Daily News (Los Angeles)

Biden waves his résumé

Some may be skeptical

- By Nicholas Nehamas The New York Times

President Joe Biden is discoverin­g that passing one of the most ambitious legislativ­e agendas in recent U.S. history may have been the easy part. Persuading Americans that he deserves a second term may be far more difficult.

Confrontin­g low approval ratings and a neck-and-neck race against former President Donald Trump, Biden is now racing to tell voters about his accomplish­ments, in ways big and small.

Road signs that promote his legislatio­n are going up at constructi­on projects financed by his $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill and at factories where jobs are being created by his $280 billion CHIPS and Science Act. Biden has affixed his name to emails telling Americans with student debt that their loans were being forgiven. And he is traveling to battlegrou­nd states to sit down with voters who have benefited from his policies.

Democrats traditiona­lly have been “the party of the abstract, and we need to be the party that humanizes things,” said Gov. Phil Murphy of New Jersey, a Biden ally who believes the president has the skill set to do just that. “He personally is so good at this, putting his arm — figurative­ly and literally — around the American people and saying, `Hey, listen, I feel your pain.'”

But Biden faces a host of challenges in reaping the credit that he feels he deserves as he seeks reelection.

Polling shows that a majority of Americans disapprove of his job performanc­e. Many Americans say they benefited more from the policies of Trump. Most concerning for Biden, his support remains underwhelm­ing among key parts of the Democratic coalition, including Black and Hispanic Americans and younger voters — the people many of his efforts were designed to help.

Some of that negativity can be attributed to the 81-year-old president's age, the lingering effects of the pandemic and improved views of Trump, a phenomenon that is common after presidents leave office. The war in the Gaza Strip has depressed enthusiasm with Democrats.

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