Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., poses for a selfie Wednesday with a National Guardsman who wished him luck giving the GOP response to President Joe Biden. In his response, Scott accused Biden of betraying his promises.

- (The New York Times/ T.J. Kirkpatric­k)

WASHINGTON — Even before President Joe Biden delivered his first joint address to Congress touting what he has accomplish­ed in the first 100 days of his administra­tion, Republican­s on Capitol Hill were prepared to tell a different story: how a new president betrayed his campaign promises about how he would govern.

The centerpiec­e of the GOP effort to rebut Biden’s speech came minutes after Biden finished his defense of government’s role in American life, declaring his intent to “prove democracy still works.”

The GOP response was delivered by Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, the only Black Republican senator, who spoke to a national television audience about his personal story of escaping poverty and his fervent belief in the power of free enterprise.

Scott slammed Democrats for not moving more swiftly to reopen schools during the coronaviru­s pandemic, praised former President Donald Trump’s efforts to develop a vaccine, declaring that Biden “inherited a tide that had already turned,” criticized their approach to race relations as fighting “discrimina­tion with different discrimina­tion,” and defended the GOP’s effort to restrict voting in numerous states after Biden’s victory.

He delivered Republican­s’ central political criticism of Biden, claiming that he campaigned as a uniter and a moderate but has governed as a liberal relying only on Democratic votes in Congress.

“President Biden promised you a specific kind of leadership. He promised to unite a nation, to lower the temperatur­e, to govern for all Americans, no matter how we voted,” Scott said. “But three months in, the actions of the president and his party are pulling us further apart.”

Many of Scott’s fellow Republican­s delivered sharper barbs. Well before Biden arrived at the Capitol on Wednesday night, Republican­s had laid the groundwork for a narrative rooted in false pledges and creeping “socialism.” The Republican National Committee, in a series of news releases and social media posts, dubbed Biden’s opening act “100 days of failure,” and top congressio­nal Republican­s piled on.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., first previewed the attacks in an appearance Sunday on Fox News, accusing Biden of a “bait and switch” — promising to be a leader who values bipartisan­ship but who instead passed a $2 trillion pandemic relief bill with zero Republican support.

“The bait was he was going to govern as bipartisan, but the switch is he’s governed as a socialist,” McCarthy said.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., continued the theme Wednesday morning, accusing Biden and Democrats of engaging in “brazen misdirecti­on” and living “in an alternate universe where both the campaign promises they made and the mandate the American people delivered were completely different than what happened here on planet Earth.”

“Behind President Biden’s familiar face, it’s like the most radical Washington Democrats have been handed the

keys, and they’re trying to speed as far left as they can possibly go before American voters ask for their car back,” McConnell said.

Inside the sparsely occupied House chamber Wednesday night, Republican­s from both chambers signaled areas where they could agree with the president, including on issues such as passing police overhaul legislatio­n by the anniversar­y of George Floyd’s death next month, as well as keeping manufactur­ing jobs in the United States.

But they also made their difference­s with the president clear.

McCarthy shook his head and looked back at his caucus when Biden tried to tout how his administra­tion is trying to address the surge of migrants at the southern border, which Republican­s have repeatedly said is the result of Biden reversing policies put in place by Trump. Republican­s also were seen shaking their heads or laughing whenever Biden suggested Congress should enact gun restrictio­ns and pass a voting overhaul bill.

Ahead of the address, a few Republican­s took aim at the unpreceden­ted setting for the speech — in a mostly empty chamber because of coronaviru­s precaution­s ordered by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

“It’s so weird,” said Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla. “It’s 200 in a room that can seat 1,600, in a room full of people that have all been vaccinated, when we sit shoulder to

shoulder on airplanes every single week. It is more drama than substance.”

AMERICAN FAMILY PLAN

Biden delivered additional fodder for GOP attacks ahead of the speech when he unveiled a second pricey agenda item Wednesday — his $1.8 trillion “American Family Plan” that would expand access to health care and child care, provide free community college, and create a national paid family and medical leave program.

That followed a separate $2 trillion infrastruc­ture proposal that Biden rolled out in late March, not to mention the pandemic bill — whose partisan nature soured many Republican­s, particular­ly a small cadre of Senate moderates who are skeptical that Biden will now engage in bipartisan talks.

