Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden’s reputation for bipartisan­ship faces test

- By Jules Witcover Jules Witcover is a national political columnist.

PRESIDENT-ELECT Joe Biden’s long history of reaching across the aisle in the Senate may well hold the key to his legislativ­e success in the Oval Office. Evidence of that hope was his visit to Georgia last week to support two Democrats for Senate seats at stake in a runoff election there on Jan. 5.

Biden, who carried the state on Nov. 3 in a break from tradition, is backing the Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff against Republican incumbent

Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler. That outcome would change a 50-48 GOP majority in the upper chamber to a 50-50 tie, enabling Vice President-elect Kamala Harris to break it as president of the Senate upon taking office on Jan. 20.

“We need those two seats,” Biden said during his visit. “I may eat these words, but

I predict to you: As Donald Trump’s shadow fades away, you’re going to see an awful lot of change.” He spoke on the heels of Trump’s own rally in Georgia to shore up Republican support for Perdue and Loeffler amid GOP fears the outgoing president’s efforts might be counterpro­ductive.

At the same time, Biden’s campaign rushed ground forces into the state to stir voter turnout for Warnock, senior pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, the Atlanta church of the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., and for Ossoff.

Biden himself cautioned that despite his own long connection with the Senate, it might take “six to eight months” for a better wowwrking relationsh­ip between the two parties to jell. But he promised: “You’re going to be surprised. We’re going to have a lot of people wanting to work with us.”

The president-elect said he had been in touch with seven senior GOP senators, and he may well have taken heart in how Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell had acknowledg­ed Biden’s election and congratula­ted him. It remains to be seen whether that gesture, and his mild rebuke of Trump’s feud against the man who beat him at the polls, will lead to any post-trump collaborat­ion in the Senate.

Biden met with Mcconnell last week and said afterward: “We agreed to get together sooner rather than later.” Of Perdue and Loeffler, he dimissivel­y observed, “I need two senators from the state who want to get something done, not two senators who are just going to get in the way.” It was a comment that said nothing of his hallowed ability to work across the partisan aisle.

At the same time, Biden cautioned progressiv­e Democrats among civil right leaders he addressed via video call not to get enmeshed in an intramural squabble over criminal justice. I “don’t think we should get too far ahead of ourselves on dealing with police reform, because (the Republican­s) already labeled us as (being for) ‘defund the police.’ That’s how they beat the living hell out of us across the country,” he said.

Such accommodat­ions seem to illustrate there are limits to Biden’s willingnes­s to split the difference on some controvers­ial issues.

Biden himself cautioned that despite his own long connection with the Senate, it might take “six to eight months” for a better working relationsh­ip between the two parties to jell.

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