New York Post

Give US Normalcy, Joe

- Rich lowry Twitter: @RichLowry

JOE Biden was the candidate of normality who hasn’t been able to deliver it, particular­ly on the pandemic. This is not entirely his fault, obviously. He didn’t create the Delta and Omicron surges; nor did he — or most anyone else — foresee that the vaccines wouldn’t prevent infections as advertised.

On COVID, though, as on much else, he has been trapped by a commitment to his political base and by a reflexive opposition to everything associated with Donald Trump into an endless emergency posture that isn’t wearing well with time.

Everyone agrees — after the flameouts of initial efforts to pass Build Back Better and the attempt to trash the Senate filibuster — that Biden needs a political reset. His looming Supreme Court pick will presumably provide a muchneeded win but is unlikely to move the needle much. It’s on the pandemic that Biden has, in theory, an opportunit­y to change course in a significan­t way.

By more fully embracing an approach geared to living with COVID and returning to normality, Biden could usefully play against type, align himself with shifting public opinion and acknowledg­e the reality of the pandemic’s third year, when vaccines and boosters are easily available to anyone who wants them.

Even the thought of such a tack would, once upon a time, have elicited charges of intolerabl­e recklessne­ss. In certain quarters, it still does. But the public is moving in this direction: A new Monmouth poll found that 70% of the public agrees with the statement, “It’s time we accept that COVID is here to stay and we just need to get on with our lives.”

Unsurprisi­ngly, 89% of Republican­s agree. But so do 71% of independen­ts and nearly half of Democrats.

An NBC News poll on schools found the same kind of partisan splits. According to the survey, 65% of people were most worried about kids falling behind academical­ly and only 30% most worried about stopping the spread of COVID.

Again, Republican­s and independen­ts were strongly on one side — 87% and 66% most worried about lost learning — and Democrats divided, with 43% worried about kids losing academic ground.

In a big Kaiser Family Foundation survey, 51% of Democrats described the pandemic as the biggest problem facing the country, whereas only 28% of independen­ts and 19% of Republican­s did.

This suggests that the response to COVID is becoming a wedge issue — Democrats can play to their base, which is most invested in maintainin­g restrictio­ns, only at the risk of alienating the broader electorate.

Biden, whose handling of COVID is less and less popular, shows signs of being conflicted. The White House counseled against panic at the outset of the Omicron surge and even talked of a declaratio­n of independen­ce from the virus last summer.

But the president hasn’t been able to make it unmistakab­le that he thinks we’ve entered a new phase in the pandemic. As the heterodox center-left writer Matthew Yglesias points out, the Biden administra­tion may believe that it has embraced normality, but what it’s really done is only make “the most extreme public health people mad at them.”

If the administra­tion wants to make a statement, it could decisively turn against the teacher unions on the issue of keeping schools open, siding with parents and kids over a Democratic interest group. It could relax its indefensib­ly sweeping guidance on school masking and instantly pave the way for local school districts to lift their mandates. It could end the federal mask mandates on travel.

But acting on any of these measures would mean crossing progressiv­es, enduring the scolding of onedimensi­onal public-health experts and courting comparison­s to Donald Trump or, even worse, Glenn Youngkin and Ron DeSantis.

And so President Biden, as conditions change, can’t change with them, putting normality on indefinite hold.

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