Albany Times Union (Sunday)

First State of the Union comes amid struggles

Biden to address nation Tuesday confrontin­g crises

- By Chris Megerian

The last time President Joe Biden addressed a joint session of Congress, he said the country was “ready for takeoff ” after a period of plague and strife.

It’s been a more turbulent flight than expected. Biden is scheduled to deliver his first State of the Union speech on Tuesday night at a moment when he has struggled to deliver on many of his original promises and as he is being forced to confront new crises.

The gap between the two major speeches — the first one was last April — is the story of a presidency that has repeatedly needed to recalibrat­e its ambitions.

Although Biden reached a bipartisan deal on an infrastruc­ture plan, many of his other proposals have been jettisoned or left languishin­g with no clear path to becoming reality. He followed through on his pledge to remove U.S. forces from Afghanista­n, but the chaotic withdrawal left the Taliban in control and a looming humanitari­an disaster. The coronaviru­s evolved into more contagious variants that increased the death toll despite widespread availabili­ty of vaccines.

And Russian President Vladimir Putin expanded his invasion of Ukraine, plunging Europe into war and hijacking Biden’s foreign policy agenda.

“These speeches go through many, many drafts,” said Michael Waldman, president of the Brennan Center for Justice and a former chief speechwrit­er for President Bill Clinton. “And I would bet they’re starting some new drafts right now.”

He added: “Two weeks ago the speechwrit­ers probably thought they knew what was in the speech. Vladimir Putin had other ideas.”

Traditiona­lly, State of the Union speeches focus on domestic issues. But Waldman said this one is a chance for Biden to outline the stakes of the crisis in Ukraine, especially as Americans remain wary of becoming involved in foreign conflicts and worry economic ripple effects could drive up gas prices.

“This is a really important opportunit­y for the president to talk about Russia’s appalling attack and to put it in the context of why it matters,” Waldman said.

Biden is preparing his speech during one of the most consequent­ial stretches of his presidency. In addition to the expanding invasion of Ukraine, on Friday he announced Ketanji Brown Jackson as his nominee for the Supreme Court seat being vacated by Justice Stephen Breyer, who is retiring.

Jackson would be the first Black woman to serve on the nation’s highest court if she is confirmed by the Senate. The nomination kicks off a closely watched process in the Senate, where Democrats have a slim majority.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also loosened guidelines for when Americans should wear masks to limit the spread of the coronaviru­s. The agency is setting benchmarks based on hospitaliz­ations, a sign it is shifting to a new phase of the pandemic where the virus is viewed as more manageable.

Michael Beschloss, a presidenti­al historian, said that for Biden, the State of the Union speech is “going to be one of the largest audiences he has, and it happens at the confluence of historic moments.”

“It’s one rare opportunit­y for a president to lift his voice above the noise,” Beschloss said. “He doesn’t have very many of those opportunit­ies.”

Making promises to American voters could be difficult when so many of Biden’s initial proposals have stalled. Some ideas were abandoned, such as free community college.

Others became mired in negotiatio­ns over the president’s legislativ­e agenda, known as “Build Back Better,” when Senate Democrats were unable to reach a consensus on the plan. Limits on the cost of prescripti­on drugs, financial incentives for fighting climate change and free preschool have become stranded.

Biden has also failed to make progress on protecting voting rights. Republican­s continue to pass laws at the state level to restrict ballot access, and former President Donald Trump has refused to abandon his baseless crusade that the last election was fraudulent.

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