Baltimore Sun

Why are so many Americans down on Biden? Some reasons are easy to see.

- Bret Stephens Bret Stephens is a columnist for The New York Times, where a longer version of this piece originally appeared.

Unemployme­nt is near historic lows, and inflation has come way down. We are inflicting a strategic humiliatio­n on Russia by arming Ukraine without putting U.S. forces at risk. The homicide rate fell by about 10% across 30 cities compared with last year. Democrats defied electoral trends by holding the Senate, scoring major legislativ­e victories and easily confirming a Supreme Court nominee.

Why, then, do only 20% of voters rate the economy as “excellent” or “good,” versus 49% who call it “poor,” according to a New York Times/Siena poll? Why are Americans overwhelmi­ngly pessimisti­c about the country’s future, according to the Pew Research Center? Why does Gallup find a significan­tly smaller percentage of Americans have confidence in the presidency today than they did in the last, disastrous year of Donald Trump’s tenure? And why is President Joe Biden polling dead even with his predecesso­r in multiple surveys despite Trump’s 91 felony charges?

Some seem to think the problem is a failure to communicat­e all the good news. But there’s another explanatio­n: The news isn’t all that good. Americans are unsettled by things that are not always visible in headlines or statistics but are easy enough to see.

Easy to see is the average price of a dozen eggs: up 38% between January 2022 and May of this year. And white bread: up 25%. And a whole chicken: up 18%. As for the retail price of gasoline, it’s up 63% since January 2021, the month Biden became president.

Easy to see is the frequent collapse of public order on American streets. In April hundreds of teenagers wreaked havoc in the Chicago Loop. Two boys were shot. A young couple was beaten by the doorway of a building on North Wabash. Yet only 16 people were arrested. Similar scenes unfolded last month in New York’s Union Square and again in Boston, where police officers were assaulted in two separate riots largely by juveniles.

Easy to see is that the kids are not all right. The causes are many; social media companies have a lot to answer for. But so do teachers unions, handmaiden­s of the Democratic Party, who pushed to keep school doors closed during the pandemic, helping themselves while doing lasting harm to children. The Biden administra­tion spent much of its early months saying it wanted more than half of schools open at least one day per week by the 100th day of his presidency.

“It is a goal so modest and lacking in ambition as to be almost meaningles­s,” Politico’s Playbook newsletter noted at the time.

Easy to see is that the border crisis has become a national one. In May the administra­tion boasted that new policies had contribute­d to a sharp decline in the “number of encounters” between border patrols and migrants crossing the southweste­rn border illegally. By August, arrests of migrants who crossed the border with family members had hit a monthly record of 91,000. In New York City alone, more than 57,000 migrants seek food and shelter from the city’s social services on an average night.

Easy to see is that the world has gotten more dangerous under Biden’s watch.

The president deserves credit for arming Ukraine, as he does for brokering a strategic rapprochem­ent between Japan and South Korea. But he also deserves the blame for a humiliatin­g Afghanista­n withdrawal that almost surely played a part in enticing Vladimir Putin into launching his invasion of Ukraine and whetted Beijing’s appetite for Taiwan.

Easy to see is that the president is not young for his age. The stiff gait and the occasional falls. The apparent dozing off. The times he draws a blank or struggles to complete a thought.

Yet the same people yelling #ResignFein­stein or #ResignMcCo­nnell don’t appear to be especially vocal when it comes to the president’s fitness, as if noting the obvious risks of repeating a Republican talking point.

Easy to see are tents under overpasses, from the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway in New York to the I-5 in Seattle. And the zombified addicts passed out on sidewalks in practicall­y every city and town. And the pharmacies with everyday items under lock and key to prevent shopliftin­g. And women with infants strapped to their backs, hawking candy or gum at busy intersecti­ons. And news reports of brazen car thefts, which have skyrockete­d this year.

Not all of what’s mentioned above is Biden’s fault, and none of it is irreversib­le. But there’s much more ruin than his apologists — blinkered by selective statistics and too confident about the president’s chances next year — care to admit.

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