Boston Herald

How history will view the disastrous Biden years

- By Neil Patel Neil Patel is a syndicated columnist.

When historians study the disaster that was the Biden administra­tion, they will find many factors that contribute­d to the historic level failure we are witnessing. At the top of the list is a president who is clearly just not up to the job. Whether due to age, cognitive decline or general ineptitude, Joe Biden has not been able to lead America. Nobody wants a weak president. People can smell weakness, and Biden reeks of it. The president put himself in a further hole by surroundin­g himself with a young staff driven more by a rigid, left-wing ideology than a desire to help the lives of everyday Americans. With a leader seemingly too weak to temper his team’s radical ideas, the results have been catastroph­ic.

Even with a corporate media desperate to keep propping him up, Biden’s approval ratings are at alltime lows. Support among men has fallen through the floor. More troubling, his support from the normally rocksolid Black and Hispanic base of the Democratic Party has dropped dramatical­ly. The breakdown in the Democratic Party is so complete that their only remaining hope is that Republican­s somehow find a way to screw up enough to give them another chance. Praying for a Republican disaster may be the Democrats’ only shot. That’s not generally a far-fetched scenario, but this time, their deficit may just be insurmount­able.

How did things fall so far so fast for Biden and the Democrats? Amazingly, the president seemed to capture the national mood perfectly in his inaugural address. Americans are not happy. Polarizati­on is at record levels, and it has gone past politics and led to a country more divided than maybe at any time since the Civil War. Biden certainly covered a few left-wing priorities in his inaugural address, but more than anything, he called for national healing and unity. Had he governed that way, he would not be in the position he’s in today. Instead, from the start, apparently following the lead of the radical wing of his party, he governed from a rigidly ideologica­l and astonishin­gly outof-touch perspectiv­e that left average Americans bewildered.

Biden immediatel­y dismantled many of former President Donald Trump’s border security policies. That’s not surprising from a Democratic politician. But Biden had no replacemen­t plan. He took down policies that were working and didn’t bother to put in place any plan of his own to secure the border. When the predictabl­e crisis followed, the Biden team’s first reaction was to pretend that everything was fine; there was no crisis. When you have the majority of the media on your team, you can try audacious explanatio­ns like that, but it was too much. Like the CNN reporter proclaimin­g riot cities “mostly peaceful” in a camera shot with burning buildings in the background, there’s a level of political spin that will just never work. Following an election where many Democrats openly advocated for open borders and decriminal­izing illegal border crossing, the political blame for the crisis at the border landed squarely in the president’s lap.

But the biggest liability for the president isn’t the border; it’s the rising prices hammering the American people. Knowing the political price they are likely to pay for skyrocketi­ng inflation, team Biden is desperatel­y trying to spin this away as the “Putin Price Hike.” Unfortunat­ely, the record is so clear that only the most committed partisans would try to repeat that whopper.

When Biden took office, the first big economic debate was over his nearly $2 trillion COVID-19 stimulus package, the so-called American Rescue Plan. Coming on the heels of multiple Trump COVID-19 stimulus policies, many leading experts in both parties warned that Biden’s spending was going too far. Overstimul­ating the economy in this way, they argued, would come with the risk of high inflation. The Republican warnings were perhaps best summarized by Kevin Hassett, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under Trump. Hassett’s warning to Biden and the Fed was not subtle. He titled it “Inflation: The Ingredient­s Are in the Pot, and the Fire Is On.”

It’s understand­able that Biden would tune out Trump’s chief economist, but he also tuned out some of the most prominent economic minds in his own party. Bill Clinton’s Treasury Secretary, Lawrence Summers, and Barack Obama’s chief economist, Jason Furman, were also warning very directly about inflation, beginning early in the Biden presidency. The Biden team and their surrogates in the press not only ignored these warnings from leading Democrats; they attacked them viciously for daring to dissent. Topped perhaps only by his tragic prediction­s about the doomed Afghanista­n withdrawal, Biden defended his huge spending proposals with an argument that would be truly comical if it weren’t so sad: “The one thing we learned is we can’t do too much here. We can do too little.” They did too much. Biden also rewarded the Federal Reserve leadership with new appointmen­ts, despite a clear failure by the Fed to predict and address inflation. Many economists in both parties have criticized the central bank for keeping interest rates too low for too long. In fact, despite inflation already spiking to levels not seen in decades, the Fed continued to stimulate the economy with bond purchases until just last month.

The “Putin Price Hike” is only the latest Biden attempt to deflect responsibi­lity. At first, the White House insisted that inflation was “transitory.” This was, of course, repeated throughout the press. Those who dared dissent were even fact-checked. Inflation was all about COVID-19, they argued. Then it was all about “supply chain disruption­s.” All this would come to an end, and everything will be fine, they told us. This was all before Vladimir Putin even began his war. Now it’s Putin’s fault. People often don’t have the time to study issues at length, but they can smell pure political spin from a mile away. This one just stinks.

 ?? Ap file ?? WRONG DIRECTION: At his inaugurati­on last year, President Biden talked about healing the divisions in the country but his actions since then have taken us in the opposide direction.
Ap file WRONG DIRECTION: At his inaugurati­on last year, President Biden talked about healing the divisions in the country but his actions since then have taken us in the opposide direction.
 ?? Ap file ?? SKY HIGH: A man looks at beef in the meat department at Lambert’s Rainbow Market in Westwood last year. Consumer prices have been skyrocketi­ng lately.
Ap file SKY HIGH: A man looks at beef in the meat department at Lambert’s Rainbow Market in Westwood last year. Consumer prices have been skyrocketi­ng lately.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States