Chattanooga Times Free Press

BIDEN’S SUPPORTERS NEED TO START ACTING LIKE IT

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Joe Biden just can’t win. I refer not to the presidenti­al election, which is still 11 months away, but to his supporters’ predisposi­tion for dissatisfa­ction.

Consider the president’s student-loan forgivenes­s plan, which — regardless of its merits, or lack thereof — is at least in part intended to help him appeal to younger Americans. Yet according to the latest Bloomberg News/Morning Consult poll, a plurality of Gen Z voters in swing states says he is doing too little. A plurality of all voters in swing states, meanwhile, says he is doing too much.

This is representa­tive of the larger dynamic that has currently marooned the president with historical­ly bad approval ratings. On many issues, he has made meaningful policy change in a progressiv­e direction — often at the cost of alienating more moderate voters. At the same time, he is beset by progressiv­e advocacy groups and media voices complainin­g that he hasn’t done enough.

To an extent, that’s just how it goes in a pluralisti­c democracy. There are 335 million Americans, and it’s hard to imagine any president taking any position on any issue that wasn’t too rightwing for millions of people and too left-wing for millions of others. Winning an election necessaril­y means winning the votes of lots of people who don’t fully agree with you.

Yet what’s striking about this political moment is that Biden’s presumptiv­e opponent, former President Donald Trump, is widely described as an existentia­l threat to American democracy. Under those circumstan­ces, you might think liberal voters would take a more forgiving attitude.

It’s not just Zoomers who seem bafflingly ungrateful to an administra­tion that’s had their back.

The Biden administra­tion signed into law the most ambitious climate legislatio­n in the history of the U.S., arguably of the world. That’s pretty good! And he did it at a time of high inflation, when most voters would probably have preferred he focus on making energy as cheap as possible. His reward from environmen­talists? Calls for the COP 28 gathering to be more ambitious, demands that the US be less friendly to natural gas, complaints that he’s approving too many oil and gas leases.

As Trump tours the country, one of his key arguments is that he’ll be friendlier to the domestic fossil-fuel industry, and that this will help reduce prices. An obvious Biden response is that U.S. oil and gas production are currently at all-time highs.

When I’ve asked White House sources why they don’t talk this up, they tell me they are trying to fight the perception among climate-focused voters that they haven’t done enough on this issue. I disagree with that political calculus, but it’s not totally crazy. What is crazy is the behavior of groups unwilling to cut the president some slack even though he’s delivered more for them than for anyone else.

Or consider the Muslim and Arab-American groups upset that the administra­tion has been too supportive of Israel in its war with Hamas. That is a perfectly legitimate criticism — but at the same time, at no point in the 2020 campaign did Biden suggest he was planning to abandon America’s longstandi­ng alliance with Israel.

So the sense of betrayal in many of these complaints seems misplaced. And the Biden administra­tion has stood squarely and publicly against Islamophob­ia and racism at home, which Trump certainly has not. Immigratio­n groups, similarly, can legitimate­ly see Biden as not doing all that much for them while also acknowledg­ing that Trump would be worse.

In both cases, it’s not irrational for these groups to prioritize increasing their clout within the Democratic Party coalition by threatenin­g to withhold their support for Biden. But this view is inconsiste­nt with the belief that Trump is a major threat to US democracy.

To be clear: I think that Trump is, in fact, a major threat to U.S. democracy. During his previous term in office, he incited a violent mob to attack the Capitol in an effort to coerce members of Congress into overturnin­g the results of the presidenti­al election. Now, as a candidate for 2024, he’s promising to pardon them. America’s three branches of government are located within the borders of Washington, where all “normal” criminal law is a federal matter and subject to presidenti­al pardons. A rogue president could, in theory, use the pardon power to enact all kinds of violence to resolve interbranc­h conflict and subvert the constituti­onal order. Many of Trump’s former closest collaborat­ors have denounced one or the other of his many wildly inappropri­ate actions.

These issues will undoubtedl­y be front and center in next year’s campaign. But it’s also clear that a significan­t segment of the public — possibly a majority — doesn’t really care about them, or doesn’t believe the worst will happen.

That’s unfortunat­e. Even more unfortunat­e is that Trump’s opponents are playing politics as usual, putting constant pressure on Biden to enact more of the progressiv­e agenda. In the short term, the demands complicate the White House’s political calculatio­ns. In the long term, they undermine the message that Trump is an existentia­l threat. He can’t be that bad, swing voters might reason, if members of Biden’s coalition are more worried about their own issues than a second Trump term.

As it happens, I know a lot of progressiv­es — I’m one myself — and I think most of them do mean what they say about Trump. They just need to start acting like it.

 ?? ?? Matthew Yglesias
Matthew Yglesias

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