigration policy.
It didn’t affect the Dutchess County budget.
And it didn’t solve a single local problem.
What it did do was create a political statement.
Supporters framed the resolution as a moral position on immigration policy. Critics questioned whether the legislature should be devoting time to symbolic declarations about federal issues happening somewhere else while residents here at home are dealing with tax pressures, infrastructure needs, housing costs, and economic development challenges.
In other words, the real debate wasn’t immigration policy.
It was about the role of local government.
Should a county legislature focus on the work directly in front of it — roads, budgets, public safety, and strengthening the local economy?
Or should it increasingly become a platform for national political messaging?
Because once local governing bodies begin stepping into symbolic national debates, the line between governing and campaigning becomes very thin.
And then, almost on cue, Washington provided the national version of the same phenomenon.
This week the House of Representatives voted on a resolution reaffirming that Iran is the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism — something that has been official U.S. policy since 1984. The measure passed overwhelmingly, but headlines quickly focused on the minority of members, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, and Rashida Tlaib, who voted against the symbolic reaffirmation.
Again, the underlying policy didn’t change.
Iran has been designated a state sponsor of terrorism for more than forty years. The vote didn’t alter that designation, didn’t change foreign policy, and didn’t materially shift America’s posture in the region.
But it did create another political moment.
And that’s the thread tying these stories together.
From the chambers of the Dutchess County Legislature to the floor of Congress, we’re seeing more and more votes that seem designed less to solve problems and more to signal positions.
Resolutions about issues outside a body’s authority.
Votes that produce headlines but little practical impact.
Statements crafted for political audiences rather than local constituents.
Meanwhile, voters are watching all of it.
And if you talk to people across the Hudson Valley — in diners, town halls, small businesses, and neighborhood meetings — you’ll hear a common refrain:
They’re tired of it.
Tired of symbolic votes.
Tired of political theater.
Tired of leaders who seem more focused on messaging than on managing.
People want government that works.
They want problems solved.
They want officials focused on the communities they were elected to serve.
That doesn’t mean principles don’t matter. They do.
But effective government — whether in Washington or right here in the Hudson Valley — is measured not by the number of resolutions passed, but by the results delivered.
Which brings us back to the same question I asked in my earlier column:
When a county legislature is voting about a federal detention facility in another county…
and Congress is reaffirming policies that already exist…
are we witnessing governance — or simply another round of political grandstanding?
Judging by what voters are saying these days, the appetite for the latter is running very thin.