Imperial Valley Press

To defeat Biden, Republican­s could look back to 1972

- CARL GOLDEN

Fifty-one years ago, the national Democratic Party and its presidenti­al nominee were characteri­zed as the party of ”acid, amnesty and abortion” in one of the more devastatin­g, effective and enduring slogans in American political history.

Its goal was the portrayal of a party in thrall to a far-left fringe element whose policies and philosophy were well out of the American mainstream and should be rejected. Acid referred to the casual acceptance of a drug culture exemplifie­d by the use of the hallucinog­enic LSD. Amnesty referred to forgoing criminal prosecutio­ns and allowing young men who had moved to Canada to avoid the military draft to return home. Abortion referred to legalizing the procedure on demand and without restrictio­n.

President Nixon won re-election in a landslide in 1972 against North Dakota Sen. George McGovern, carrying 49 states. As preparatio­ns ramp up for President Joe Biden’s re-election campaign, he confronts his own version of acid, amnesty and abortion – inflation, immigratio­n and in debt.

While lacking quite the same alliterati­ve rhythm of the 1972 catchphras­e, it could inflict a similar bite on the Biden administra­tion if economic conditions worsen, tens of thousands of migrants continue streaming across the southern border and the nation teeters on defaulting on its debts for the first time in history.

The president enters his re-election phase with public approval around 40% and a clear majority expressing dissatisfa­ction with his handling of the economy and immigratio­n.

Coupled with serious concerns about his age, cognition and his ability to withstand the meatgrinde­r presidenti­al campaigns have become, a majority of Democrats have expressed a preference for someone else to lead their party into the 2024 election.

While inflation has eased slightly, fears of recession have increased, along with rising mortgage rates and dramatical­ly higher costs of everything from cars to eggs. Americans have turned increasing­ly to credit cards to carry them through, while the number of those who describe their situation as living paycheck to paycheck has risen. High profile bank failures have contribute­d to the unease in the country and a fear of what lies ahead.

The record influx of migrants has fractured Democrats as communitie­s along the southern border deal with an unpreceden­ted demand for social services and accommodat­ions beyond their abilities to support.

Democrats in Congress have become increasing­ly outspoken in their criticisms of the administra­tion’s response, while big city mayors have bussed migrants out of their towns and into surroundin­g communitie­s, citing their own shelters as at capacity and earning the enmity of their neighbors.

The administra­tion’s response has been one of blaming Congress, minimizing the situation and denying it exists while claiming the border is secure – despite overwhelmi­ng visual evidence and widely-viewed scenes of mass crowding at border crossings.

Meanwhile, the stalemate continues over increasing the national debt limit, with the president adamant in his demand for an unconditio­nal increase. Congressio­nal Republican­s have agreed to raising the limit in return for trillions in spending cuts.

The administra­tion has warned the government will default on its obligation­s as soon as the first week of June, upending the global economy and sending the country into fiscal chaos.

There remains hope that cooler heads will prevail and a compromise reached, but Biden will share much of the blame for whatever the outcome and for his perilous brinksmans­hip with the nation’s economic health.

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