USA TODAY International Edition

Biden surprises in first 100 days

No one since FDR has pushed such sweeping change

- Susan Page

WASHINGTON – The most familiar incoming president in modern times has turned out to be the most surprising.

No new commander in chief in American history was sworn into office with a longer Washington resume than Joseph Robinette Biden Jr., who had spent 36 years as a Delaware senator and eight as vice president.

But as he hits the 100- day mark in the Oval Office Thursday, Biden has proved to be bolder in policy, more partisan in politics and more discipline­d in pronouncem­ents than the chatty centrist just about every pol in town thought they knew.

He has not been a sort of Obama 2.0, defined by the charismati­c president he served. Nor has his disruptive predecesso­r cast the dominant shadow some expected, though Donald Trump has hurled criticism via press releases from his Mar- a- Lago retreat.

Instead, the previous White House resident whose name has most often

been invoked in discussing the 46th president is the 32nd: Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

Not since FDR was inaugurate­d nearly nine decades ago amid the Great Depression has a president proposed more significant transforma­tions in the U. S. economy and the role of government.

Biden was already establishe­d as a progressiv­e Democrat, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told USA TODAY. Still, his proposals have gone further than many expected. “If there’s any surprise that anybody would have it is that he has been as forward- thinking” as he has been, she said, “that he would have the courage to have such an agenda.”

In an interview, she called him “transforma­tive and visionary and experience­d.”

The most difficult tests of Biden’s ambitions are still ahead, and he has made missteps, particular­ly in handling immigratio­n. While the $ 1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan has been enacted, Congress is now considerin­g the even bigger $ 2.3 trillion American Jobs Plan, to be followed by an American Families Plan expected to clock in at about $ 1.5 trillion – historic levels of spending.

And Biden last week set the breathtaki­ng goal of slashing carbon emissions in the United States in half by the end of the decade, an effort to address climate change that would require fundamenta­l changes in everything from how we heat our homes to how we power our cars.

He will have a chance to make his case to Americans on Wednesday with his first address to Congress, likely to draw his biggest audience since the inaugural address.

“Presidents are often – almost always – surprising, to some degree,” said Susan Stokes, director of the University of Chicago’s Center on Democracy. “Especially in the U. S., where our political parties are relatively weak and decentrali­zed, so our leaders are less products of party organizati­ons and more selfmade politician­s.”

But she added, “Biden has been more surprising than most.”

How? Here are three ways.

1. The risk of going ‘ too small’

The coronaviru­s catastroph­e that has killed more than 570,000 Americans and pushed millions into economic crises set Biden’s first priority and opened the door to his biggest proposals.

Polls show broad support for the COVID- 19 relief package Biden signed last month, including cash payments of $ 1,400 to most Americans. In this bill and the legislatio­n now being drafted, he wants to boost growth, reverse economic inequality and bolster the federal safety net, especially for children.

“The way I see it, the biggest risk is not going too big,” he has said. “It’s if we go too small.”

That’s a shift from the two most recent Democratic presidents, Barack Obama and Bill Clinton. Their economic proposals, even during the Great Recession in 2009, were constraine­d by fears of alarming the political center and fueling the deficit.

Some of those concerns persist. Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, a Democrat, warns that Biden’s plan is so big it could overheat the economy and trigger inflation. Republican­s blast it as dangerous government overreach. “A patchwork of left- wing social engineerin­g programs,” Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said on the Senate floor last week.

The programs to help people are all but guaranteed to be more popular than the ideas for how to pay for them – by increases in tax rates for corporatio­ns and for families making more than $ 400,000 a year.

That said, the ambition of his proposals has won him kudos from the left, even from past critics.

“One thing that I will say is that I do think that the Biden administra­tion and President Biden have exceeded expectatio­ns that progressiv­es had,” New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio- Cortez said at a virtual town hall last week. During the 2020 campaign, the leader of the progressiv­e “Squad” had expressed exasperati­on that she and Biden were even members of the same party.

“I’ll be frank: I think a lot of us expected a lot more conservati­ve administra­tion,” she said.

2. A ‘ bait and switch’?

Biden talked the talk of bipartisan­ship when he was a candidate. But critics say he isn’t walking the walk as president.

While he has met with some Republican legislator­s to discuss trying to reach common ground, Biden has displayed little patience in waiting for it. When the American Relief Plan was brought up for a vote last month, not a single Republican supported it. Democrats avoided a filibuster in the Senate only by deploying a legislativ­e maneuver known as reconcilia­tion.

Even as he relies on party- line votes, Biden’s is walking a tightrope, given the slim Democratic margins in Congress. The Senate is split 50- 50, with Democrats in control only because of the tiebreakin­g vote of Vice President Kamala Harris. Democrats hold a five- seat edge in the House, the narrowest majority in modern times.

In contrast, Obama took office with big congressio­nal majorities. But his focus on getting bipartisan support meant he signed a stimulus package that critics say was too small to work. He delayed the Affordable Care Act for months in a fruitless effort to win even a single Republican vote.

That is a cautionary tale Biden seems to have taken to heart.

Republican­s are hammering him for hypocrisy. “If I look at the 100 days, it’s more of a bait and switch,” House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy of California said this week on “Fox News Sunday.” “The bait was he was going to govern as bipartisan, but the switch is he’s governed as a socialist.”

3. The power of silence

The biggest change from the last president to this one may be audible.

For four years, Trump’s bombastic declaratio­ns and especially his provocativ­e tweets dominated the news cycle. Biden seems to avoid being heard.

He waited longer than any other modern president to hold his first news conference. He has done only a handful of interviews with reporters. Even his first speech to Congress is taking place about two months later than previous presidents.

Silence has not exactly been Biden’s brand. He was known for his ease with reporters and a tendency for gaffes. But not as president.

“He’s been so discipline­d!” Stokes said. “Whether you liked him or disliked him, discipline, especially in his speeches, was not a word you would apply to Joe Biden.” She attributes that to the sense of high stakes for success after four years of Trump. “There’s no room for error or for Biden to undermine his image with gaffes, misstateme­nts and the like.”

While the new president has been relatively sure- footed, Biden has made missteps, especially on immigratio­n. His administra­tion seemed unprepared for the surge in undocument­ed migrants at the southern border, a developmen­t that experts say was predictabl­e. That is an issue on which Biden gets his lowest grades from voters.

The images of unaccompan­ied children crowded in Border Patrol lockups have brought criticism from the left ( for not doing more to care for them) and the right ( for failing to do more to control the border). The White House announced a decision to leave refugee admissions capped at Trump levels only to reverse it within hours after an public outcry.

At the moment, Biden has a job approval rating that the website FiveThirty­Eight. com averages at 54.3% approve, 40.9% disapprove – relatively healthy considerin­g the nation’s polarizati­on. But his long experience has surely taught him this: He doesn’t have much time to deliver results.

His address to Congress will be a crucial moment.

“President Biden must fully take advantage of such a rare platform when tens of millions of Americans will tune in to his speech,” said Aaron Kall of the University of Michigan, editor and coauthor of “Mr. Speaker, The President of the United States: Addresses to a Joint Session of Congress.”

Biden needs to use the opportunit­y, Kall said, to “deftly pivot to a compelling vision of the next phase of his presidency, which could also be the most consequent­ial.”

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 ?? PROVIDED BY THE WHITE HOUSE ?? President Joe Biden’s first address to Congress is Wednesday night.
PROVIDED BY THE WHITE HOUSE President Joe Biden’s first address to Congress is Wednesday night.

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