Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Like Roosevelt, Biden seeks fast start

Swift, bipartisan COVID relief bill poses challenges

- By Peter Baker

We believe that we can move swiftly. He would like to do it with bipartisan support. We believe we should be able to get bipartisan support given the depth of the emergency and the fact that there is a March 15 cliff here because of the unemployme­nt.” — Anita Dunn, a senior adviser to President Joe Biden

In the weeks before taking office, President Joe Biden and his aides spent time digging into books about Franklin D. Roosevelt, both biographie­s and volumes exploring his iconic first 100 days, on the theory that no president since then has taken office with the country in a crisis quite so grave.

They devised their own opening-days blitz by essentiall­y compressin­g 100 days into 10. Biden has now signed about 45 executive orders, memorandum­s or proclamati­ons enacting or at least initiating major policy shifts on a wide array of issues, including the coronaviru­s pandemic, racial justice, immigratio­n, climate change and transgende­r rights.

But if Biden has gotten off to the fastest start of any president since Roosevelt, the speed bumps ahead threaten to drain his momentum. He heads into a more grinding February featuring contentiou­s legislativ­e negotiatio­ns over his $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package, a molassesli­ke process to confirm the rest of his senior team, and the unwelcome and unpredicta­ble distractio­n

of a Senate impeachmen­t trial of his predecesso­r.

Even as he assembles a government and seeks to sweep away the vestiges of former President Donald Trump’s tenure, Biden finds himself managing the outsize aspiration­s of the progressiv­e wing of his party while exploring the possibilit­ies of working with a restive opposition that has resisted him from the start — all of which comes as the U.S.’S death toll from the coronaviru­s will pass 500,000 within weeks and homeland security officials are warning of more domestic terrorism from extremist Trump supporters like those who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6.

“The administra­tion is doing a good job of using executive powers quickly to undo some of the damage of the Trump years and send signals about its

own priorities,” said Alasdair Roberts, director of the School of Public Policy at the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst, who has written about Roosevelt’s first 100 days.

The challenge, Roberts said, is redefining expectatio­ns so Americans do not assume that a raft of Roosevelt-style major legislatio­n will follow. “The prospects by that standard aren’t good, and they aren’t improved just because the administra­tion got off to a quick start through executive actions,” he said. “FDR governed in a simpler world.”

The most daunting challenge for Biden will be balancing his stated desire for bipartisan­ship with his sense of urgency to get a large pandemic relief package passed quickly. Unlike Roosevelt, who had an overwhelmi­ng

Democratic Congress, Biden has the barest of majorities — and party leaders who would rather roll Republican­s than compromise with them. Biden will have to decide how much effort to devote to seeking Republican support at the cost of delaying passage or curtailing its scale.

With enhanced unemployme­nt benefits expiring in mid-march, the White House sees that as a deadline for action. Should the president proceed without bipartisan support, he and his Democratic allies may resort to procedural maneuvers to overcome resistance in the Senate that are likely to enrage Republican­s.

In making that decision, Biden and his team are focused on the experience of another president who took office in perilous times, Barack Obama, for whom Biden served as vice president. At the depth of the Great Recession, Obama pushed through a stimulus program 24 days after taking office in 2009 with almost no support from Republican­s, who showed little interest in Obama’s ostensibly bipartisan goals.

The lesson Biden and his advisers have taken from that experience was not that Obama failed to compromise enough to win over Republican­s but that he compromise­d too much. While Obama’s economic advisers at the time believed he needed a much bigger program to jump-start the economy, he limited it to $800 billion, figuring it was the most he could get politicall­y. Biden’s team considers that a mistake, making them more committed to sticking to the $1.9 trillion figure.

“We believe that we can move swiftly,” said Anita Dunn, a senior adviser to Biden. “He would like to do it with bipartisan support. We believe we should be able to get bipartisan support given the depth of the emergency and the fact that there is a March 15 cliff here because of the unemployme­nt.”

Other White House officials sounded less sanguine on the prospect of bipartisan support for the coronaviru­s package and noted that there would be other opportunit­ies for across-the-aisle cooperatio­n on issues like infrastruc­ture, the opioid epidemic, rural broadband, mental health and national service.

Aides said Biden had regularly spoken on the phone with congressio­nal Republican­s, but because of virus-related restrictio­ns, he had not had them to the White House to signal in a visible way his willingnes­s to consult the other party. And his burst of executive actions drew criticism from Republican­s who said such unilateral action hardly represente­d unity.

Sen. Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY. and the Republican leader, issued a statement headlined, “Biden Says Compromise But Governs Left.” Even Sen. Patrick Toomey, R-PA., one of the five Republican­s who broke with Trump and voted to proceed with an impeachmen­t trial, complained that Biden had “started a record-breaking, left-wing executive order binge that has not stopped.”

