Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Biden campaign can’t get off the ground

- By Carl Golden Cagle Cartoons Newspaper Syndicate

THE Biden campaign is flounderin­g — directionl­ess, unable to formulate a coherent second term vision and battered by a series of national polls that place his public standing at historic low levels for an incumbent president seeking re-election.

Bidenomics, the president’s economic policy once heavily touted as the centerpiec­e of his administra­tion, was a monumental flop and has since been abandoned, replaced by a strategy of an all-out attack on former President Donald Trump.

Biden’s campaign rally and fundraiser — masqueradi­ng as his State of the Union speech — brought greater clarity to his new approach, with repeated references to “my predecesso­r” as the greatest threat to the Republic since the Civil War.

Granted, Trump has given Biden a treasure trove of wild apocalypti­c and often unhinged rhetorical rants to work with, but is it enough?

Biden’s address was pitched directly toward relieving the anxiety of his party’s base, a plea to put aside their doubts and misgivings and cease fretting about his physical and mental strengths. Polling, however, paints a far grimmer portrait — 39 percent overall approval and rankings below 30 percent approval for his handling of immigratio­n and the economy, while nearly 70 percent of Americans believe the nation is heading in the wrong direction.

More telling is the finding that a stunning 80 percent believe he is too old and his cognitive strength too diminished to effectivel­y serve a second term.

He has trailed Trump in matchup polling since last September — albeit often within the margin of error — but his ongoing failure to overtake or surpass the former president is a clear indication of a seriously weakened incumbent.

Biden also faces a restive and alienated progressiv­e wing of his party, angry over his unqualifie­d support for Israel in its war with Hamas and for his administra­tion inching closer to Trump-era restrictio­ns on immigratio­n at the southern border.

As opposition to his immigratio­n policy grew in intensity until it became the overriding issue on the public’s mind, the administra­tion was thrown on the defensive and has failed to regain the initiative.

It careened from denial, stubborn refusal to describe it as a crisis while insisting against all evidence that “the border is secure.” The administra­tion position became untenable as Democratic mayors in cities such as New York, Chicago, Denver and Los Angeles pleaded for federal assistance to offset the enormous drain on their budgets to cope with the influx of tens of thousands of migrants and the economic, social and public safety crises it caused.

Either fearful of offending immigratio­n advocacy groups or simply at a loss for how to deal with it, the administra­tion did nothing and handed Republican­s and Trump a potent campaign issue. The GOP accuses Biden of disastrous­ly repealing the former president’s policies and opening the door to more than

7 million immigrants.

Three years into his first term and facing re-election in a bitterly polarized nation, Biden’s tentative steps toward enhanced border control has infuriated the progressiv­es on the left and further reinforced Democrats reputation as the party of open borders.

The president owns the issue now. By taking three years to acknowledg­e it and act decisively, rather than blaming others, the president has lost credibilit­y.

While he points to a declining inflation rate, job creation and low unemployme­nt, the president’s efforts to mitigate the economic harm inflicted in the early stages of his administra­tion have been largely unsuccessf­ul. While cold statistics

indicating recovery are noteworthy, the reality of significan­tly higher prices for everything from cars to supermarke­t eggs is even colder.

Declining inflation, low unemployme­nt and job creation are small comfort to consumers in the supermarke­t checkout line hoping the final tally isn’t too far into triple digits.

The blame-trump strategy, along with warnings he would impose an authoritar­ian government and deny basic fundamenta­l rights to Americans, might pay off for Biden.

Turning it into a referendum on Trump rather than Biden worked four years ago. It may again.

 ?? Andrew Harnik
The Associated Press ??
Andrew Harnik The Associated Press

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