Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The president’s job

- Star Parker Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

Widely reported in the press is that President Joe Biden called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to express his concern about judicial reforms that are currently being considered in Israel.

We wonder why Biden, who demonstrab­ly cannot run our own country, feels behooved to tell others, particular­ly one as successful as Israel, how to run theirs.

Looking into Biden’s own backyard, per latest Gallup polling, a paltry 20 percent of Americans say they are satisfied with the direction of their country.

The White House reported that Biden told the Israeli prime minister that “democratic values” are “a hallmark of the U.S.-Israel relationsh­ip, that democratic societies are strengthen­ed by genuine checks and balances, and that fundamenta­l changes should be pursued with the broadest possible base of popular support.”

But Israel is governed under a parliament­ary system that ties the government on a day-to-day basis to popular sentiment more closely than our own system. On any given day, in Israel’s parliament­ary system, a vote of no confidence can bring down the government.

As a result of a deeply divided electorate, Israel has had five elections within four years. As the only democracy in its part of the world, it doesn’t seem like democracy and elections are subjects on which Israel needs tutorials from Biden.

What’s going on is not a problem with democracy, but a problem with those who are unhappy with the results that democracy produces. It happens that Israelis, in their last election, returned to power Netanyahu, who has put together a right-of-center government that does not please Israel’s left or America’s leftwing president, who has been recruited to put in his two cents.

Biden touting the importance of democracy and checks and balances is more than a little ironic as he waits for the Supreme Court to rule on the constituti­onality of his unilateral move to wipe out $400 billion of student loans. Most assessment­s point to the likelihood that Biden’s move will be found unconstitu­tional.

Regarding the importance of the “broadest base of popular support,” the U.S. banking system is now teetering, already with several bank failures, with others looking for support. Banks have been ravaged by interest rate increases, the result of inflation caused by trillions spent by Biden’s administra­tion.

The $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan and the $735 billion Inflation Reduction Act both passed the House and Senate without a single Republican vote and were signed into law by Biden.

We might recall that the U.S. health-care system was overhauled when Biden was vice president. The Affordable Health Care Act— Obamacare—was passed in the House and the Senate without a single Republican vote and signed into law by President Barack Obama.

The founders of our country and the drafters of our Constituti­on would never believe that the beautiful system they designed, conceived to limit government and protect individual liberty, would someday see government at all levels taking almost half our gross national product, generating massive deficits and national debt larger than our nation’s entire economy.

Nor would they believe that the courts have been used to remove all vestige of religion from public life or that Supreme Court justices felt it was their job to redefine marriage.

The percentage of Americans that have a “great deal/quite a lot” of confidence in their major institutio­ns, reported by Gallup last July, are as follows: the presidency 23 percent; U.S. Supreme Court 25 percent; Congress 7 percent; public schools 28 percent; newspapers 16 percent; criminal justice system 14 percent; television news 11 percent.

Please, Mr. Biden, do your own job and let Israelis run their own country.

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