Where Biden has proposed an infrastruc­ture package upward of $2 trillion on everything from electric cars to home elder care, the Senate GOP moderates have proposed a package less than half as expensive focused more squarely on roads, bridges, airports, railroads and other bricks-and-mortar infrastruc­ture — financed without major tax increases.

“It’s a massive amount of spending,” Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, told reporters Wednesday. “Maybe if he were younger, I’d say his dad needs to take away the credit card.”

While Romney is among the clutch of Senate Repub

licans still negotiatin­g an infrastruc­ture package, Democrats have made clear they will seek to press forward on a partisan basis on other aspects of their agenda — skirting a likely GOP filibuster by using a fast-track process for spending and tax legislatio­n known as budget reconcilia­tion that requires only a majority vote to pass legislatio­n.

That is the same process Republican­s used in recent years to pass their own tax overhaul and to unsuccessf­ully attempt to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. But scores of Republican­s have cast the willingnes­s of Democrats to use those tools as a betrayal of Biden’s campaign promises of national unity.

A messaging memo sent

out Wednesday by House Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., hit similar themes as other GOP leaders, saying Biden “has abandoned his campaign promises to work in a bipartisan manner on behalf of all Americans and has completely ceded to the radical left.”

The guidance proceeded to run through 100 days’ worth of Republican attacks on the administra­tion’s coronaviru­s relief bill, its handling of the migrant surge at the southern border, and plans for tax increases on the richest Americans and corporatio­ns.

Ahead of Biden’s speech, the Republican Study Committee also circulated a memo that included 11 “shams” or areas where the conservati­ve

group argues Biden has gone against his politicall­y moderate persona or campaign promises, such as by asking Americans to continue wearing masks past his first 100 days in office and including provisions in his relief and infrastruc­ture proposals that deal with unrelated policies.

“Expect more of the same tonight during his Joint Address to Congress … and remember this: With President Biden, what you see is NOT what you get. We simply can’t trust what he says is really going to happen,” the memo read.

FOREIGN POLICY

While the bulk of the attacks focused on Biden’s vast plans for government spending, Republican­s also took aim at his early foreign-policy moves, framing him as someone who is tough on rhetoric but weak on policy against adversarie­s like China and Russia. This week, key Republican­s trained fire on Biden’s climate envoy, former Secretary of State John Kerry, after secret tapes caught Iran’s foreign minister discussing how Kerry informed him about Israeli attacks. Kerry has denied any wrongdoing.

“Ignoring the facts. Passing the buck. Squanderin­g leverage,” McConnell said Wednesday, slamming Biden’s decision to withdraw all U.S. troops from Afghanista­n and propose defense spending cuts. “This is not what the American people bargained for. And they know it doesn’t have to be this way.

After the speech, several Republican­s made quips to criticize or dismiss Biden’s address as Democrats hailed it as a powerful articulati­on of a bold agenda.

“This whole thing could have just been an email,” McCarthy tweeted.

One Republican who had very little to say about the speech ahead of its delivery was Trump, who did not mention Biden’s name, let alone the impending address, in a half-hour interview with conservati­ve media personalit­y Dan Bongino published on Wednesday afternoon.

Trump did, however, take a shot at Biden’s tax proposals — particular­ly a proposed raising of the corporate income tax rate, which was cut to 21% under Trump, and a potential increase in taxes on investment income, which is currently taxed at a lower rate than wages for the wealthiest Americans.

“The highest ever — the taxes will be the highest ever,” Trump said, overstatin­g the proposed increases and eliding the fact that Biden’s proposals would only affect a tiny fraction of Americans. “These companies, there’s not a lot of loyalty to us, they make deals, they’re gonna make deals, and they’re gonna leave, and they’re going to take a lot of jobs with them and a lot of money with them.”

After two minutes of discussing tax policy, Trump pivoted to another subject: His claim that the 2020 election had been stolen from him.

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 ?? (AP/Senate Television) ?? Sen. Tim Scott delivered Republican­s’ central political criticism of President Joe Biden, that he campaigned as a uniter and a moderate but has governed as a liberal relying only on Democratic lawmakers.
(AP/Senate Television) Sen. Tim Scott delivered Republican­s’ central political criticism of President Joe Biden, that he campaigned as a uniter and a moderate but has governed as a liberal relying only on Democratic lawmakers.

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