Loveland Reporter-Herald

The Whittier (Calif.) Daily News on how Biden spoke very loudly and mostly clearly in his State of the Union address:

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Coming two days after Super Tuesday set up a rematch of the 2020 election with former President Donald Trump, President Joe Biden’s Thursday State of the Union address set the tone for the grueling march to Nov. 5. Both sides are going to blast away with no holds barred until voters decide the matter. But the winner will be the one who wins the moderates in the middle.

At one hour and 13 minutes the State of the Union address approached President Bill Clinton’s record of one hour and 29 minutes in 2020, and showed Biden’s stamina. While Biden fumbled some lines, he exceeded the very low bar set for him by critics who focus on his age and related issues, as he maintained an energetic delivery.

An election-year SOTU is intended to solidify the president’s base while attracting moderate voters. Biden tilted toward the base with his laundry list of new programs: money for mortgages, home care, elder care, student loan relief, Pell grants, universal tutoring and pay raises for K-12 teachers. Where’s the money for that going to come from with the federal debt $34 trillion and rising, and interest payments $1 trillion a year?

He was right to criticize “my predecesso­r,” his phrase for Trump, for running up the debt another $8 trillion. But saying he “reduced” the yearly deficit “by over $1 trillion” isn’t that comforting when the Congressio­nal Budget Office projects it will be $1.5 trillion for fiscal 2024, then rising in 2025 to $1.8 trillion and to $2.6 trillion by 2034.

To pay for his new programs and supposedly reduce the deficit, he asked “to raise the corporate minimum tax to at least 21% so every big corporatio­n finally begins to pay their fair share,” and to end tax breaks for Big Oil, Big Pharma, private jets and “massive executive pay.” He shouted, “End it now!” But higher taxes would just be passed on to consumers in higher prices, while reducing American companies’ investment­s in innovation at a time they’re facing fierce competitio­n from China, India and other countries.

Although Biden was right to tout unemployme­nt is at 50-year lows, a major factor that will help him, higher taxes would end that quickly.

Biden tried to have it both ways on some important issues. He plumped for the bipartisan Senate immigratio­n bill, which he said would bring 1,500 more security agents and officers and 100 more immigratio­n judges to deal with 2 million backlogged cases . ...

But he also made reference to “an illegal,” which has drawn criticism from his progressiv­e base. In any case, the perceived lack of action on the border, true or not, will remain a political problem for him . ...

Biden paints himself as essential to defending America against the threat of ... Donald Trump and his authoritar­ian, anti-democratic impulses . ...

This editorial board is indeed troubled by the worst elements of Trumpism. What’s most unfortunat­e is that the American people have to choose between such deeply flawed choices . ...

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