Texarkana Gazette

Biden should hope he gets heckled Thursday

- Doyle Mcmanus

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden should hope he gets heckled by Republican­s when he gives his State of the Union address on Thursday, just as he was last year.

Here’s why. Biden’s campaign for a second term is in trouble. His job approval rating, normally a reliable indicator of an incumbent’s chances, is mired below 40%.

So the stakes for the State of the Union address, usually a forgettabl­e event, are un- usually high.

The president and his aides have been getting a tsunami of public advice from other Democrats, including strategist­s who worked for Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, on how to improve his prospects.

They say Biden needs to accomplish three goals: He needs to quell voters’ worries that at 81 he is too old to seek a second term. He needs to tackle, head-on, the issues on voters’ minds: high prices and immigratio­n. And he needs to frame the election as a binary choice between him and former President Donald Trump instead of a referendum on his first term.

For months, Biden has tried to joke his way out of voters’ concerns over his age — or worse, reacted angrily to questions about it.

“It’s crazy to think that if you don’t talk about it, people won’t think he’s old,” David Axelrod, Obama’s campaign strategist, said recently. “You won’t get a hearing unless you at least acknowledg­e to people, ‘Yeah, I get it.’”

Biden is unlikely to raise the age issue in his State of the Union speech. But merely by turning in a competent performanc­e, he can rebut opponents’ claims that he’s not fit for the office.

In his address a year ago, he was handed a minor triumph by Republican zealots, including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, whose heckling and the back-andforth that followed showed he can still be quick on his feet. The president should hope for more of that kind of help again this year.

On the economy, aides say Biden will recount the achievemen­ts of his first three years, including bipartisan legislatio­n on infrastruc­ture and high-tech manufactur­ing.

On inflation, which is easing but still troublesom­e, he’ll talk about his push to negotiate down prescripti­on prices for Medicare and his efforts to ban hidden “junk fees” charged by banks, hotels and other businesses.

And he’ll repeat his demand for legislatio­n to “make the wealthy and corporatio­ns to pay their fair share,” meaning higher taxes on corporatio­ns and individual­s making more than $400,000 a year.

On immigratio­n, he’ll ask Congress — again — to pass the bipartisan Senate border bill that has been blocked by House Republican­s.

He’ll talk about a long list of other issues as well, including reproducti­ve rights — possibly including the recent ruling by Alabama’s conservati­ve Supreme Court that had the effect of shutting down in vitro fertilizat­ion in the state.

The test of Biden’s success will be whether he can turn a speech that too often devolves into a laundry list of priorities into a coherent narrative of what he would seek in a second term.

Which brings us to the third goal: making the 2024 election a choice between two flawed candidates, not a referendum on Biden’s first three years.

“Most presidents can’t win a referendum, and Biden surely can’t, given the environmen­t and the mood of the country right now,” David Axelrod said on the podcast he co-hosts, “Hacks on Tap.” “If it’s a referendum, it’s going to go poorly. If it’s a choice, I think he’s got a shot to win.”

Given the protocol of a State of the Union address, he’s unlikely to take Trump on by name, as he’s been doing more often in campaign events — calling the former president “dangerous,” a “threat to democracy” and, turning one of Trump’s favorite insults back at him, “a loser.”

His rhetoric on Thursday will be more elevated, but the underlying goal will still be to make the contrast clear.

One way he can do that is on foreign policy, where he will press the Republican speaker of the House, Mike Johnson of Louisiana, to put his pending request for military aid for Ukraine to a vote. Biden is likely to remind Congress that defending U.S. allies against Russian President Vladimir Putin is a core national security goal. The comparison with Trump, an unabashed Putin fan, won’t need to be spelled out.

So here’s a television recommenda­tion rarely made before. This will be a State of the Union speech worth watching — even if the president isn’t lucky enough to get heckled again.

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