San Antonio Express-News

Joe stumbling, his presidency starts to shrink

- RICH LOWRY

Joe Biden was never exactly a colossus bestriding the Earth, but he’s been getting smaller by the day.

A Washington Post poll over the weekend suggested that his presidency is, for now, a smoking political crater. It had him at a 41 percent approval rating, despite the passage of his long-sought infrastruc­ture bill that was supposed to buoy him and his party.

Even more striking, the survey found that Republican­s lead Democrats on the generic congressio­nal ballot by 10 points, 51 percent to 41percent, an unpreceden­tedly strong showing for the GOP that forecasts an earthquake, tsunami and maybe a few more natural disasters for Democrats come next fall.

And who can be surprised? Biden is stumbling, out of touch and weak. Two of his major initiative­s, at the border and in Afghanista­n, created completely avoidable catastroph­es. He has given no sense of being in control of events or even his own party. He is an accidental president who is running smack into his own inadequaci­es and absurd pretension­s.

No one in Washington over the last four decades ever said that Joe Biden was just the man with the foresight, wisdom and deft political touch to lead the free world.

No, he was an average senatorial bloviator whose first two presidenti­al campaigns flamed out in embarrassi­ng fashion, before he hit the jackpot when Barack Obama choose him as his running mate in 2008.

Showing the advantage of hanging around for a very long time, Biden won both the 2020 Democratic nomination and the presidency by default. In the primaries, the former vice president looked good in comparison to Bernie Sanders, and he ran in the general on not being Donald Trump.

Now, Biden is allied with Bernie Sanders, who helped write the first version of his Build Back Better plan, and Donald Trump no longer looms as large as Biden’s foil.

The best case for Biden’s presidency was that he could be a kind of consensus caretaker — restoring a sense of normality and maintainin­g a low profile while riding in the slipstream of improving economic conditions and a diminishin­g pandemic.

Instead, he’s been carried along by the left-wing tide of his party and repeatedly engaged in unconstitu­tional executive overreach. On top of it all, he’s brought his own brand of incompeten­ce, exemplifie­d by the botched pull-out from Afghanista­n.

His foremost mistake was overestima­ting an attenuated electoral mandate for pedestrian governance as a permission slip for passing nearly the entirety of the progressiv­e agenda in the space of less than a year.

Not only has there been sticker shock over the price tag of the Biden agenda, but it has little connection to things people truly care about. The infrastruc­ture bill polls well, but no one goes about their daily lives worried about the alleged crisis of crumbling bridges and tunnels.

Meanwhile, the Build Back Better bill started as a $3.5 trillion grab bag of everything that progressiv­es want but couldn’t get in the infrastruc­ture bill. Passing as much spending as you possibly can before you lose Congress a year from now, which is essentiall­y the rationale behind Build Back Better, is not a compelling reason for a historic spate of federal spending.

That legislatio­n has been pared down to largely a child care and climate change bill. That’s an unnatural pairing that came about not because those are the top two things that the public wants from Washington, but because they happen to be what Democrats think they can pass.

Only now is the White House trying to argue that the infrastruc­ture bill and Build Back Better will address real public concerns, namely the supply chain disruption­s and the inflation that is outpacing wage growth. This is clearly a tendentiou­s, after-the-fact argument.

The White House can hope that the supply chain bottleneck­s ease and inflation declines, but Biden’s disastrous first year speaks to a more intractabl­e problem with the lackluster occupant of the Oval Office himself.

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