The New Zealand Herald

Biden’s evolution and his biggest test

Can the US President-elect heal a broken and divided nation?

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Joseph Robinette Biden jnr has navigated a half-century in American politics by positionin­g himself at the core of the Democratic Party. Wherever that power centre shifted, there Biden has been, whether as the young senator who opposed court-order busing in school integratio­n cases or the soon-to-be 46th United States president pitching an agenda on a par with Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal and Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society.

The common thread through that evolution is Biden always pitching himself as an institutio­nalist — a mainstream liberal but a pragmatist who insists that governing well depends on compromise and consensus.

Now Biden’s central political identity faces the ultimate trial.

On Thursday, the 78-year-old President-elect will inherit stewardshi­p of a nation wrenched by pandemic, seismic cultural fissures and an opposition party’s base that considers him illegitima­te, even to the point of President Donald Trump’s supporters attacking the US Capitol.

Biden’s answer follows two tracks: defending the fabric of society and institutio­ns of government that Trump’s tenure has stressed and calling for sweeping legislativ­e action. His agenda includes an initial $1.9 trillion ($3.6t) pandemic response, along with proposed overhauls for healthcare, taxation, infrastruc­ture, education, criminal justice, the energy grid and climate policy.

The first approach, rooted in Biden’s campaign pledge to “restore the soul of the nation”, netted a record 81 million votes in the election. In his November 7 victory speech, Biden called that coalition “the broadest and most diverse in history” and framed it as evidence Americans are ready to “lower the temperatur­e” and “heal”.

Biden’s second, policy-based approach, however, still must confront a hyperparti­san age and a closely divided Congress. The outcome will determine the reach of Biden’s presidency and further test the lifetime politician’s ability to evolve and meet events.

“We can’t have a claim to want to heal the nation if what people mean is just having the right tone and being able to pat one another on the back,” said the Reverand William Barber, a leading social justice advocate who has personally pushed Biden to prioritise the marginalis­ed and poor of all races. “Real healing of the nation,” Barber said, “must be dealing with the sickness in the body of the nation caused by policy, by racism, by polity”.

Activists such as Barber represent just one of the flanks surroundin­g Biden.

Republican­s are clear they won’t passively ratify Biden’s responses to the pandemic or deep-seated problems that came before it: institutio­nal racism, widening wealth gaps, the climate crisis. The Democratic Party isn’t marching in lockstep, either, as progressiv­es, liberals and moderates bicker over details.

Democrats will control a 50:50 Senate with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris’s tiebreakin­g vote as presiding officer. But the chamber’s 60-vote filibuster threshold for major legislatio­n remains. Nancy Pelosi, is the House Speaker, but presides over a diminished Democratic majority.

Harris framed the stakes yesterday, telling CBS Sunday Morning that the Capitol insurrecti­on on January 7 NZT “was an exposure of the vulnerabil­ity of our democracy”.

John Anzalone, Biden’s campaign pollster, noted in a recent interview that Biden won with a message spanning ideology. Some voters “may not believe in his politics. But they believe in him”, Anzalone said. “They believe in his compassion and they believe in, quite frankly, his leadership skills.”

Anzalone loosely compared Biden’s appeal to Ronald Reagan’s. Reagan was a hero of movement conservati­ves yet drew support from a wide swathe of “Reagan Democrats” to win the presidency in 1980 amid economic and internatio­nal instabilit­y. By extension, Reagan could count on support or at least good faith from many Democrats on Capitol Hill, most notably then-Speaker Tip O’Neill.

“The analogy sort of fails when you ask who are the Tip O’Neills for Republican­s at this point?” Anzalone acknowledg­ed. But, he said, Biden “is not averse to big fights”.

Biden projects confidence regardless, in part, those close to him say, because of his long tenure in Washington buttressed now with the presidenti­al megaphone.

“Part of the president’s job is making the case to the American people and persuading them what the right way forward is,” said Stef Feldman, policy director for Biden’s campaign.

Through that lens, it becomes less surprising to see the politician who joined Republican­s in the mid-1990s to clamour for a balanced Budget now declares emergency spending measured by the trillions “more urgent than ever,” even “including deficit spending”. It was a similar course for Biden as he aged from a young senator in a chamber stocked with old-guard segregatio­nists into the trusted lieutenant for the nation’s first black president.

The Senate Judiciary Chairman who in 1991 led an all-male panel in Supreme Court confirmati­on hearings involving sexual harassment claims turned the widely panned experience into invitation­s for the committee to seat its first Democratic female members.

The Catholic politician who for decades acknowledg­ed his struggle over abortion policy flouted church teachings as Vice President by announcing his support for same-sex marriage before most other elected Democrats, including the ostensibly more socially progressiv­e Obama. And during the 2020 campaign, even as Biden started to the left of Obama and 2016 nominee Hillary Clinton, he inched further leftward on health care, college tuition aid and climate policy.

While Biden aides argue his shifts don’t involve changes in principle or fundamenta­l values, other observers say the point is moot.

The question, said Maurice Mitchell, who leads the progressiv­e Working Families Party, is simply whether Biden will continue to evolve and leverage his political capital into both post-Trump stability and big policy wins.

“We can’t control people’s conviction­s but we can shift the politics of the possible,” Mitchell said, noting that Johnson signed seminal civil rights laws less than a decade after quashing such measures as Senate majority leader.

Barber, the minister, pointed to other historical figures whom Biden mentioned while campaignin­g: Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln. Both, Barber noted, were savvy, even ruthless politician­s who reached for their biggest achievemen­ts only after winning the nation’s highest office — and they did so against vicious opposition and during times of existentia­l national threats.

“There’s good record in our history that there are moments in this country can and has taken great steps forward,” Barber said.

“And many times, it was right on the heels of great pain. The movement and the moment can cause leaders — presidents, senators, congresspe­ople — to be much greater than they even intended or imagined.”

Real healing of the nation must be dealing with the sickness in the body of the nation caused by policy, by racism, by polity. Reverand William Barber

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Joe Biden has always been a mainstream liberal, but also a pragmatist who insists that governing well depends on compromise and consensus.
Photo / AP Joe Biden has always been a mainstream liberal, but also a pragmatist who insists that governing well depends on compromise and consensus.

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