Dayton Daily News

President Biden has enjoyed a remarkable summer run

- Charles M. Blow Charles M. Blow writes for The New York Times. Clarence Page returns soon.

Media narratives are driven by trajectory.

Things get better or worse. People rise and fall. Maybe there is an upstart sensation who threatens the establishm­ent. Maybe there is a spectacula­r fall from grace. Maybe there is a comeback. Regardless of the story, the direction of movement is what matters.

Joe Biden got caught in one of those narratives: that things were going badly and people were losing confidence. Then, of course, the polls backed up that narrative, which provided a patina of proof.

But the truth is that news narratives and polls are symbiotic. The narratives help shape what people believe, which is then captured by the polls, and those polling results are then fed back into news narratives as separate, objective and independen­t fact.

“Joe Biden can’t catch a break” was a neat narrative. Every new disappoint­ing data point fit snugly within it. But reality doesn’t play by media rules.

Biden has had some bad months, to be sure, but there is no way to get around the fact the last month or so has been stellar for the administra­tion.

On the economic front, as of Wednesday, gas prices had fallen for 50 consecutiv­e days, down 86 cents from the record average high of $5.02 on June 14, according to CNN. The jobs market has also shown incredible resilience. Friday’s jobs report alone far outpaced expectatio­ns.

On the legislativ­e front, in June, Biden signed the most significan­t federal gun safety legislatio­n in nearly 30 years. Two weeks ago, his big spending bill, Build Back Better, which everyone thought was dead, was resurrecte­d in the trimmed-down form of the Inflation Reduction Act. Now, all Democrats have cleared the way for the bill to move forward in the Senate.

There are foreign policy wins, like the killing of al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahri in Afghanista­n and the overwhelmi­ng vote in the Senate in favor of expanding NATO to include Finland and Sweden, a direct reaction to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. And the Russians have suggested that they are open to discussing a prison swap to free Brittney Griner and Paul Whelan, both of whom are still being held in Russian custody.

Then, there is the uber issue of the Supreme

Court striking down the right to an abortion. This was a gutting disappoint­ment to liberals, and many have accused the White House of not reacting strongly enough.

But it appears that the issue has roused some otherwise disinteres­ted or dispassion­ate voters and may help Democrats to hold off a massive wave of Republican wins in the midterms. We need look no further than Kansas, a state that voted strongly for Trump in 2020 but that last week voted even more strongly to keep the right to an abortion in the state constituti­on.

Biden’s string of victories may not yet be enough to shift the narrative about him from spiraling to rebounding, but a fair read of recent events demands some adjustment.

The White House must also shift its messaging, from defensive to offensive. I’ve never truly bought the argument that Biden’s polling was bad because he simply wasn’t doing enough to tout his accomplish­ments. There were some periods where the disappoint­ments actually seemed to carry more weight than his achievemen­ts.

But that’s not the case now, and the administra­tion must seize this moment and not be shy about shouting about its wins.

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