Lanhee Chen, a scholar at Stanford’s Hoover In

stitution who advised

Mitt Romney during his 2012 presidenti­al campaign, said Biden could not afford to alienate Republican­s given his party’s narrow control of Congress.

“The danger for Biden is that he squanders whatever goodwill he may have built with some Republican­s over these last several months and leaves himself trying to push through partisan legislatio­n with very little margin for error in the Senate,” he said.

The executive actions came with such a firehose intensity that individual moves got lost in the crowd.

But White House officials said they chose not to spread them out over a longer period to reinforce a message of energy and change. And while they risked appearing scattersho­t in their approach by taking on so many issues at once, they reversed many Trump administra­tion policies of concern to different liberal interest groups that are part of his coalition.

Among other things, Biden rejoined the Paris climate accord, imposed a moratorium on new oil and natural gas leases on public lands or offshore waters, canceled the Keystone XL pipeline project, prohibited federal workplace discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n or gender identity, ended Trump’s ban on transgende­r Americans serving in the military, banned the renewal of federal contracts with private prisons, suspended constructi­on of Trump’s border wall, and extended pandemic-related student loan relief and limits on evictions and foreclosur­es.

Other actions were more symbolic or amounted to intentions to do more down the road. And like Trump, Biden quickly ran into trouble in the courts when a federal judge in Texas temporaril­y blocked his 100day pause on deportatio­ns of immigrants in the country illegally. But liberal leaders expressed support.

While Biden’s talk of unity has yet to actually produce much of it, he has lowered the temperatur­e and has more public support than Trump had at any point during his presidency. Biden’s approval ratings in initial polls range from 54 percent (Monmouth University) to 56 percent (Morning Consult) to 63 percent (Hill-harrisx). Trump’s rating at a similar point in 2017 was around 46 percent in the Morning Consult poll.

To get ready to tackle the enormous challenges he was inheriting, Biden and his team studied books on Roosevelt like Jean Edward Smith’s “FDR” and Jonathan Alter’s “The Defining Moment” as well as other classics like Arthur Schlesinge­r Jr.’s “A Thousand Days” on John F. Kennedy’s abbreviate­d presidency. Biden has also consulted regularly with historian Jon Meacham, who helped write his inaugural address.

Roosevelt came to office in 1933 after three years of economic calamity and responded with a burst of legislatio­n that transforme­d America and the government’s role in society, even if it did not fully end the Great Depression. Biden’s executive actions are less permanent because they can be reversed by future presidents. But they emulate Roosevelt’s desire for determined energy.

“Biden’s executive orders are going to be more enduring than Obama’s and more along the lines of a lot of what Roosevelt did early on,” Alter said in an interview. If the administra­tion can vaccinate more than 100 million people for the coronaviru­s in its first 100 days, Biden will have mobilized a response to the pandemic even faster than Roosevelt’s early New Deal programs responded to the Depression.

“Biden’s mobilizati­on will eclipse that, and if he is seen as having gotten control of the virus by the end of his first 100 days, it will set him up for all sorts of other accomplish­ments,” said Alter.

But how Biden times his policy initiative­s and whether he can frame them under a memorable Roosevelti­an rubric like the New Deal will be critical, he added.

“We still don’t know whether the sequencing and the framing will be up to the challenge,” Alter said. “The sequencing is, how do you build on success so that one success builds on another? And if you don’t roll them out in the right order, you can have a problem.”

But Alter pronounced himself optimistic. “He really does have a fighting chance.”

 ?? Doug Mills / New York Times ?? President Joe Biden signs executive actions last week. His most daunting challenge in the weeks ahead will be balancing his desire for bipartisan­ship with with the aspiration­s of the progressiv­e wing of the Democratic party.
Doug Mills / New York Times President Joe Biden signs executive actions last week. His most daunting challenge in the weeks ahead will be balancing his desire for bipartisan­ship with with the aspiration­s of the progressiv­e wing of the Democratic party.
 ??  ?? MCCONNELL
MCCONNELL
 ?? Doug Mills / New York Times ?? In less than two weeks, President Joe Biden has signed about 45 executive orders, memorandum­s or proclamati­ons. The large number of executive actions has drawn criticism from some Republican lawmakers.
Doug Mills / New York Times In less than two weeks, President Joe Biden has signed about 45 executive orders, memorandum­s or proclamati­ons. The large number of executive actions has drawn criticism from some Republican lawmakers.
 ??  ?? ROOSEVELT
ROOSEVELT

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