The Northern Advocate

No use for bridge that Biden built

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The presidency of the world’s most powerful politician has been fading towards a grey sunset at an alarming rate. In his successful 2020 election campaign, United States President Joe Biden, now closing in on age 80, billed himself as a bridge to a new generation of leaders.

And it seems as though — a year and a half into his term — many of the electorate, the US political media, and Biden’s own Democratic Party are mentally on the other side of that river.

As the midterm elections approach in three months, Biden’s polls are dire, potential party successors have been jockeying for position, and the media has been ranking the riders for the 2024 presidenti­al primary.

There’s a large thumbs-down on the idea that he seek a second term. A CNN poll showed 75 per cent of Democratic voters want someone else for 2024.

Biden isn’t on the ballot this November but he’s the Democratic figurehead and the consequenc­es of his party losing control of Congress would be severe for him.

The hearings into the January 6 Capitol riot and Donald Trump’s role in it, plus the march of Trumpist Republican­s to more fringe beliefs, have not doomed the opposition party’s hopes of regaining the Senate and House while economic anxiety is high.

It’s a long way from Biden’s 2020 triumph with his 306 to 232 Electoral College vote win and seven million margin in the popular count over Trump. The midterms after a presidenti­al election are usually tough for the White House occupant’s party. Inflation at 9.1 per cent, high living costs and the stubborn pandemic make it harder.

Biden may have navigated Russia’s invasion of Ukraine reasonably well, supplying Kyiv with billions worth of weapons, but his domestic agenda has often been stymied with conservati­ve Democrats sometimes allying with Republican­s in the Senate. The Democrats have only a 51-50 advantage with the vicepresid­ent’s tying vote.

So the news that a key conservati­ve Democrat, Senator Joe Manchin, supported a US$739 billion deal, to go through a simple majority vote process, is significan­t. It would be a version of Biden’s original US$3.5 trillion Build Back Better package.

It helps millions of families with health costs, puts $369b towards combating climate change through tax incentives and is mostly paid for with a 15 per cent minimum tax on corporatio­ns earning more than US$1b a year.

Politicall­y, it lets the Democrats take an argument into the campaign that more energysect­or jobs will result.

It’s too soon to write off the Democrats from holding on to one or both chambers of Congress. That will have a major bearing on how Biden’s term plays out.

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