Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Biden making Western swing 3-state visit aims to promote climate policy, veterans’ aid

- CHRIS MEGERIAN

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden set out Monday on a Western swing aimed at showcasing his work on conservati­on, clean energy and veterans’ benefits as he seeks to draw an implicit contrast between his administra­tion’s accomplish­ments and former President Donald Trump’s legal troubles.

Biden’s first stop will be the Grand Canyon area, where today he will announce a new national monument to preserve about 1,562 square miles around Grand Canyon National Park and limit uranium mining, White House officials said.

Climate adviser Ali Zaidi told reporters accompanyi­ng Biden aboard Air Force One on Monday that the president will designate his fifth national monument during the stop in northern Arizona. He said a dozen tribes had “stepped up” and asked for the monument.

After Arizona, Biden will travel to New Mexico and Utah.

The Democratic president will be in Albuquerqu­e on Wednesday and will talk about how fighting climate change has created new jobs, and he’ll visit Salt Lake City on Thursday to mark the first anniversar­y of the PACT Act, which provides new benefits to veterans who were exposed to toxic substances. He’ll also hold a reelection fundraiser in each city.

Biden will use the threenight trip to “continue to highlight the progress he’s making across his agenda,” particular­ly when it comes to climate change, said Natalie Quillian, the White House deputy chief of staff.

“You can expect to us to highlight more groundbrea­kings of projects, more ribbon cuttings and opportunit­ies to show the American people how these investment­s and jobs are reaching their communitie­s and their neighborho­ods,” she said.

The White House has been pushing to demonstrat­e the impact of Biden’s policies, hoping to harness lower inflation numbers and strong employment figures to alleviate the president’s sagging poll numbers.

Biden will be fresh from more than a week of vacation in Delaware, where he stayed at family homes in Rehoboth Beach and Wilmington. On the day that Trump faced a new indictment for attempting to overturn his 2020 election loss, Biden went to a fish restaurant with first lady Jill Biden, attended a screening of the movie “Oppenheime­r” and took a moonlit walk across the beach.

He hasn’t commented at all about the charges against his predecesso­r, maintainin­g the same strategic silence he did regarding the previous two indictment­s.

The criminal charges appear to have done little to dampen Republican voters’ enthusiasm for Trump, and he’s still the leading candidate for his party’s 2024 nomination for president. The situation has also provided a challenge and an opportunit­y for Biden.

The legal drama has drawn attention away from the White House, making it harder for Biden to generate public attention for his accomplish­ments. But it’s also created a suitable backdrop for Biden’s promise to break with years of Trump-fueled chaos and focus on governing.

Democratic pollster Anna Greenberg said Trump’s legal trouble “sucks the oxygen out of everything else” and limits the chances for Republican­s to discuss other issues, such as the economy.

“People like to say nothing matters anymore,” she said. “But the conversati­on that you’re not having actually does matter.”

Biden’s trip will traverse a varied political landscape.

Arizona is a key battlegrou­nd state that Biden won narrowly. New Mexico is considered safe for Democrats. Utah is a Republican stronghold whose governor, Spencer Cox, has stressed finding common ground across party lines.

It’s also a critical region for conversati­ons about climate change. Phoenix saw 31 days in a row of temperatur­es at least 110 degrees Fahrenheit.

Biden’s senior adviser on clean energy, John Podesta, said the president would talk about “the investment­s that we need to ensure that we are building a resilient society going forward in the face of what is becoming a challengin­g situation.”

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