Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE BIDEN WHITE HOUSE DUMPSTER FIRE

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President Joe Biden’s plunging public approval rating isn’t his problem. It is a reflection of his problem.

Biden held a big ceremony this week to sign the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill, the $1.2 trillion measure passed after months of wrangling in Congress. The public is well aware of it. And yet, in a new Washington Post poll, taken after the bill’s passage, Biden’s job approval rating has hit a new low — just 38% among registered voters, versus 57% who disapprove. So much for those Democrats who thought passing a big bill would boost Biden’s numbers.

Here’s what’s worse — much worse. For many years, pollsters have asked what is called the “generic ballot” question. There are many ways to say it, but it is basically, “If the election were today, would you vote for the Republican candidate or the Democratic candidate for the U.S. House in your district?” In the new Post poll, 51% of registered voters said the Republican candidate and 41% said the Democratic candidate.

For people who follow the generic ballot, that’s a stunning number. Usually Democrats lead Republican­s on the question. In fact, the GOP has never had a number as high as 51% in decades of Post polling. Even before big wins in 1994 and 2010, Republican­s did not have that big a lead in the generic ballot. But now, it’s 10 points — a “historical­ly strong result for Republican­s on this measure,” according to the Post. Watch for panic among Democrats that a White House signing ceremony won’t ease.

That’s a major problem for Democrats. But an even bigger problem is the state and future of the Biden White House. The issue, simply put, is whether the soon-to-turn-79-year-old president — the oldest in U.S. history — will be able to run for re-election in 2024. And if he doesn’t, whether his unpopular vice president, Kamala Harris, can win the Democratic nomination to succeed him. And if she can’t win, who can?

While Biden is struggling, Harris is struggling even more. Media reports suggest that a number of Democrats — Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Sens. Elizabeth Warren, Cory Booker and Amy Klobuchar — are positionin­g themselves as possible 2024 candidates should Biden not run and Harris have insufficie­nt support to claim the nomination.

Were that scenario to materializ­e, of course, there would be a huge fight inside the Democratic Party, with an old, weak president leaving the stage and each candidate having supporters, and above it all the Harris side raising the question of what it would mean for the party to cast aside a woman who is both the first female vice president and the first vice president of color.

It’s a mess. To put it mildly, it is not good if you are a new president, less than a year into the job, and people in your own party are speculatin­g that you can’t make it past one term and your vice president isn’t strong enough to succeed you.

All of this stems from one fact: Biden is too old to be president. Democrats knew when they chose him that Biden would be 82 at the end of his term and, if reelected, would serve until he was 86 years old. That is unpreceden­ted in American history. On top of that, Biden has clearly slowed down in recent years — looking at videos from a decade ago, when he was vice president, he was noticeably more vigorous than he is today. (And it’s not as if Biden was ever a brilliant leader, capable of shoulderin­g the responsibi­lities of the presidency, even in his prime.)

Put it all together, and the Biden White House, just months into power, has become a dumpster fire. Some of its problems are fixable. But other problems are structural — they won’t get better even if Congress passes this or that bill. Biden’s age, of course, was not a secret during the 2020 campaign. Voters knew what they were getting. And now they’re getting it.

 ?? ?? Byron York
Byron York

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