Call & Times

Biden was never going to be FDR

- By MEGAN MCARDLE

Something called Build Back Better may eventually pass, but the dream of a transforma­tional, pan-coalition spending extravagan­za expired on Sunday, when Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-W. Va., announced he was giving up on it. And this marks a turning point for the administra­tion: For all the talk of a “21st century New Deal,” President Joe Biden will not, after all, be the next Franklin D. Roosevelt.

In this, Biden is normal. No matter how narrow or contingent their victories, all Democrats arrive at the White House nursing hopes of being the next Lyndon B. Johnson or FDR, while Republican­s reckon to reincarnat­e Ronald Reagan. Almost all are disappoint­ed because such political genius is rare, and because even those who KDYH LW XVXDOO\ FRPH WR R൶FH at the wrong time to make their political genius count.

Political genius matters – – Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush illustrate what happens to presidents who meet a crisis without it. But Bill Clinton, whose charm and ambition might have vaulted him into the top tier, was instead doomed to the middle by an uneventful era.

Roosevelt was elected on WKH EDFN RI D JOREDO ¿QDQFLDO crisis, while John F. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion, and his opponent’s radical conservati­sm, propelled Johnson into R൶FH ZLWK ODQGVOLGH PDMRULties. Clinton had modest maMRULWLHV DQG D PRGHVW UHFHVsion, neither of which gave him the scope for his massive health-care reform. When it comes to radical change, it’s not enough to solve some real problem. Unless that problem is pushed to the very top of voters’ minds by an acute crisis, the general electorate’s natural inertia will tend to swamp the revolution­ary fervor of your base.

Nonetheles­s, politician­s always forget how much timing matters. For 30 years, Republican­s have been campaignin­g on Reaganite tax cutting – – and delivering in R൶FH HYHQ WKRXJK WKH HOHFtoral returns to tax cutting keep diminishin­g. It is telling that after all his claims to represent a new Republican 3DUW\ WKH RQH PDMRU SLHFH RI non-emergency legislatio­n Donald Trump managed to pass was a tax bill.

Yet the 1980s tax cutter in chief was very much a man of his moment. When 5HDJDQ HQWHUHG R൶FH VWDJÀDWLRQ ZDV XQGHUFXWWL­QJ the credibilit­y of economic technocrat­s and breeding tax revolts through “bracket creep.” Because tax brackets ZHUHQ¶W LQGH[HG WR LQÀDWLRQ then over 10 percent a year, URXWLQH FRVW RI OLYLQJ DGMXVWment­s kept pushing ordinary people into higher brackets, though their purchasing power was stagnant. Reagan wooed those voters with a plausible solution: deregulati­on and tax cuts.

Had Reagan been elected a few years earlier, or a few years later, his presidency PLJKW UHDG YHU\ GL൵HUHQWO\ WR history. In 1979, Carter nominated a new Fed chief, Paul A. Volcker, who raised interest rates to 20 percent, triggering a sharp recession that ¿QDOO\ KDOWHG WKH LQÀDWLRQar­y spiral. Had Reagan run in, say, 1978, he might have QRPLQDWHG D GL൵HUHQW FKDLU and presided over more of WKH LQÀDWLRQ WKDW KDG GRRPHG Carter. Had Reagan himself nominated Volcker, he’d KDYH ¿QLVKHG KLV ¿UVW WHUP in the shadow of Volcker’s recession – – likely dooming his reelection chances. And if KH KDG UXQ LQ DV LQÀDtion was easing, voters might have been less worried about bracket creep, and Reagan’s anti-tax message perhaps wouldn’t have resonated. Reagan’s success wasn’t MXVW D SURGXFW RI WKH PDFURecono­mic environmen­t but which years America happened to hold elections.

Or consider Barack Obama, a charismati­c superstar who had better reason than any other modern president to fancy himself the next FDR. Unfortunat­ely, the Democrats who made that comparison forgot that when FDR was elected in 1932, the Great Depression was three years old, and already in the process of hitting rock bottom. Obama, by contrast, ZDV HOHFWHG MXVW PRQWKV DIWHU the Lehman Brothers colODSVH VHQW WKH JOREDO ¿QDQcial system into convulsion­s. His political situation was arguably closer to Herbert Hoover’s than FDR’s, and when he rammed through PDMRU OHJLVODWLR­Q DQ\ZD\ KLV SDUW\ VX൵HUHG D PDMRU PLGterm loss.

Biden’s world-historic crisis doesn’t look very Roosevelti­an either, though one could forgive his team for thinking otherwise in January, before it turned out there was still much more pandemic left to preside over. And even if the vaccines had ended covid-19 on schedule, he still wouldn’t have an FDR-style mandate because D SDQGHPLF MXVW GRHVQ¶W FDOO for one. A contagious disHDVH PD\ MXVWLI\ LQWUXVLYH and expansive public health measures – – temporaril­y. It does not convince frightened voters that the economy has permanentl­y broken and VKRXOG EH MXQNHG LQ IDYRU of a government-designed replacemen­t. His minuscule PDMRULWLHV DUH DOVR QRWKLQJ like what FDR and LBJ had to work with.

Like most of the presidents before him, Biden misread an expansive mandate into an election that called for something more modest. And, like other presidents who mistook their mandate, his administra­tion has come to grief. Now he must try to work himself out of it in time to face the voters who elected him to be the president, rather than a timeless historical icon.

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