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Biden’s realism approach runs head-on into liberal pressure

- By Seung Min Kim

WASHINGTON—ON restoring access to abortion, President Joe Biden says his hands are tied without more Democratic senators. Declaring a public health emergency on the matter has downsides, his aides say. And as for gun violence, Biden has been clear about the limits of what he can do on his own.

“There’s a Constituti­on,” Biden said from the South Lawn in late May. “I can’t dictate this stuff.”

Throughout this century, presidents have often pushed aggressive­ly to extend the boundaries of executive power. Biden talks more about its limits.

When it comes to the thorniest issues confrontin­g his administra­tion, the instinct from Biden and his White House is often to speak about what he cannot do, citing constraint­s imposed by the courts or insufficie­nt support in a Congress controlled by his own party—though barely.

He injects a heavy dose of reality in speaking to an increasing­ly restive Democratic base, which has demanded action on issues such as abortion and voting rights before the November elections.

White House officials and the president’s allies say that approach typifies a leader who has always promised to be honest with Americans, including about how expansive his powers really are.

But Biden’s realpoliti­k tendencies are colliding with an activist base agitating for a more aggressive party leader—both in tone and substance. Although candidate Biden sold himself as the person who best knew the ways of Washington, he nonetheles­s is hamstrung by the same obstacles that have bedeviled his predecesso­rs.

“I think that if you hesitate from important actions like this just because of a legal challenge, then you would do nothing,” said Rep. Judy Chu, D-calif., who has been pressing for more administra­tive actions on abortion. “People all across the country are expecting us—the leaders—to do something.”

Biden’s cautionary approach could be to protect himself if the White House falls short—like Democrats did in negotiatin­g a party-line spending package centered on the social safety net and climate provisions. That sweeping effort had been steadily thwarted due to resistance from two moderate Democrats, one of them West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, who on Thursday scuttled for the time being a scaled-back effort that focused on climate and taxes.

That developmen­t prompted calls from Democratic senators for Biden to unilateral­ly declare a climate emergency. In a statement Friday while in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, Biden pledged to take “strong executive action to meet this moment” on climate. But in recent weeks, that gap between “yes, we can” and “no, we can’t” has been most glaring on abortion.

Since the Supreme Court last month overturned the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling from 1973 with its constituti­onal protection­s for abortion, the White House has come under considerab­le pressure to try to maintain access to abortion in conservati­ve states that are set to outlaw the procedure.

For instance, advocates have implored Biden to look into establishi­ng abortion clinics on federal lands. They have asked the administra­tion to help transport women seeking abortions to a state that offers the procedure. And Democratic lawmakers are pressing the White House to declare a public health emergency.

Without rejecting the ideas completely, White House aides have expressed skepticism about such requests. And even as he signed an executive order last week to begin addressing the issue, Biden had one clear, consistent message: that he could not do this on his own, shifting attention to the other end of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue.

“The only way we can secure a woman’s right to choose and the balance that existed is for Congress to restore the protection­s of Roe v. Wade as federal law,” Biden said shortly after the court struck down Roe. “No executive action from the president can do that.”

Shortly after declaring that the filibuster—a Senate rule that requires 60 votes for most legislatio­n to advance—should not apply for abortion and privacy measures, Biden acknowledg­ed during a meeting with Democratic governors that his newfound position would not make a difference, at least not right away.

“The filibuster should not stand in the way of us being able to do that,” Biden said of writing the protection­s of Roe into federal law. “But right now, we don’t have the votes in the Senate to change the filibuster.”

Biden, who served for 36 years in the Senate, is an institutio­nalist to his core and has tried to operate under the constraint­s of those institutio­ns—unlike his predecesso­r, Donald Trump, who repeatedly pushed the boundaries of executive power.

But some advocates don’t want to hear from Biden about what he can’t do.

Renee Bracey Sherman, founder and executive director of the group We Testify, which advocates for women who have had abortions, said the administra­tion should proceed with a public health emergency even if it’s eventually blocked by the courts.

“It tells those people who need abortions that the president is trying to help them, and that the thing that’s stopping him is the court, not himself, or his own projection­s on what could possibly happen,” she said, later adding: “The fact that he’s an institutio­nalist and cannot look around and see the institutio­ns around him are crumbling is the problem.”

Democratic lawmakers have also continued to prod senior administra­tion officials behind the scenes. In a virtual meeting this past week, Chu urged Xavier Becerra, the health and human services secretary, to have the administra­tion enact a public health emergency. Proponents of the idea say it would unlock certain powers and resources to not only expand access to abortion but to protect doctors who provide them.

Though Becerra did not rule out the idea, he told Chu and other members of the Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus that the administra­tion had two main questions: How would the administra­tion replenish money for the public health emergency fund and what would this move actually accomplish?

The skepticism has not deterred Democratic lawmakers. But some of the most ardent proponents of expansive executive actions on abortion have similarly cautioned their voters and activists to be realistic.

“It’s unrealisti­c to think that they have the power and the authority to protect access to abortion services in every part of this country because of what the Supreme Court has done,” said Sen. Tina Smith, D-minn.

In one sense, the recent success on gun s was a validation of Biden’s art-of-the-possible approach, advocates say. Rather than promising what he could not achieve, Biden instead spoke of his limitation­s and cautioned that any substantiv­e changes would require the support of at least 10 Senate Republican­s—a goal that seemed implausibl­e at the start.

That culminated this past week with a ceremony marking the signing of the first substantia­l gun restrictio­ns into law in roughly three decades.

“I think that the president has struck the absolute right balance,” said John Feinblatt, the president of Everytown for Gun Safety.

Concerns about the limitation­s on Biden’s executive powers aren’t mere hypothetic­als. His administra­tion’s efforts to tame the coronaviru­s pandemic, for example, were repeatedly foiled by the courts, including a requiremen­t to wear masks on mass transit and a vaccinatio­n mandate for companies with at least 100 workers.

Then-president Barack Obama sounded similar warnings when confronted by immigratio­n activists urging him to use his power to issue a deportatio­n reprieve for millions of young immigrants who did not have legal status in the US.

Obama in 2012 unilateral­ly enacted the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which is still standing today. Two years later, Obama more fully embraced the pen-and-phone strategy, signaling to Congress that he would not hesitate to use executive orders if lawmakers continued to imperil his domestic agenda.

“Nobody thinks he’s got a magic wand here. Folks understand there are limitation­s,” said Leah Greenberg, co-founder and co-executive director of the Indivisibl­e Project. “What they want to see is him treating this like the crisis it is for folks in red states losing access to abortion.”

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