Baltimore Sun

Biden’s a great president. He should not run again.

- By Michelle Goldberg Michelle Goldberg (Twitter: @michellein­bklyn) is a columnist for The New York Times, where this piece originally appeared.

President Joe Biden has a lot to boast about. He’s presided over record job creation and the lowest unemployme­nt rate in over 50 years. Whereas Donald Trump’s infrastruc­ture weeks were a running joke, Biden signed the largest infusion of federal funds into infrastruc­ture in more than a decade. His Inflation Reduction Act made a historic investment in clean energy; the head of the Internatio­nal Energy Agency called it the most important climate action since the 2015 Paris climate accord. (And incidental­ly, inflation is finally coming down.) Biden rallied Western nations to support Ukraine against Russia’s imperialis­t invasion and ended America’s long, fruitless war in Afghanista­n, albeit with an ugly and ignominiou­s exit. His administra­tion capped insulin prices for seniors, codified federal recognitio­n of same-sex marriage and shot down that spy balloon everyone was freaking out about. He’s on track to appoint more federal judges than Trump.

Biden can also take a victory lap for Trump’s declining influence. Lots of pundits rolled their eyes when Biden sought to make the midterms a referendum on the MAGA movement’s threat to American democracy. Voters didn’t. Even more than Trump’s defeat in 2020, the losses by Trumpist candidates, including Arizona’s Kari Lake and Georgia’s Herschel Walker, in 2022 convinced many Republican­s they need to move on from their onetime hero.

In other words, Biden has been a great president. He’s made good on an uncommon number of campaign promises. But he should not run again.

“Democrats say he’s done a good job but he’s too old,” said Sarah Longwell, an anti-Trump Republican strategist who conducts regular voter focus groups.

“He’ll be closer to 90 than 80 by the end of his second term.” Perhaps reflecting this dynamic, a Washington Post/ABC News poll showed that while 78% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independen­ts approved of the job Biden has done as president, 58% of them wanted a different candidate next year.

The arguments for sticking with Biden are not trivial. In addition to his successful record, he has the benefit of incumbency. Primaries are expensive, exhausting, bruising affairs. If only Biden were just a few years younger, it would not be worth the Democratic Party enduring one.

But it’s hard to ignore the toll of Biden’s years, no matter how hard elected Democrats try. In some ways, the more sympatheti­c you are to Biden, the harder it can be to watch him stumble over his words, a tendency that can’t be entirely explained by his stutter. Longwell said Democrats in her focus group talked about holding their breath every time he speaks. And while Biden was able to campaign virtually in 2020, in 2024 we will almost certainly be back to a grueling real-world campaign schedule, which he would have to power through while running the country. It’s a herculean task for a 60-year-old and a near impossible one for an octogenari­an.

If Biden faces Trump, who will be 78 next year, that might not matter. It is worrying that in The Washington Post/ ABC poll, Trump was slightly ahead in a hypothetic­al rematch, but Trump’s negatives tend to go up the more he’s in the public eye, and a presidenti­al campaign would give him plenty of chances to remind Americans of his unique malignancy. But with many polls showing Trump’s popularity slipping and with the deep-pocketed Koch network lining up against him, chances are good that Biden’s competitor will be someone much younger, like Ron DeSantis, who will be 46 in 2024. Barring some radical shift in the national mood, the candidates will be vying for leadership of a deeply dissatisfi­ed country desperate for change. For Democrats, the visual contrast alone could be devastatin­g.

Plenty of Democrats worry that if Biden steps aside, the nomination will go to Vice President Kamala Harris, who polls poorly. But Democrats have a deep bench, including politician­s who’ve won in important purple states, such as Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and

Sen. Raphael Warnock of Georgia. Biden said he wanted to be a bridge to the next generation of Democrats. There are quite a few promising people qualified to cross it. A primary will give Democrats the chance to find the one who is suited for this moment.

The last time I wrote about Biden being too old, he was at a low moment in his presidency, with inflation soaring and his Build Back Better agenda stalled. Had he decided not to run for reelection then, it probably would have looked like an admission of failure. Now his political legacy seems more secure. He’ll cement it if he has the uncommon wisdom to know when the time has come for a valedictio­n, not a relaunch.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address on Feb. 7.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address on Feb. 7.

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