The Mercury News

Biden, Cabinet fan out to sell domestic agenda

- By Darlene Superville, Fatima Hussein and Chris Megerian

SUPERIOR, WIS. >> President Joe Biden, struggling to regain his political footing as the midterm elections approach, visited the crucial state of Wisconsin on Wednesday to promote one of his top accomplish­ments, a bipartisan infrastruc­ture measure that will distribute billions of dollars to fix roads, bridges and other public works.

Biden's trip was part of a customary post-State of the Union blitz that enlisted Vice President Kamala Harris and Cabinet officials, who fanned out across the country to showcase the administra­tion's plans. Along with first lady Jill Biden, the president shook hands with workers in hard hats and neon vests near the base of the John A. Blatnik Memorial Bridge, which connects Wisconsin and Minnesota by spanning a corner of Lake Superior. The span is a perennial candidate for replacemen­t because it's too corroded to support heavy trucks, limiting its ability to serve as an economic lifeline for the region.

“After years of talking about infrastruc­ture, we're finally getting it done,” Biden said in a speech at a nearby college campus.

Although the $1 trillion infrastruc­ture legislatio­n was a bright spot in his rocky first year, Biden's broader agenda — including education programs, price controls for prescripti­on drugs and financial incentives for fighting climate change — remains stalled on Capitol Hill.

The White House has brushed off questions about whether Biden was rebranding his legislativ­e proposals, previously known as “Build Back Better,” but the signs flanking the president in Wisconsin told a different story.

“Building A Better America,” they said, echoing a line from his State of the Union address.

Biden is also trying to demonstrat­e that his administra­tion remains focused on domestic issues even as he confronts the Russian invasion of Ukraine, a crisis that has required close coordinati­on with European allies.

“When the history of this era is written, Ukraine will have left Russia weaker and the rest of the world stronger,” Biden pledged.

Harris was in North Carolina, a swing state that remained out of reach for Democrats in the last election, to visit an apprentice training program for union electrical workers. She was joined by Labor Secretary Marty Walsh, one of several Cabinet officials who were traveling Wednesday.

One of the most notable trips was made by Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who rarely makes appearance­s with political undertones. She touched down in Chicago, where she had lunch at a Ukrainian restaurant in a show of solidarity with the besieged country and spoke at the University of Illinois' campus in the city.

Yellen defended the administra­tion's economic sanctions on Russia, saying they've driven down the worth of the ruble and forced Moscow to close the stock market for days to limit losses.

“The objective is to keep the pain to the maximum extent possible, focused on Russia and not on the rest of us,” she said, an acknowledg­ement that economic ripple effects could affect Americans with higher gas prices.

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