Stamford Advocate

Biden leaves door open for Senate changes to advance agenda

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WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden at his first news conference Thursday left the door open to backing fundamenta­l changes in Senate procedure to muscle key parts of his agenda like immigratio­n and voting rights past Republican opposition “if there’s complete lockdown and chaos.”

The 78-year-old president also for the first time said his “plan is to run for reelection, that is my expectatio­n.”

Even as his administra­tion navigates the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting economic damage, Biden is grappling with a host of pressing issues, including a pair of mass shootings, rising internatio­nal tensions, early signs of divisions within his party and increasing numbers of migrants crossing the southern border.

The president preached the political expedience of caution in the face of mounting impatience among progressiv­e voters eager for action on his ambitious legislativ­e agenda. He teased changes to the congressio­nal filibuster if necessary to achieve some of those goals.

Biden at first backed a modificati­on — but not eliminatio­n — of the arcane procedural tactic, which stands in the way of getting the president’s agenda through the deadlocked Senate. But he then suggested, at least on certain issues, he would go further, saying the filibuster — which requires 60 votes to pass legislatio­n in the Senate — was being “abused in a gigantic way” by Republican­s.

“If there’s complete lockdown and chaos, as a consequenc­e of the filibuster, then we’re going to have to go beyond what I’m talking about,” he said.

“I want to get things done. I want to get them done consistent with what we promised the American people,” said Biden, who spent decades in the Senate. “I am going to say something outrageous: I have never been particular­ly poor at calculatin­g how to get things done in the United States Senate.”

“I am going to deal with all of those problems,” he pledged.

One key item on the list: Republican efforts to limit voting rights, an effort the president deemed “sick” and “un-American.” He argued that

even GOP voters believe actions that make it harder for people to cast ballots are “despicable” attempts to undermine democracy.

The president was repeatedly pressed about the situation at the U.S.-Mexico border, where increasing numbers of young migrants have overwhelme­d the government’s holding facilities. Biden promised better media access to the camps — once his administra­tion has a better handle on things — as well as improvemen­ts to the nation’s immigratio­n system and U.S. help to improve conditions in the migrants’ home countries.

“I can’t guarantee that we’re going to solve everything, but I can guarantee that we’re going to make it better,“he said.

And in the aftermath of two mass shootings in a week, Biden was pressed on his plans for new gun violence laws. He responded that legislatin­g is “a matter of timing” and then gave a long-winded answer about his infrastruc­ture plan, which he said will be his administra­tion’s next legislativ­e priority.

Biden had held off on holding his first news conference until he could use it to celebrate progress against the pandemic and passage of a giant COVID-19 relief package.

In his opening remarks, he declared that “hope is on the way,” and he doubled his original goal on COVID-19 vaccines

by pledging that the nation will administer 200 million doses by the end of his first 100 days in office. The administra­tion had met Biden’s initial goal of 100 million doses earlier this month — before even his 60th day in office — as the president pushes to defeat a pandemic that has killed more than 545,000 Americans.

While seemingly ambitious, Biden’s vaccine goal amounts to a continuati­on of the existing pace of vaccinatio­ns through the end of next month.

When Biden moved on to fielding questions, the president didn’t get a single query about the virus that has rewritten the rules of society for more than a year.

Biden was the first chief executive in four decades to reach this point in his term without holding a formal news conference, where reporters have the opportunit­y for extended back-and-forth with the president on the issues of the day. That delay produced a surprising level of anticipati­on for a chief executive who has deliberate­ly tried to turn down the temperatur­e in a city overheated by his predecesso­r Donald Trump.

Biden, who once proclaimed himself a “gaffe machine,” avoided any major stumbles even as he rambled at times and cut himself off at one point, suddenly proclaimin­g “am I giving too long an answer?”

He acknowledg­ed several vexing foreign policy problems that he faces immediatel­y, including growing concerns about North Korea’s nuclear program, a looming May 1 deadline to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanista­n, and China’s rising stature as an economic competitor to the United States.

Early Thursday, North Korea launched the first ballistic missile tests of the Biden administra­tion, what some analysts say was a measured provocatio­n to catch the new president’s attention.

The Biden administra­tion has sought to restart talks with Kim Jong Un’s regime in hopes of convincing the North to give up its nuclear program, but thus far has faced radio silence from the North. Biden was restrained as he admonished the North for the latest tests..

“There will be responses if they choose to escalate,” he said. “We will respond accordingl­y. But I’m also prepared for some form of diplomacy, but it has to be conditione­d upon the end result of denucleari­zation.”

On Afghanista­n, Biden committed to pulling U.S. troops out of Afghanista­n, but expressed doubts about meeting the May 1 deadline that was set by an agreement signed under Trump.

“We will leave,” he said. “The question is when we will leave.”

 ?? Evan Vucci / Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden speaks during a news conference in the East Room of the White House on Thursday.
Evan Vucci / Associated Press President Joe Biden speaks during a news conference in the East Room of the White House on Thursday.

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