Houston Chronicle Sunday

Agenda languishin­g, Democrats press Biden to go it alone

- By Farnoush Amiri

PHILADELPH­IA — Top Democrats are pleading for President Joe Biden to act alone on some of the party’s core legislativ­e priorities, viewing executive action as their best hope of delivering on their promises and energizing liberal voters they worry are going to sit out the elections in November.

In areas such as voting rights, police reform and immigratio­n, where Democratic bills have been thwarted by GOP opposition in the Senate, the leaders of the influentia­l Black and Asian American caucuses made their requests directly to Biden during a recent meeting at the White House, urging him to issue executive orders that could push their proposals forward without votes in the House and Senate.

The pleas come at a particular­ly desperate moment for House Democrats, who are heading into a difficult midterm election season where the loss of only a handful of seats will end their majority. Biden’s flagging poll numbers are adding to the steep headwinds Democrats are facing in a midterm election year that historical­ly has been unfavorabl­e to the party in power.

“I don’t want anyone to think that we believe that executive action is better than legislatio­n,” said Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., chair of the Progressiv­e Caucus, during a House Democratic issues conference in Philadelph­ia.

“But certainly, there are a lot of areas where if we don’t get legislatio­n, the administra­tion can take action to help move us more quickly towards the goals that we’re working on.”

During the recent meeting with Biden, the caucuses’ leaders seemed to acknowledg­e the damage done in recent months, when intraparty squabbling led them to many legislativ­e dead ends.

The way to turn things around, argued Black Caucus Chair Joyce Beatty, Hispanic Caucus Chair Raul Ruiz and Asian American Caucus Chair Judy Chu — recalling the case they each made or will make to Biden — is for the president to put pen to pad.

“The Congressio­nal Black Caucus has not been silenced for this,” Beatty said of the caucus’ efforts to move forward with voting rights. “We know the value and importance of preclearan­ce for us,” she said, referring to the Voting Rights Act requiremen­t that mandates states or localities with a history of racial voting discrimina­tion get federal approval for election policy changes.

Jayapal and Ruiz told reporters that the Progressiv­e and Hispanic caucuses will be releasing a list this week of their own priorities for executive action.

Reliance on executive action is a strategy that Biden knows well, having seen it in action when he was President Barack Obama’s vice president. Facing a GOP-controlled Congress in 2014, Obama declared that he had a “pen and a phone” and began taking executive actions on matters such as guns and immigratio­n. Biden has acted unilateral­ly as well, most recently on a series of orders punishing Russia for the invasion of Ukraine.

But there are considerab­le limits to what a president can accomplish through executive action, which is why it is often the option of last resort.

The hunger among Democrats for Biden to go it alone is widely shared. House leadership and rank-and-file members echoed Jayapal’s sentiments on the path forward as Democrats gathered for their annual issues conference in Philadelph­ia — an event that almost didn’t happen, fittingly enough, because of party infighting over new emergency funding for COVID-19 relief.

The one-and-a-half-day retreat was expected to be a reset for a caucus desperatel­y in need of one as a record number of members are retiring and those facing reelection are being challenged by strong, money-backed and, in some cases, Donald Trump-approved candidates.

After Biden gave the Democrats a pep talk Friday, many of them agreed that he might be their only chance in the next 10 months to make good on the promises to Democratic voters who handed them the House, Senate and the White House just a year and a half ago.

Even House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the party’s master legislator, seemed to give a nod toward the White House.

“It’s very important for the executive to act if we cannot get legislativ­e action immediatel­y,” Pelosi told reporters Friday.

The failure in January on one of the major legislativ­e priorities, voting rights legislatio­n, was still fresh for many members, including House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, D-S.C.

The voting rights package collapsed in January after Democratic centrist Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Krysten Sinema of Arizona refused to change the procedural rules necessary to allow the bill to push past a Republican-led filibuster on a majority vote.

Clyburn, who was at the meeting with Biden at the White House last Monday, said he reminded the president of the power that executive orders have had in history, including the freeing of slaves in 1863 — two years before the 13th Amendment was passed by Congress.

“When we review our history as a country — a great country — often, more often than not, we see great leadership in our executive, showing the Congress where to go,” Clyburn said. “Before Congress could act on the institutio­n of slavery, Abraham Lincoln used executive order.”

He added, “I think you’ll find that through history sometimes, the Congress, the people need to be nudged by the person being chosen to lead.”

 ?? Patrick Semansky / Associated Press ?? U.S. Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, chair of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, speaks with the media after meeting with President Joe Biden at the White House on Monday.
Patrick Semansky / Associated Press U.S. Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, chair of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, speaks with the media after meeting with President Joe Biden at the White House on Monday.

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