Monterey Herald

BIDEN'S ELECTION PITCH HIGHLIGHTS PRAGMATISM

- By Zeke Miller

President Joe Biden promised voters in 2020 that he knew how to get things done in Washington and could bring stability to the capital. It seemed like a message out of step with the more combative era brought on by Donald Trump.

But Biden prevailed, and as he seeks a second term, he's again trying to frame the race as a referendum on competence and governance, pointing to the bipartisan debt limit and budget legislatio­n he signed on Saturday as another exemplar of the success of his approach.

The agreement the Democratic president negotiated with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and other Republican­s averted the catastroph­e of a U.S. government default — and forestalle­d another threat until after the 2024 election — while largely protecting the domestic agenda that formed the backbone of what he hopes will form his legacy.

His approach, favoring pragmatism over Trumpian pugilism, will be tested as never before in the coming campaign, with his approval rating even among Democrats low despite the results he has delivered, in large part because of concerns about his age as the oldest person to ever seek the presidency.

“The results speak for themselves,” said Jeff Zients, the 80-year-old Biden's chief of staff. “This level of support shows that we got a bipartisan deal that, most importantl­y, protects the president's priorities. And now we have a runway to execute on the president's priorities.”

Biden's allies say his strategy reflects his broader view of the presidency: tuning out the daily chatter and focusing on making a prolonged impact.

“This was quintessen­tial Joe Biden,” said longtime Biden confidant and former Delaware Sen. Ted Kaufman. “He really understand­s the institutio­ns, how they function, how they interact, and what their limitation­s are. It's the incredible advantage he has from having 36 years in the Senate and eight years as vice president.”

That perceived advantage — longevity — is also perhaps Biden's steepest hill as he seeks four more years.

Biden, aides said, devised a strategy shortly after Republican­s took the House in November and stuck by it through the talks, despite second-guessing from members of his own party. He pressed the Republican­s to define their budget priorities, then hammered them in public for unpopular pro

posed cuts once they did, to enter the negotiatio­ns with the strongest hand possible.

“He believes in the institutio­ns of American governance. He's approached this with an eye toward making the presidency and the Congress work and the way they were designed to work,” said Mike Donilon, a senior adviser to the president.

As the talks progressed, Biden stepped out of the limelight to allow Republican leaders to claim a win — necessary to sell it to their caucus — and quietly reassured Democrats that they would grow to like the deal the more they learned about it.

The result is an agreement that White House aides say exceeded their projection­s of what a budget agreement would look like with Republican­s in charge of the House. It essentiall­y freezes spending for the next year, rather than the steep cuts proposed by the GOP, and protects Biden's infrastruc­ture and climate laws and spending on Social Security and Medicare.

From the view of Biden's team, it's also far better than the result than the debt limit showdown of 2011, when Biden was a negotiator for then-President Barack Obama and House Republican­s forced them to accept stiffer budget cuts that they believe hampered the country's recovery from the Great Recession.

Biden still has come under fire from some in his own party for agreeing to tougher work requiremen­ts for some federal food assistance recipients and speeding up environmen­tal reviews for infrastruc­ture projects.

But the White House sees an upside: The permitting changes will speed up implementa­tion of Biden's infrastruc­ture and climate laws, and the Biden aides highlight that Congressio­nal Budget Office projection­s show that carve-outs from work requiremen­ts for veterans, people who are homeless and those leaving foster care will actually expand the number of people eligible for federal food assistance.

“While the rest of us are sweating the micro-news cycles and who's up and who's down on Twitter, the president is playing the long game,” said Obama spokesman and Democratic strategist Eric Schultz.

“He ran for the presidency pledging to restore functional­ity to Washington after his predecesso­r, and it's hard to argue with his record of doing so,” Schultz added. “He's proven he can rack up significan­t Democratic wins while also working in good faith with the other side.”

Biden drew a red line in negotiatio­ns that the debt limit had to be extended until after the 2024 presidenti­al election, worried both on substance and style about the potential for another showdown in an even more heated political environmen­t.

His sentiment may be right, but voters are increasing­ly concerned about his age and its toll, a message relentless­ly reinforced by prospectiv­e Republican challenger­s and the conservati­ve media ecosystem.

“Biden has chalked up a series of impressive accomplish­ments on a bipartisan basis and demonstrat­ed that he can do that without being the center of attention,” said presidenti­al historian Lindsay Chervinsky. “That's what the American voters said they wanted then. But 2024 will have an entirely different context.”

Biden, she said, would need to argue that the stability he's brought about is at risk by his opponents and hope voters' memories are long enough.

White House aides say the deal gives them “running room” through the 2024 election to focus on making people feel the impacts of the legislatio­n Biden signed into law, as well as begin to lay out their priorities for what he would do with another term and more Democrats in Congress.

Biden himself on Friday underlined the contrast with the combative character of the Republican­s' race and his adult-in-the room posture. He called on both parties to “join forces as Americans to stop shouting, lower the temperatur­e,” even as he highlighte­d GOP opposition to his efforts to raise taxes on wealthy individual­s and corporatio­ns and cut tax breaks.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy of Calif., and Senate Majority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer of N.Y., listen as President Joe Biden speaks before a meeting to discuss the debt limit in the Oval Office of the White House,
May 9, in Washington.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy of Calif., and Senate Majority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer of N.Y., listen as President Joe Biden speaks before a meeting to discuss the debt limit in the Oval Office of the White House, May 9, in Washington.
 ?? JIM WATSON — POOL VIA AP ?? President Joe Biden addresses the nation on the budget deal that lifts the federal debt limit and averts a U.S. government default, from the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, June 2.
JIM WATSON — POOL VIA AP President Joe Biden addresses the nation on the budget deal that lifts the federal debt limit and averts a U.S. government default, from the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, June 2.
 ?? JON ELSWICK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The draft of a bill that President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy of Calif., negotiated to raise the nation’s debt ceiling, is photograph­ed May 29.
JON ELSWICK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The draft of a bill that President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy of Calif., negotiated to raise the nation’s debt ceiling, is photograph­ed May 29.

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