Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Santos must have taken notes from Biden

- Marc Thiessen is syndicated by the Washington Post Writers Group.

New York Republican George Santos is a fabulist who lied to voters about his family, education and achievemen­ts. Incoming House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries (N.Y.) said in a statement that Santos’s many lies make him “woefully unqualifie­d” and “clearly unfit to serve” in Congress. He’s right.

So, what about Joe Biden? When it comes to making up self-serving, politicall­y advantageo­us details about his past, Santos seems to have taken a page from our fabulist in chief. Let’s review the record: Biden has lied about his family history. During the 1988 Democratic presidenti­al primary, it emerged that he had plagiarize­d a speech by British Labour leader Neil Kinnock, adopting Kinnock’s family history as his own.

“Why is it that Joe Biden is the first in his family ever to go to a university?” Biden asked. “Is it because I’m the first Biden in a thousand generation­s to get a college and a graduate degree? … My ancestors, who worked in the coal mines of northeast Pennsylvan­ia and would come up after 12 hours and play football for four hours?”

Not only were many of the words stolen, so were the facts: Biden was not the first in his family to go to college (only the first on his father’s side), and his ancestors had not been coal miners (though a great-grandfathe­r was a mining engineer).

Biden has also made numerous false assertions about his educationa­l achievemen­ts. He claimed in 1987 that he had “graduated with three degrees from college,” had received an award as “the outstandin­g student in the political science department,” finished in the “top half” of his class at law school and received a “full academic scholarshi­p.” None of that was true. He received a single B.A. in history and political science, had only been put up for the award by a professor, graduated 76th in a class of 85 from Syracuse College of Law, and had a partial needbased scholarshi­p. After the Supreme Court reversed Roe v. Wade, he claimed to have written “a number of law review articles” on the right to privacy — which was untrue.

He has also lied about his experience in war zones. In 2021, Biden told State Department employees that he was “shot at” overseas — similar to a debunked claim of being shot at inside Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone made during a Democratic presidenti­al debate in 2007. (He later revised the claim, saying that in fact, “I was near where a shot landed.”) In 2019, he told a detailed story about brushing off warnings of danger, when he was vice president, to pin a Silver Star on a Navy captain in Afghanista­n.

The Post reported that “almost every detail in the story appears to be incorrect.” It was President Barack Obama, not Biden, who gave him the award; it was the Medal of Honor, not the Silver Star; and the ceremony took place at the White House, not in Afghanista­n.

He has lied about his relationsh­ips with foreign leaders. In 2020, he claimed that he had gotten China to join the 2016 Paris climate accord “after meeting with Deng Xiaoping,” who died in 1997. And he has claimed more than 20 times that he had traveled 17,000 miles with Chinese President Xi Jinping — earning Biden a “Bottomless Pinocchio” from The Post.

And, of course, Biden lies constantly about his record as president. He falsely claimed to have passed his student loan forgivenes­s “by a vote or two.” (Congress never voted on it.) He has repeatedly falsely claimed that he has cut the federal debt in half; that “real incomes are up” (they’ve suffered the largest decline in four decades); that his Chips Act will create 1 million constructi­on jobs (the real number is 6,200); that his Inflation Reduction Act will reduce inflation (it will not); and that none of his military commanders advised him to leave a residual force in Afghanista­n (they did).

Biden’s career has been a constant stream of untruths. Yet no Democratic Party leaders have suggested that Biden is “woefully unqualifie­d” or “unfit to serve.” Maybe Santos should switch parties and run for president — then all would be forgiven.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States