Texarkana Gazette

Administra­tion starting to get results

- Carl Leubsdorf

In less than two months in the White House, Joe Biden has shown the difference an activist president can make.

Through both legislativ­e proposals and executive actions, he has replaced the passive approach of his predecesso­r — frequent declaratio­ns, few follow-ups – and started to produce the economic and health results he promised.

While it is too soon to measure their ultimate impact, Biden’s approach is already producing progress in three main aspects of the crisis he inherited:

■ Fighting the pandemic. Biden has expanded the federal government’s role in the distributi­on and administra­tion of the vaccines that hold the key to ending the COVID-19 pandemic. The number of daily vaccinatio­ns has doubled.

■ Funding the fight. The House on Wednesday completed congressio­nal passage of Biden’s $1.9 trillion package funding an expanded war on COVID-19 and providing much needed added help for its victims: both individual Americans and local and state government­s.

■ Opening the schools. Biden and his newly installed secretary of education are urging states to give teachers priority for COVID vaccinatio­ns and providing additional aid to make reopening schools safer.

With one big exception — the Operation Warp Speed program to develop and produce COVID vaccines — the Trump administra­tion relied more on words than deeds, often transmitti­ng mixed messages while minimizing the seriousnes­s of the problem and disdaining use of federal authority.

After questionin­g his predecesso­r’s readiness to distribute and administer vaccine, Biden and his health team have taken a more activist approach to ensure it happens, delivering a consistent message the vaccine is the single best way to restore normalcy in American life.

They have created large vaccinatio­n sites, negotiated expansion of the vaccine production by the two initial suppliers, Pfizer and Moderna, and brokered an important deal by which Merck, unable to produce its own vaccine, will produce additional supplies of Johnson & Johnson’s newly approved single-shot antidote.

As a result, despite many state and local bottleneck­s, the daily vaccinatio­n rate has hit 2 million, meaning the administra­tion will almost certainly surpass its goal of 100 million vaccinatio­ns in its first 100 days. It now promises production of enough vaccine by the end of June for every American who wants it.

Meanwhile, Biden forged unity within the slim Democratic House and Senate majorities to propose and muscle through the massive relief bill designed both to fight the pandemic and ease the economic damage for many Americans at a time unemployme­nt remains 10 million higher than a year ago.

Already, Biden and the Democrats have signaled they hope to use their political momentum to push through an even bigger follow-up measure aimed at spurring long-term economic growth by meeting the country’s underfunde­d infrastruc­ture needs.

They have talked of using a second budget reconcilia­tion package that again could pass the Senate with just Democratic votes. But over the weekend, Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., warned he opposes that approach without a serious effort to attract Republican support.

Of the new administra­tion’s three initial goals, the most difficult has been reopening a majority of K-eighth grade schools by his 100th day.

A principal factor is that state and local government­s have the authority to open schools, not Washington, D.C. And the effort has been complicate­d by resistance from teacher unions demanding assurances reopening would be safe for teachers.

The relief package contains $130 billion to help elementary and secondary schools reopen. In addition, the administra­tion has stepped up public pressure to vaccinate teachers and school administra­tors, urging states and localities to ensure that all get at least one shot by the end of March.

Newly confirmed Education Secretary Miguel Cardona plans a conference of local and national education officials on school reopening and may name an administra­tion point person to monitor school reopening issues.

Nearly half of elementary and secondary schools are fully open with the rest evenly split between remote teaching or a combinatio­n of on-site and remote programs, says The Washington Post, citing Burbio, a firm that tracks school, library, and event data.

Lacking the votes to stop Biden’s legislativ­e proposals, Republican­s called his package too costly and complained it contains provisions not directly aimed at the COVID-19 crisis. That’s true, since the Democrats wisely included both targeted aid and broader anti-poverty provisions like expanding family tax credits and bolstering Obamacare, seeking to take advantage of the current crisis to make long-needed underlying reforms.

New administra­tions have only limited periods to enact their programs and, as former White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel once noted, “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste.”

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