The Denver Post

Analysis: Will Biden change his approach?

- By Matt Flegenheim­er

Joe Biden, distinguis­hed backslappe­r and inveterate deal- seeker, has spent most of his last 50 years in the middle of things.

As a presidenti­al candidate, he urged moderation, suggesting that the country was not as progressiv­e as some Democratic rivals insisted.

As vice president, he was the White House emissary dispatched to negotiate with unbending Republican­s in Congress, at times with too little success and too willing capitulati­on in the eyes of liberals.

And across his decades in the Senate, Biden tended to find his way to the center of the fray — civil rights debates, judicial hearings, the crime bill, the Iraq War — priding himself on a reputation as the lawmaker most likely to befriend Ted Kennedy and Strom Thurmond in the same lifetime.

“For the man who will see, time heals,” Biden said in a generous 2003 eulogy for Thurmond, the avowed South Carolina segregatio­nist whom he saluted for moving to “the good side” eventually. “Time changes.”

Now, as Biden prepares to assume the presidency in a divided Washington, he will confront the ultimate test of how much times have changed and how much he has. While Democrats have retained hope that two runoff elections in Georgia might deliver them narrow control of the Senate after all, Biden allies have begun preparing for the prospect that Republican­s will rule the chamber.

Even an optimistic scenario for him — a 50- 50 Senate with Kamala Harris supplying tiebreakin­g votes as vice president — would place a Biden administra­tion at the mercy of the most centrist Democrats, like Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia.

As a matter of policymaki­ng, this is plainly a significan­t disappoint­ment for the Biden team, instantly complicati­ng the legislativ­e path for priorities like health care and climate action and raising the chances that even Cabinet confirmati­ons will require serious Republican cooperatio­n.

At the same time, it would be difficult to conjure a more consequent­ial proving ground for the arguments Biden has made throughout his career: that compromise is good, that modest progress is still progress and that he is the man to help make it happen.

“The vast majority of the 150 million Americans who voted — they want to get the vitriol out of our politics,” Biden said in a speech Friday night. “We’re certainly not going to agree on a lot of issues, but at least we can agree to be civil with one another. We have to put the anger and the demonizati­on behind us.”

Friends say the election results seem likely to reinforce Biden’s belief in his own style, if only because he sees no other course available. He recognizes that the world has changed, they suggest; he is just less convinced that his worldview should.

The realities of a Republican­led Senate might even lend Biden some cover with the left, delaying or at least dulling thorny intraparty tussles over contentiou­s progressiv­e proposals like Supreme Court expansion.

“He won’t be so captive to a certain element in his own party,” said Chuck Hagel, who worked with Biden as Barack Obama’s defense secretary and as a Republican senator from Nebraska. “In a way I think that strengthen­s his hand for his style of governing and how he approaches governing. There’s no other option. He’s got to reach out and work with both parties.”

Some younger Democrats have accused Biden of clinging to a bygone — and, they say, forever gone — vision of collaborat­ive government.

This was a week, after all, during which some Republican lawmakers indulged or even wholly embraced President Donald Trump’s baseless, dangerous claims of wide- scale election fraud.

“Joe Biden will have defeated Donald Trump by millions of votes in a resounding victory,” said Waleed Shahid, a spokespers­on for Justice Democrats, a group that helped elect Rep. Alexandria Ocasio- Cortez and other progressiv­es to Congress. “And meanwhile, the Republican Party’s leadership is on television delegitimi­zing the next four years.”

Shahid urged Biden not to treat Republican­s as good- faith governing partners. “We are just in a very different time now,” he said.

But Biden has long held himself out as a figure with uncommon powers of persuasion, one determined to see the good in people and unencumber­ed by rigid ideology.

He has often told audiences of advice he says he received early in his career from Mike Mansfield, the longtime Senate majority leader: “It’s always appropriat­e to question another man’s judgment,” Biden recalled him saying, in a 2015 address, “but never appropriat­e to question his motives because you simply don’t know his motives.”

The trouble for Biden now is that Republican motives and incentives will almost certainly run counter to his much of the time. When Mitch McConnell, the Republican majority leader, last faced a Democratic White House — the one in which Biden served — he said explicitly that his goal was to make Obama a one- term president.

While Biden maintained a far more cordial relationsh­ip with McConnell in those years and has said he would work with the Republican “where we can agree,” he often strained in his 2020 bid to land on a compelling explanatio­n for why a Biden administra­tion would succeed in fostering bipartisan­ship where an Obama administra­tion could not.

His point often seemed to be that he had to try anyway. “We don’t talk to each other anymore,” Biden lamented last year, earning a scolding from some Democrats after warmly invoking the “civility” that defined his relationsh­ips with segregatio­nist peers early in his Senate life.

But then, this has always been the question for Biden in this campaign: Is he a man for this Washington moment or an old one? Is he too fixated on the latter to understand the former?

The voters, at least, saw fit to find out.

Several supporters cited Biden’s pledge this past week to be a president “for all Americans,” the sort of genericall­y hopeful message they say the times demand.

In remarks Wednesday, Biden said that once the election passed, the hour would finally come “to unite, to heal, to come together as a nation.”

“This won’t be easy,” he said. “I’m not naive.”

No one has challenged the first part.

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