The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Dems applaud, Republican­s pan Biden’s speech

A few lines in address caused nearly every lawmaker to stand.

- By Tia Mitchell Tia.mitchell@ajc.com

Georgia Democrats who attended President Joe Biden’s State of the Union speech on Tuesday found plenty to love.

There was his endorse- ment of a cap on insulin costs for patients on private insurance, which U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock and U.S. Rep. Lucy Mcbath have long championed, plus his plug for improved policing stan- dards as prompted by Warnock and other members of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus. Biden also advocated for restoring the child tax credit that U.S. Rep. Nikema Williams and other liberals have backed, and he high- lighted infrastruc­ture dol- lars that are being spent “at major airports from Boston to Atlanta to Portland.”

On the other hand, Georgia Republican­s panned Biden’s speech as out of touch and unserious. U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene stood up and shouted “liar” when he accused some Republican­s of wanting to sunset Social Security and Medicare.

There were a few lines in Biden’s speech that brought almost every lawmaker in the chamber to their feet, regardless of party affiliatio­n. The president received biparti- san standing ovations when he said he would enforce a rule requiring that only constructi­on materials made in America be used in federal infrastruc­ture projects and later when he said prosecu- tions will ramp up for individual­s accused of obtain- ing COVID-19 relief dollars under false pretenses.

U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff said the president’s focus on infrastruc­ture resonated with him. Ossoff recently visited the cities of Byron, Doraville and Thomson to highlight federal dollars that will be used for pedestrian safety, drinking water and flood mitigation projects.

Biden’s remarks Tuesday helped bring home the importance of the biparti- san infrastruc­ture law that Biden signed, Ossoff said.

“It makes a real difference in the daily lives of Georgians in every part of the state,” Ossoff said. “So I thought that the economic focus, the focus on infrastruc­ture and the growth of America’s manufactur­ing sector was very strong and very relevant to Georgia.”

U.S. Rep. Buddy Carter, R-pooler, said he was pleased to hear Biden cele- brating changes in federal law that allow hearing aids to be purchased over the counter without a prescrip- tion, something for which he had advocated. And Carter also agrees with Biden that the federal tax code is too complicate­d, although Biden did not endorse Carter’s remedy: a national sales tax to replace the federal income tax.

But Carter said Biden’s speech showed he is out of touch.

“The White House is only two miles away from the Capitol, but he is a world away from where we are,” Carter said.

He accused Biden of gloss- ing over the continued strain that inflation has on Geor- gians. Carter also said the president, in highlighti­ng the fentanyl drug crisis, should have addressed its connection to the immigratio­n crisis at the southern border.

There were junctures where Republican­s booed Biden as he delivered his speech, especially when he said some want to target Social Security and Medicare.

U.S. Rep. Mike Collins, a first-year GOP lawmaker from northeast Georgia, said he was not among those who yelled out during Biden’s speech. But he agreed with the sentiment.

“All that is just bogus lies,” the Jackson County resident said.

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