Daily Press

Biden’s recent political wins should have GOP concerned

- Carl P. Leubsdorf

Bob Strauss, the venerable Dallas lawyer-lobbyist and longtime Democratic Party leader, used to say that, in politics, things are never as good as they seem or as bad as they seem.

That’s a good thing to remember as falling gas prices, passage of some major legislatio­n and the dramatic raid that killed al-Qaida’s leader have inspired a spate of stories about President Joe Biden’s comeback from near political oblivion — and the potential impact on Democratic chances this November.

After all, it is less than 90 days until Americans fill all 435 House seats, 35 Senate slots and 36 state governorsh­ips. A lot can still go wrong. And Biden’s job approval levels remain sufficient­ly low that they are still a distinct negative for his party.

Still, it is clear events of recent weeks have energized Democratic voters, making their leaders more optimistic — and the Republican­s more concerned — than just weeks ago.

For almost a year, the storyline surroundin­g Biden has been one of failure to manage events. It stemmed from his botched withdrawal from Afghanista­n, his inability to anticipate and curb soaring inflation, and the much-publicized divisions that prevented his Democratic congressio­nal allies from passing key parts of his economic agenda.

That combinatio­n dropped Biden’s job approval below 40% and spawned stories that many Democrats hope the 79-yearold president doesn’t run again in 2024. In the shorter term, it created the widespread expectatio­n within both parties that Democrats were headed for a midterm electoral disaster that would cost them control of the House — and probably the Senate.

But in recent weeks, gas prices have dropped steadily, and lawmakers finally passed three key bipartisan measures — a modest gun safety bill, increased support for the domestic semiconduc­tor industry and significan­t new health benefits for veterans.

Most importantl­y, perhaps, Senate Democrats resolved internal divisions and passed a slimmed-down version of Biden’s economic agenda. Its final passage will enable Democratic candidates to stress the positive things they achieved for voters.

Meanwhile, despite persistent recession fears — and a modest drop in total economic output during the first half of 2022 — the job market continues to expand. Unemployme­nt is now lower than before the COVID-19 pandemic struck in early 2020.

The Democrats have also gotten help in at least two ways from their political enemies.

In several key states, Republican­s heeded former President Donald Trump’s siren song and nominated conservati­ve neophytes for Senate seats and governorsh­ips. That has increased the likelihood that Democrats can keep the Senate and several key Midwest and swing-state governorsh­ips.

Second, the unexpected­ly sweeping Supreme Court decision that overturned its 1973 ruling legalizing abortions has prompted a backlash among abortion-rights advocates that is generating the previously lacking Democratic voter enthusiasm.

Recent polls show increased enthusiasm for voting this November among Democratic voters, especially younger ones. Pollsters attribute the change to their opposition to the court’s abortion decision and vows by many Republican­s to follow up by banning virtually all abortions, as

Indiana did last weekend.

Ironically, Biden’s improvemen­t came while he was quarantine­d in the White House after testing positive for COVID-19, an echo of the fact that he won the presidency in 2020 while self-isolating in his Wilmington, Delaware, basement.

Still, there has only been a modest uptick in his weak job approval level. Further improvemen­t is needed before he is no longer a potential drag on his party’s chances.

Analysts traditiona­lly say that, if the president’s job approval is under 50% at the time of a midterm election, his party is in danger of losing the House. When Democrats lost the House in 2010, President Barack Obama’s job approval was 45%; when the GOP lost control in 2018, Trump’s stood at 40%.

Midterm elections are traditiona­lly a referendum on the incumbent president and his administra­tion. Democrats hope their recent successes — and the looming presence of Trump — will let them make it a choice between the two parties and thus help avoid the electoral disaster they once feared.

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