Chattanooga Times Free Press

10 WORST THINGS PRESIDENT BIDEN DID

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After the disasters Joe Biden unleashed in 2022, I didn’t imagine his presidency could get worse — but it did. Here are the 10 worst things Biden did in 2023:

10. He made the child-care crisis worse. As my Post colleague Alyssa Rosenberg and I pointed out in September, child-care costs have been rising at nearly twice the rate of inflation. We proposed expanding the State Department’s au pair program, making this lower-cost option available to more families. Instead, the Biden administra­tion put forward a plan that would double the cost of hiring an au pair by tying compensati­on to state and local laws on minimum wage, which will effectivel­y put the program out of reach for many working families.

9. He made us more dependent on Russian uranium. If Biden wants to speed Americans’ transition from fossil fuels to electricit­y, we will need more nuclear power. Yet the president restricted developmen­t on more than 1 million acres of land that includes the only U.S. source of high-grade uranium ore. Since the United States is the largest purchaser of Russian enriched uranium, the move increases our dependence on Russia at a time when we are trying to isolate Vladimir Putin.

8. He circumvent­ed the Supreme Court on student loan forgivenes­s. With the stroke of a pen, Biden tried in 2022 to cancel half a trillion dollars in student debt, only to see his unconstitu­tional plan blocked by the Supreme Court. So the president used other regulatory means to write off nearly $132 billion in student debt anyway — effectivel­y forcing blue-collar workers to subsidize the higher education of white-collar profession­als and launching a frontal assault on Congress’s power of the purse.

7. He failed to police antisemiti­sm on the left. When Biden declared his candidacy for president in 2019, he condemned the right-wing bigots in Charlottes­ville “chanting the same antisemiti­c bile heard across Europe in the ’30s.” Yet he failed to forcefully confront the explosion of antisemiti­c bile on the left, from college campuses to Capitol Hill, after Hamas’s Oct. 7 terrorist attack on Israel.

6. He allowed a Chinese spy balloon to violate U.S. airspace. For days, the Biden administra­tion did nothing to stop the 20-story Chinese craft until someone in Montana looked up at the sky and said: What the hell is that? Even Democrats, including former defense secretary and CIA director Leon Panetta, Sen. Jon Tester and Rep. Raja Krishnamoo­rthi, called the president out for letting it sail over our country for a week before finally shooting it down over the Atlantic.

5. He allowed Iran to attack U.S. forces with impunity. As president, Donald Trump drew a clear red line with Iran’s leaders, warning that the United States would respond militarily against Iran or its terrorist proxies if they killed a single American. He enforced this by taking out Iran’s terrorist mastermind, Qasem Soleimani, in 2020. On Oct. 7, Iran’s proxy Hamas killed more than 30 Americans during its attack against Israel. Since then, Iran’s partners in terror have carried out reportedly more than 100 attacks on U.S. forces in Iraq, Syria and the Red Sea. Yet Biden has imposed no cost on Iran, sending a message of weakness that invites more attacks.

4. He allowed the worst border crisis in U.S. history to get even worse. In fiscal 2023, the record for the most encounters at the Southern border was broken for the third straight year. A December Wall Street Journal poll found that 64% disapprove of Biden’s border policies, while just 27% approve.

3. He blocked allies from giving Ukraine a clear path to NATO membership. At a July summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, a majority of NATO allies wanted to set a specific timetable for Kyiv’s admission into the alliance, but Biden rejected their entreaties in fear of provoking Russia — giving Putin a major victory.

2. He continued to slow-roll weapons to Ukraine. After 19 months of Ukrainian pleading, Biden provided Kyiv with Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) in October — but the United States supplied only a few medium-range missiles, which travel 100 miles, instead of longer-range missiles that have a 190-mile range. And after denying Ukraine’s entreaties for F-16 fighters for more than a year, Biden reversed course in May — but U.S. training delays prevented their deployment. He has provided Kyiv with just three Patriot air-defense systems, leaving Ukrainian troops, schools, homes, hospitals and critical infrastruc­ture exposed. Biden’s delays have undermined Ukraine’s counteroff­ensive, prolonged the war and weakened support in Congress for military aid to Ukraine.

1. He announced he is running for re-election. Biden is the most unpopular president since the end of World War II. Monmouth polling in October found 76% say he is too old to serve another term; CNN polling in August found that 67% of Democrats want someone else to be their party’s nominee. Yet Biden is running, forcing a Biden-Trump rematch that most Americans say they don’t want.

This list barely scratches the surface, so, as I do each year, here are some dishonorab­le mentions: Biden canceled the seven remaining oil and gas leases in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge; he transferre­d $6 billion in frozen oil funds to Iran as a ransom for five American hostages; he announced the most draconian restrictio­ns on auto emissions ever to try to force Americans to transition to electric vehicles; he nominated judges who could not answer basic questions about the Constituti­on; and he embraced “Bidenomics” even though only 14% say they have been helped by Biden’s economic policies.

Year 3 was a disaster. I tremble to think what 2024 will bring.

 ?? ?? Marc Thiessen
Marc Thiessen

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