Former Maryland governor Martin O'Malley is a Democratic contender for the White House in 2016. Here's his take on gay marriage, income inequality and more, in his own words. (Julie Percha/The Washington Post)

Former Maryland governor Martin O'Malley is a Democratic contender for the White House in 2016. Here's his take on gay marriage, income inequality and more, in his own words. (Julie Percha/The Washington Post)

Danielle Allen is a political theorist at Harvard University and a contributing columnist for The Post.

Well, somebody has to do it. Somebody has to write about Martin O’Malley. He’s a serious person, with serious things to say, and it’s a travesty that he hasn’t gotten more coverage.

In this election, two big issues are colliding: broadly diminished economic opportunity and concerns about growing federal power, which in some forms — battles over excessive surveillance, the war on drugs, police violence and the No Child Left Behind Act, for instance — have shaken up long-standing left-right splits. On the surface, wage stagnation and income inequality appear to be Democratic turf, while worries about big government belong to the Republicans. For the latter half of the 20th century, tackling both issues simultaneously would have been like trying to square the circle. The antidote to poverty and inequality was government, requiring more taxes, more programs, just plain more. The antidote on the other side was less. Lower taxes, austerity, sequestration.

If this presidential race had quickly resolved to the candidates we expected to have, Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush, we’d more or less be getting the usual conversation. But thanks to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Donald Trump and an anti-big- government Republican chorus that has included Sen. Rand Paul (Ky.), we’ve got something far more interesting in the works.

Republicans are finally waking up to the issues of the working class, even while continuing to decry big government. The editors at National Review last week called on the GOP to “advance a compelling working-class agenda” that doesn’t leave the working class vulnerable to a demagogue. If the candidates listen, the pieces are in place to force the party to think through both halves of the dilemma facing the country.

What about the Democrats? Are they ready to face the fact that we have to figure out how to tackle inequality without further feeding the growth of state power? As I’ve watched the campaign unfold, I’ve come to the conclusion that O’Malley is the only voice on the Democratic stage with the potential to resolve the dilemma.

In recent years, economists and political scientists have routinely pointed out how municipal and regional decisions about transportation, mobility, housing, communications infrastructure and finance powerfully affect the distribution of opportunity. We often use zoning regulations, housing and transportation policy, and municipal funding structures in ways that generate socioeconomic and ethnic segregation. These policies reduce the likelihood that “bridging ties” — connections between people across demographic cleavages — form within our population. Significant bodies of research suggest that the more a society is characterized by bridging ties, the more egalitarian will be outcomes across economic, health and educational domains. To maximize these ties, we need policies that push in the opposite direction from those we have now.

The good news is that this doesn’t require adding services and programs, only smarter choices about the things that governments already do and will always need to do. One can have a dramatic impact on the distribution of opportunity without increasing government’s footprint. One just needs to use the existing levers differently.

This, it turns out, is just what O’Malley, the former governor of Maryland, wants to do.

O’Malley consistently says that one of his most important efforts as president would be a new agenda for our cities. (Full disclosure: I donated $100 to O’Malley in 2015, along with $250 each to Clinton and Sanders.) This is worth paying attention to. Cities are places, O’Malley told me when I traveled to hear him at one of his New Hampshire town halls, “where we see still the most entrenched structural unemployment. Structural unemployment doesn’t solve itself. We have to solve these things. You see in places like Flint, Michigan, the results of our underinvestment in infrastructure and underinvestment in our city centers. You see the gap in terms of criminal justice. So the opportunity gap and the justice gap is the greatest in America’s cities and yet we haven’t had an agenda to invest in cities since Jimmy Carter.”

To address entrenched unemployment, O’Malley, who is also former mayor of Baltimore, wants to invest in mobility, transportation and infrastructure. He wants investment in “workforce housing so our cities remain economically diverse places so that we don’t simply move poor families out of gentrifying neighborhoods.” And he sees retrofitting cities for environmental sustainability as a major potential source of jobs.

Doing this, he points out, would give us a chance to take advantage of new efficiencies that have developed in cities. As he sees it, “the levers and the mechanisms are already in place for doing many of these things.” Mayors have become “entrepreneurial” and “better at creating public-private partnerships that leverage those dollars many times over.” He adds, “Cities on their own have for the most part been improving how they govern and how they deliver services, but we have not yet really harnessed them for the economic engine and their potential.”

So why do I think O’Malley can help the Democratic Party reconsider its approach to the scale and scope of governmental power? It’s true that O’Malley does want to raise taxes on high earners, but the point of pride on which he distinguishes himself from Clinton and Sanders is his record of having balanced a budget 15 years in a row, including during a recession. He cares about fiscal discipline, and he wants to use resources from taxes as investments to be allocated by mayors and, presumably, governors. He places emphasis here rather than on expenditure through federal agencies.

O’Malley is right. We could do a lot to reverse current economic patterns if we took seriously the infrastructure projects needed in our cities. We could use such projects to reconnect isolated groups to opportunity, and we could do this without expanding the administrative state. There’s a lot more to be said about how a federally supported, municipal-level agenda could rebuild an egalitarian economic structure for our country. But if we’re going to hear about it, I can’t be the only one asking O’Malley serious questions.