The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

For Biden, addressing virus is key to everything else

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Sometimes the most important thing a president can do is tell the country he’s working on the problem its citizens are most worried about. And one of the worst setbacks is losing his advantage on the issue that had been his hole card.

For both reasons, President Joe Biden’s speech Tuesday on the fight against the coronaviru­s’s omicron variant was one of the most useful he has given for some time. He explained how he is trying to get on top of the new wave of infections. He reassured Americans that we could get through this without reimposing lockdowns. And he was unusually direct about the political forces making the pandemic worse.

For months, Washington news has been dominated by the frustratin­g legislativ­e struggle for the president’s Build Back Better program. The effort hit a wall on Sunday with the savage — though not necessaril­y fatal — blow delivered by Sen. Joe Manchin. With Tuesday’s address, Biden reminded the country he had not forgotten his most urgent task.

There are many theories to explain Biden’s declining approval ratings, but he has taken his biggest hits on his stewardshi­p of the war on COVID-19, once the foundation of his popularity. No single speech, nor a dozen of them, can offset the fact that the virus’s persistenc­e and resurgence has left Americans, as Biden put it, “tired, worried and frustrated.”

But an address full of new actions taken to address omicron’s challenge — expanding coronaviru­s testing sites, distributi­ng a half-billion free at-home tests, deploying more federal health resources to shore up strained hospitals, new “pop-up” vaccinatio­n facilities — tells the tired and the frustrated that, at the least, Biden is on the case.

And if the move toward free test kits comes too late for the holiday travel season and contradict­s the administra­tion’s earlier resistance to such an expansive approach, it showed a willingnes­s to adjust policy to match inconvenie­nt facts.

Biden directly confronted the politics that have made containing the pandemic so difficult. He condemned media personalit­ies who are “making money by peddling lies and allowing misinforma­tion that can kill their own customers and their own supporters.”

At the same time, he sought to drive a wedge through the anti-vaccine movement by praising former President Donald Trump. Noting that Trump had “gotten his booster shot,” Biden quipped: “It may be one of the few things he and I agree on.”

He went further, declaring that, “thanks to the prior administra­tion and our scientific community, America is one of the first countries to get the vaccine.” Such olive branches might make a difference only at the margins of opinion, but that’s where battles are often won.

The administra­tion is plainly frustrated that its successes — soaring economic growth, record job creation and its infrastruc­ture bill — are receiving scant attention. The travails of Build Back Better have not helped.

But it’s becoming ever clearer that a preconditi­on for Biden’s success will be a restoratio­n of his image as a low-drama chief executive who can conquer the pandemic and allow Americans to enjoy life free of fears driven by a mysterious disease.

As he reaches out to whatever minority of Trump supporters are willing to listen, Biden might discover that taking an even more aggressive stance on the virus, including booster mandates and vaccine passports, is the best politics.

Biden defended vaccine mandates in uncompromi­sing terms. “My administra­tion has put them in place not to control your life,” he said, “but to save your life and the lives of others.”

His best path is to keep going straight at those purveyors of lies, and to get the job done.

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