The Korea Times

Biden and Democrats

- Deauwand Myers Deauwand Myers (deauwand@hotmail.com) holds a master’s degree in English literature and literary theory, and is an English professor outside of Seoul.

Old dogs can learn new tricks, or maybe for this particular old dog, he already had new tricks. For all the second-guessing of President Biden by both allies and enemies, he has accomplish­ed more transforma­tive legislatio­n in his first term since at least President Johnson, who ushered in the Civil and Voting Rights Acts, Medicaid, Medicare, and a bevy of other anti-poverty measures.

Had President Johnson’s massive ego, indeed his Greek tragedy-like hubris, propelled him to keep America mired in the bloody, unwinnable crucible of the Vietnam War, sapping resources that could have otherwise been used to aid in his ambitious War on Poverty agenda, the gross wealth and income gaps glaringly apparent in today’s American society may not exist as they do.

Here are a few of Biden’s massive achievemen­ts, in no particular order: Biden helped pass a $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastruc­ture package, investing in America’s crumbling national network of bridges and roads, airports, the internet, rail, ports and utility infrastruc­ture.

The Biden-Harris Administra­tion oversaw the program giving more than 500 million life-saving COVID vaccinatio­ns to Americans through the American Rescue Plan.

Biden passed the first bit of gun reform in over 30 years and passed a $369 billion investment in climate change, the only one of its kind since Nixon’s creation of the EPA (Environmen­tal Protection Agency).

Particular­ly for the poor, working, and middle classes, the Biden-Harris Administra­tion has done a great deal to alleviate the pains and stresses of COVID-19 and the havoc it brought to the American and global economy.

The Administra­tion forgave $10,000 to $20,000 — in the form of college debt relief — for Americans of modest means (this has been blocked by a Trump-appointed federal judge and is being appealed by the Justice Department), cut child poverty in half through the American

Rescue Plan, capped prescripti­on drug prices at $2,000 per year for seniors on Medicare, and even more amazingly, capped insulin to $35 a month since drug companies in recent years have increased the price of this life-saving medication to nearly ten times $35 a month.

Speaking of medical coverage, Biden bestowed to Medicare the power to negotiate prescripti­on drug prices through the Inflation Reduction Act, a power that every other advanced democracy has given its public healthcare programs for generation­s. Better late than ever.

The Biden administra­tion distribute­d $1,400 to many struggling Americans, while giving a reprieve to student debt borrowers and renters during the worst of COVID, meanwhile maintainin­g low unemployme­nt rates, and under Biden, America created more jobs than ever before in American history.

The Administra­tion imposed a 15 percent minimum corporate tax, long overdue. Often overlooked, yet should be much appreciate­d, the Biden-Harris administra­tion has given more funding to HBCUs (historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es) than any other administra­tion in American history, including former President Obama. Vice President Harris had a lot to do with this funding, as she graduated from an HBCU (the famed Howard University). How much funding? Nearly $6 billion in total funding was allocated in 2021.

Which leads us to ask, how did Biden, with approval ratings in the low 40th percentile, historical­ly high inflation, an uptick in crime, and insufficie­nt wage increases manage to not only fend off a red wave, but actually increase Democratic dominance in state legislatur­es and gubernator­ial mansions, maintain a U.S. Senate majority, and perhaps even maintain the House? (At the time of the writing of this article, nearly a dozen House races are still undecided).

The historical magnitude of this accomplish­ment by the Democrats, with Biden and Harris overseeing it, cannot be overstated. Only three times has the party of the President maintained or gained seats during midterms. And if Senator Warnock wins his reelection bid, it will be the first time in American history that the President’s party lost no Senate seats. By any stretch, all this is breathtaki­ng.

Trump and his election deniers were too extreme for moderate Republican­s and independen­ts. Young people and racial minorities broke heavily for Democrats, as did young college-educated women, galvanized at the draconian anti-abortion laws passed and proposed by the GOP since the overturnin­g of Roe vs. Wade; ostensibly, the conservati­ve Supreme Court argued that once a woman is impregnate­d, her body becomes property of the state, if said state chooses to mandate it as such.

People are simply tired of the xenophobic, Christo-fascist, anti-Semitic, white supremacis­t and overtly anti-democratic shenanigan­s of Republican­s and MAGA cultists, ones who wink and nod at political violence, or who even make fun of political violence, as in the hammer attack on Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband, an assault demonstrab­ly motivated by far-right wing ideology.

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