The Ukiah Daily Journal

Joe Biden is already writing his legacy

- David M. Shribman is the former executive editor of the Pittsburgh Postgazett­e. Follow him on Twitter at Shribmanpg.

An educated guess: Joe Biden is not doing what every first-year president starts doing around Day 200 of his presidency: running for reelection. After the two weeks he has just endured, he is doing the thing presidents don’t do until their last months: running for history.

Right now, he is losing that campaign. Biden, a couple of months short of age 79, can’t have decided whether he will seek a second term in 2024; he cannot even remotely imagine the state of his health or the health of the country from this vantage point. But the president has been around politics and presidents — he served with eight of them (Richard M. Nixon to Barack Obama) and watched one of them with horror (Donald Trump) before assuming the position himself — enough to know that it is his place in history that is in jeopardy now.

Coursing through his mind almost certainly are these questions: Did his “I’m squarely behind” statement about his Afghanista­n policy position him as a courageous figure of strong character and steely intelligen­ce? Or did it cast him as a headstrong leader confident of his own misconcept­ions, even when they conflicted with the consensus of civilian and military experts? Has he handled the virus, and the vaccine wars, with deftness? Or is he dividing the country with his crusade for the vaccine and his defiance of the notion that state governors have a vital role in a political system that makes federalism one of its core values? Stated simply: Will he be remembered as a visionary and unifier? Or a bungler and divider? To make it simpler: Is he a 21st-century version of Franklin Delano Roosevelt? Or Woodrow Wilson?

The answer comes in two parts. He’s neither FDR or Wilson, but purely distilled Joe Biden, for better or worse. And as for the visionary/unifier dichotomy, the easy answer is that time will tell; sometimes the easy answer is also the smart answer. And here the example of John F. Kennedy is illuminati­ng. Kennedy faced the brutal Cold War challenge of the constructi­on of the Berlin Wall on his 205th day in office. Biden began facing the calamity of the Taliban takeover on his 207th day in office. In some ways, the 35th president had a bigger challenge than the 46th.

Kennedy already had suffered the humiliatio­n of the botched Bay of Pigs invasion before his poor performanc­e facing Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev at the Vienna summit, and then the alarming Soviet announceme­nt that it would resume atmospheri­c testing of nuclear weapons.

“Kennedy was able to make a dramatic comeback,” said Matt Dallek, a political historian with George Washington University’s Graduate School of Political Management. “The Bay of Pigs was a disaster for the Cubans and a huge setback for Kennedy. Afghanista­n is the same for Biden. But it may be outweighed dramatical­ly in voters’ minds by the pandemic and the economy. They are the two great intertwine­d issues of the moment, and they may end up being more significan­t for his presidency than Afghanista­n.”

It took Kennedy’s forthright “I am the responsibl­e officer of this government” statement after the 1961 Bay of Pigs fiasco to transform him from a man who acted as if he were auditionin­g for the presidency into one who was occupying the office. Many of his revered predecesso­rs — Wilson on the League of Nations, Roosevelt on Japanese internment and his refusal to admit desperate Jews

fleeing near-certain death atthehands­ofthenazis — never did. And for a man who ran on personal compassion — it has been Biden’s signature trait since joining the Senate in an era of flare trousers, the racehorse Secretaria­t and “Killing Me Softly With His Song” — the president has displayed a remarkable, almost shocking lack of emotional intelligen­ce, making him seem more like the coldly analytical engineer Jimmy Carter than the mushy man from Delaware.

Like Carter, who had a tin ear for his putative Democratic allies on Capitol Hill, Biden has stirred the ire — the incredulit­y — of legislativ­e leaders of his own party. When he said earlier this month that there would be a time for second-guessing, he may not have realized he was courting the sort of intraparty inquisitio­n not seen in Congress since Sen. J. William Fulbright of Arkansas undertook his Vietnam hearings beginning in 1966, when Lyndon B. Johnson’s presidenti­al approval ratings were at about the same level as Biden’s today. The Democrats are worried.

With slender majorities and a president showing his age, they have ample reason for their disquiet. Long before the Afghanista­n crisis, the Democrats’ options for the next several years have been cloudy, in part because their continued control of Capitol Hill is in serious danger and in part because of uncertaint­y whether Biden, already the oldest president, will run again.

The talk among many leading Democrats is that Vice President Kamala Harris, burdened with the toughest portfolio in Washington — safeguardi­ng voting rights, handling the immigratio­n crisis — will be difficult to nominate and almost impossible to elect if Biden chooses to retire in 2025, and that the party is “grooming” Pete Buttigieg as the substitute nominee.

This talk — which I have heard several times from people with no connection to each other but with conviction about the “plan” — ignores the notion that it is risible to think “the Democrats” are conspiring to do anything. Besides, the parties — especially the Democrats — have employed the political equivalent of sprayaeros­ol air fresheners to the smoke-filled rooms of yore.

In any case, it is secretarie­s of state, not secretarie­s of transporta­tion — a position that admittedly has existed only since 1967, with only 19 people holding the office — who have had the principal Cabinet claim to the presidency.

Six of the nation’s secretarie­s of state, beginning with Thomas Jefferson (in office 1790-1793), have become president, though none more recent than James Buchanan (1845-1849). And no one wants to be on a list that includes him, though Hillary Rodham Clinton tried.

William Howard Taft wassecreta­ryofwarand Herbert Hoover was secretary of commerce before winning the White House. But in a way, all this talk is inconseque­ntial, whereas Biden’s passage in the next several months has real consequenc­e — not only for him, but also for the nation.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States