Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

President Biden is working on a cease-fire deal and should be reelected

- By Ro Khanna Guest Commentary Rep. Ro Khanna, D-calif., has served in Congress since 2017. His district is in the heart of Silicon Valley.

As a member of the Bidenharri­s 2024 national advisory board, I have spent the past year traveling the country talking with voters and hearing their concerns about the 2024 election. Americans are deeply worried about the cost of groceries and rent, the burden of student loan debt and the skyrocketi­ng cost of health care and prescripti­on drugs.

As a progressiv­e, I disagree with President Biden in several areas, including the urgent need for a permanent cease-fire in Gaza and the release of all hostages. I was in Michigan last week where I spoke with voters about the dire situation. I understand the heartbreak and frustratio­n people are experienci­ng.

President Biden has signaled that he is working on a cease-fire deal. I hope that he will heed our calls to protect civilian life in Gaza, end the war and ensure the release of hostages.

But there is a clear choice in this election. A Trump presidency will mean less diplomacy and more violence in the Middle East. It will only prolong the suffering of millions of people.

It will also mean a continuati­on of economic policies that benefit the wealthy and hurt the middle class, including tax cuts for corporatio­ns and an unstrategi­c trade war that already cost 300,000 American jobs.

A Trump presidency will jeopardize abortion rights, the rights of LGBTQ+ people and basic freedoms for millions of Americans. And, as we saw on Jan. 6, 2021, Trump is a major threat to our institutio­ns of democracy. Aside from the threat of what a Trump presidency would mean for our country, here is what President Biden has accomplish­ed in this first term that makes me confident that he should be reelected.

After extreme conservati­ves on the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, President Biden stood firmly in support of reproducti­ve health care. The president signed executive orders to protect reproducti­ve rights, including abortion, contracept­ion and patient privacy. He has said that if a national abortion ban was passed by Congress, he would veto it.

By signing the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), President Biden took historic action to lower the cost of prescripti­on drugs and invest in tackling climate change. The IRA allows Medicare to negotiate the price of high-cost drugs for the first time ever. The law also caps a month’s supply of insulin at $35 per month and includes the largest climate investment in U.S. history.

The president has taken steps to reverse the disastrous neoliberal policies of the past three decades that have cost the country 5 million manufactur­ing jobs and 70,000 factories. He signed the CHIPS and Science Act, which I coauthored, that led to companies announcing nearly $300 billion in manufactur­ing investment­s in the United States and the creation of good-paying jobs in communitie­s that have been left behind.

Thanks to funding from this law, Micron is constructi­ng a semiconduc­tor plant in Clay, N.Y., that is expected to create 50,000 good-paying jobs.

The law also includes the largest investment in science since the Kennedy administra­tion that will establish tech hubs across the country and expand investment­s in the National Science Foundation to advance research.

The president has also delivered on his promises to help the millions of people who lack clean drinking water and to repair thousands of miles of roads, bridges and highways. The Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law has already provided 21 million low-income households with free or discounted high-speed internet service.

For the sake of our economy, fundamenta­l rights and our health care system, it is critical that President Biden is reelected.

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