Morning Sun

President Biden can’t blame Republican­s for his failures

- Follow Marc A. Thiessen on Twitter, @marcthiess­en.

THIESSEN: Americans didn’t vote for a transforma­tional president. They voted for the unity, moderation and compromise that Biden promised but failed to deliver.

WASHINGTON » One year ago, Joe Biden promised in his inaugural address to put his “whole soul” into “bringing

America together.” Now the president who just compared Republican­s to racists, segregatio­nists and traitors is blaming the GOP for his utter failure to deliver on that promise. “Did any of you think that you’d get to a point where not a single Republican would diverge on a major issue? Not one?” Biden asked during his news conference Wednesday.

That, to put it gently, is a bunch of malarkey. Let’s review the history:

On his first major initiative — passage of a “Covid-relief” legislatio­n — it was Biden who refused GOP offers of cooperatio­n. On Feb. 1 — just days after Biden’s inaugural promise to reach across the aisle — 10 Senate Republican­s led by Sen. Susan Collins (Maine) went to the White House and offered to give him the 60 votes needed to pass Covid-relief legislatio­n with a bipartisan, filibuster­proof majority.

Passing a bipartisan covid bill should have been a layup. After all, President Donald Trump did it five times. Until Biden came along, every single Covid-relief bill had been approved with overwhelmi­ng bipartisan support in both houses. But Biden didn’t even make a pretense of pretending to negotiate. He held one meeting with Republican­s and then effectivel­y told them he didn’t need their votes. As all 10 Republican­s explained in a statement, the White House “roundly dismissed our effort

. . . in order to justify its go-italone strategy.” Senate Democrats then used the budget reconcilia­tion process to jam his $1.9 trillion plan through on a party-line vote.

Why did Biden refuse to cooperate? Simple: Because Democrats wanted to use COVID relief as a pretext to pass all sorts of liberal spending projects that had nothing to do with the pandemic. Just before it passed, White House press secretary Jen Psaki boasted it was the “most progressiv­e bill in American history.” A bipartisan bill would have required making concession­s. Biden chose to get everything he wanted rather than compromise with Republican­s.

Despite this, Senate Republican­s returned to the negotiatin­g table to forge a bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill. Biden did his level best to sabotage it at every turn. In June, after Republican­s and Democrats reached agreement on an infrastruc­ture framework, Biden threatened to veto the deal if Congress did not first pass his massive Democrat-only Build Back Better social spending bill. Then, he issued an extraordin­ary eight-paragraph statement walking back his veto threat, promising not to link the two bills. Then he broke his word and urged members of his own party to take the infrastruc­ture bill hostage as leverage to pass Build Back Better. With Biden’s blessing, they held up the bill for months.

In his news conference Wednesday, Biden claimed Trump had intimidate­d “an entire party where they’re unwilling to take any vote contrary to what he thinks.” Yet when Trump threatened to oppose any Republican “foolish enough to vote in favor” of the infrastruc­ture bill, 19 Senate Republican­s — including Minority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY. — did so anyway. In the House, Biden did not have enough Democratic votes to pass it. The bill reached his desk only because 13 House Republican­s crossed the aisle to save it.

That’s not all. In June, the Senate passed major bipartisan legislatio­n to improve the United States’ ability to compete with China on technology, address the semiconduc­tor shortage and supply chain issues, and prevent Chinese entities from engaging in cyberattac­ks or theft of intellectu­al property from U.S. firms. The bill passed the Senate by an overwhelmi­ng 68 to 32. But it has languished in the Democratic-controlled House, where Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., refuses to bring it up for a vote. Biden has barely lifted a finger to get it passed.

Or take electoral reform. This week, Biden forced a doomed Senate showdown over his partisan federal election legislatio­n. Instead of accusing Republican­s of standing with Bull Connor, George Wallace and Jefferson Davis, he should be working with them to pass bipartisan legislatio­n to reform how Congress counts electoral votes. But he’d rather lay the groundwork for claiming that the 2022 midterm elections were illegitima­te than get something done in a bipartisan manner.

Biden blames Republican­s for his failure to pass Build Back Better. But what killed that bill was his failure to compromise with Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-W.VA., and other like-minded Democratic lawmakers. Manchin explained the reason he decided to oppose the bill is that “it hasn’t shrunk.” Biden won’t compromise with his own party’s moderates, much less Republican­s.

The president’s first year in office was a calamitous failure not because of Republican intransige­nce, but because he allowed himself to be captured by his party’s progressiv­e wing, which convinced him that he should be a transforma­tional president. Americans didn’t vote for a transforma­tional president. They voted for the unity, moderation and compromise that Biden promised but failed to deliver. He can’t blame the GOP for that.

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