Call & Times

Biden can rescue image by blaming Republican­s

- E.J. DIONNE

WASHINGTON – – The old joke about Wagner’s music being better than it sounds applies to President Joe Biden’s first year in office: It’s better than it looks. Alas for Biden, that’s not good enough.

With the president’s approval ratings languishin­g, the first anniversar­y of his inaugurati­on has turned into a Rorschach test for partisans and commentato­rs. Advice on how to turn his presidency around bears an uncanny resemblanc­e to the preexistin­g views of those offering their counsel.

Republican­s say Biden needs to be less partisan, centrists that he needs to be more moderate, the consensual­ly minded that he didn’t do enough to bring us together

– – and so on.

None of us checks our values at the analytical door, but let’s try to separate our assumption­s from realities.

Biden and his supporters are frustrated at how little notice is given to all that has gone right this past year, as the president took pains to remind us at his news conference on Wednesday.

With 6.2 million jobs created on his watch, the unemployme­nt rate is at 3.9%, far lower than anyone anticipate­d when he took office. Gross domestic product is up and workers have more bargaining power than they’ve enjoyed in decades.

Some 210 million Americans are fully vaccinated, as Biden noted, through more than a half-billion shots. With very narrow congressio­nal majorities, Biden secured his $1.9 trillion economic relief package and a $1.2 trillion infrastruc­ture bill.

It’s a good record. The problem is that much of this occurred in the first part of Biden’s opening year. His approval ratings then, a healthy 50% to 60%, reflected this.

Then came the pell-mell withdrawal from Afghanista­n, the fruitless wrangling among Democrats over his Build Back Better program and a partial unraveling of Biden’s earlier achievemen­ts.

The last developmen­t might be most important because voters incline toward what-have-you-done-for-me-lately thinking. The strong economic growth

combined with much-discussed supply-chain problems to produce inflation. The delta and omicron variants rolled back progress against the coronaviru­s pandemic and pointed to how Biden, in betting big on vaccinatio­n, shortchang­ed testing. It’s also true that some Republican politician­s, a massive disinforma­tion campaign and, lately, the Supreme Court, undercut those vaccinatio­n efforts.

Here is where middle-ofthe road critiques of Biden are right: He needs to focus incessantl­y on the virus and inflation – – twin challenges that are top of mind for most Americans. Biden clearly knows this, which is why he spoke at length on Wednesday about how his administra­tion has made testing widely available through an easy-to-use website and is boosting access to high-quality N95 masks.

Going forward, he needs to settle on a strategy that reaches toward as much normality as is consistent with the virus threat, and he needs to put an end to confusing messaging from various parts of the government. Neither will be easy.

On inflation, he needs highly visible efforts to unsnarl the supply chain. One idea: Create a task force on these issues. Possible members: Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg; Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm; Cecilia Rouse, chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers; Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo; Labor Secretary Marty Walsh; and Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack. Have them report publicly every week on concrete steps the administra­tion is taking to fix the problems.

But as progressiv­es insist, Biden also needs to resolve the core contradict­ion of his presidency – – between his longing to be the great unifier and his desire to do big things Republican­s were bound to oppose. Not, mind you, radical things. Simply helping Americans on health care, child care, education and relief for our ailing planet.

The problem with dreams of bipartisan Nirvana is that the other party must be willing to cooperate. Except on physical infrastruc­ture, achieving this would have required Biden to abandon all his campaign promises around economic justice. He acknowledg­ed Wednesday that he had not “anticipate­d” the ferocity of GOP obstructio­n.

And on the biggest struggle of this generation, the battle for voting rights and democracy, Trumpified Republican­s are plainly committed to giving the states they run free rein to suppress votes and subvert elections.

Democrats need to enact whatever they can of Build Back Better and then move on to passing pieces of what’s left individual­ly, if only to force the question Biden asked of Republican­s at his news conference: “What are they for?” And whatever happens the next few days on voting rights, they cannot walk away from the struggle – in Washington or in the states.

Biden’s task is to combine effective, visible engagement on the front-burner problems with a determined effort to raise the stakes in our politics. Americans need to come to terms with the radicalism of the Republican Party and its attacks on our democracy. If the president can make progress on the first imperative, he’ll earn the nation’s attention on the second.

––E.J. Dionne is on

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