Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Biden aiming to restore trust in government

- By Jonathan Lemire

President’s views of Oval Office are taking shape; scope of initiative­s rivals those of some of his predecesso­rs.

As President Joe Biden preaches patience but acts with urgency, his vision of the powers of the Oval Office is quickly taking shape, modeled after Democratic predecesso­rs who dramatical­ly expanded the reach of government to confront generation­al crises.

In a recent meeting with historians and in private conversati­ons with advisers, Biden looked to the examples set by Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson as he aims to use the levers of executive authority to create opportunit­ies and break down barriers.

Unlike Roosevelt and Johnson, who enjoyed formidable Democratic majorities in Congress, Biden has had to operate with a no-margin-for-error edge in fiercely partisan Washington.

Born soon after Roosevelt’s New Deal and having first run for office in the shadow of Johnson’s Great Society, Biden has long believed in government as an instrument for good. Now, with the COVID-19 public health pandemic and the economic carnage it wrought, that philosophy is being put to a fundamenta­l test and Biden’s place in history is in the balance.

He has chosen momentous action over incrementa­l, willing to cast aside visions of a bipartisan Washington in favor of tangible results Biden insists are resonating with Republican voters, if not their elected officials.

“The president was clear about the crisis of democracy and aware of the factors and forces that may try to undermine the American experiment if we are not careful to protect it,” said historian Michael Eric Dyson, who attended the recent session. “There was no question that the president was concerned about how we treat our fellow citizens and is keenly aware that the moral trajectory of the United States has made a difference in both domestic and foreign policy.”

Over his first two months in office, Biden has signed into law a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill and, this past week, proposed an even larger $2.3 trillion infrastruc­ture and tax plan that is the first installmen­t of a two-part legislativ­e package meant to reshape the American economy.

His team’s guiding principle is that the United States must push past the pandemic and the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the Capitol to rebuild the economy in an equitable way that shows the nation can still make good for its citizens as it faces a threat from autocratic states, including China, for global economic supremacy.

“There’s a lot of autocrats in the world who think the reason why they’re going to win is democracie­s can’t reach consensus any longer; autocracie­s do,” Biden said Wednesday when he announced his infrastruc­ture plan in Pittsburgh.

“That’s what competitio­n between America and China and the rest of the world is all about. It’s a basic question: Can democracie­s still deliver for their people? Can they get a majority?” Biden continued. “I believe we can. I believe we must.”

The president has urged action despite a very narrow Democratic majority in the House and a 50-50 split in the Senate that requires Vice President Kamala Harris to break ties. No Republican lawmakers voted for the COVID-19 relief bill, although it was popular among voters of both parties.

No Republican­s appear likely to support the infrastruc­ture plan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States