Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Is Biden another incredible shrinking president?

- David Ignatius David Ignatius Columnist

Traveling overseas the last few days, I kept hearing prominent foreigners asking the same question: What’s happening to politics in the United States? And more specifical­ly: Why isn’t President Joe Biden a stronger leader at a time when his party controls the House and Senate?

You can explain the nuances to these foreign political observers — the narrow Democratic majorities, the unyielding obstructio­n of the Republican­s, the fractured internal politics of the Democratic Party. But you get a shrug. Biden won, so why is he a prisoner of those he defeated at the polls, not to mention members of his own party?

The cartoon version of Biden’s plight is that he is becoming “the incredible shrinking president” — a label that seems to be slapped on every modern chief executive, from Bill Clinton to Donald Trump. Now, it’s Biden’s turn. If you look back to June, he seemed to be gaining stature and strength. His trip to Europe was a resounding success; “America is back” seemed more than a slogan. On domestic politics, Biden helped craft a draft bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill in June that embodied the promise on which he had been elected — the country can still be governed through policies that unite left and right.

And then the stumbles began. Despite Biden’s pledge that the $1.2 trillion national infrastruc­ture bill wouldn’t be held hostage to a $3.5 trillion social spending bill, that’s just what happened; the tensions within the party that had been largely suppressed during the summer boiled over come fall. Despite Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s promise to bring the bipartisan bill to a House vote in September, it languished. Weirdly, it seemed as though progressiv­e leaders such as Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Rep. Pramila Jayapal, DWash., suddenly had more clout than Biden and Pelosi, D-Calif.

Politics is partly about momentum — and Biden should have known that. When he was up this past summer, it was time to insist on pocketing a win, to show the country that the Biden project of national reconstruc­tion was working, with a first installmen­t on infrastruc­ture. And then move on to the larger package of social reforms — important, but as initially floated, too fuzzy and too expensive.

Instead, the president got caught in the Washington political wringer. He seemed a captive of his own party, not to mention the Halloween goblins on the Republican side. This acrimoniou­s stalemate is part of what the nation detests about Washington, and it’s no wonder that Biden’s poll numbers have been in a free fall since the summer. From a supposed master of the legislativ­e process, the country expected more.

The time to compromise — toward a $1.5 to $2 trillion social spending package that can be enacted into law — is now, before any more air goes out of the Biden balloon. Pelosi made that point clearly in a statement on Monday night: “It is essential that difficult decisions must be made very soon,” she said, urging progressiv­es to cut their demands and “do fewer things well.

The White House promises a vote by the end of October, and let’s hope that Biden will pull an 11th-hour compromise from his dusty legislator’s hat. He would be crippled by failure — but congressio­nal Democrats, even more.

Bad things can happen to good countries. That’s what you remember when you travel to places such as Italy, which embraced fascism in the 1930s. When strong leaders can no longer hold the center, extremists proliferat­e on the left and right. Progressiv­es argue that the center is dead and the time for compromise is past. But that’s not the decision the Democrats — and the country — made in choosing Biden.

As it happens, Pelosi was in Italy over the weekend, too. She told her colleagues that she had met with Pope Francis and asked him “to pray for us” as the decisive votes approach. Divine interventi­on would be a blessing, but for now we must depend on Pelosi’s whip count.

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