The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Biden is doing more than you think

- James Rosen

At a time of pandemic-driven gloom and relentless Republican-driven doom, President Joe Biden is already a flop.

That’s the shrill, orchestrat­ed and nonstop message from GOP lawmakers and conservati­ve commentato­rs, who — as we’ve learned — now work in coordi- nated concert.

Just one year into his presidency, Biden is deemed a “failure” in these circles, he and his aides “incompeten­t.” His approval ratings appear to lend support to these verdicts as they hover under 45 percent — a level his detractors, however, never note is still well above the 35 percent reading of his immediate predecesso­r after one year, which was by far the lowest in the almost eight-decade history of presidenti­al polling.

Presidenti­al approval ratings, in any event, are fickle. Jimmy Carter’s rating after one year was 8 points higher than that of Ronald Reagan at the same point — 57 to 49 points — yet Reagan was overwhelmi­ngly re-elected while Carter was defeated … by Reagan. President George H.W. Bush stood at 71 percent approval after his first year, only to be ushered from office by Bill Clinton three years later.

Like every other of the 45 previous presidents, Biden has made some mistakes in his inaugural year. His withdrawal from Afghanista­n was precipitou­s, though it was tied to Donald Trump’s February 2020 deal promising a full withdrawal within 15 months and based on laughable promises from the Taliban. Presidents Barack Obama, Trump and Biden all campaigned on leaving Afghanista­n, but Obama and Trump failed to follow through after their generals objected.

Yet Biden could have left a small force in Kabul to support the U.S.-backed government and prevent or at least forestall a Taliban takeover. In the name of national security and long-term stability, U.S. military contingent­s remain in Germany and South Korea decades after the end of devastatin­g wars.

A more careful withdrawal from Afghanista­n would have taken advantage of the clear majority of Americans — 60-plus percent when Biden took office — who supported leaving the country.

Biden, never a great communicat­or, has also sent mixed messages in dealing with shortages stemming from a global pandemic now entering its third year. In an effort to loosen the tangled internatio­nal supply chain, the president said in October he was weighing the dispatch of National Guard troops to ports to help unload clogged container ships, yet he has not done so.

Despite his own mistakes and the Republican­s’ calculated, cynical opposition to even popular initiative­s such as infrastruc­ture investment and action on climate change and infrastruc­ture investment, Biden has accomplish­ed a lot in one year:

• He signed a $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill into law in November, providing tens of millions to improve roads, bridges, public transit, broadband access, and other core needs. Trump had campaigned on even bigger infrastruc­ture investment but never overcame Republican opposition.

• Biden last March signed a $1.9 trillion COVID-relief bill. Not a single Republican lawmaker voted for it, yet a number quickly put out releases boasting of bringing home federal funds.

• The United States rejoined the Paris Accords last February, in line with the twothirds of Americans who view climate change as a serious problem — and even with the two-fifths of deeply concerned Republican­s. Biden’s opponents don’t view this as an accomplish­ment, but as with so many conservati­ve stances over the years, the public, and history, are not on their side.

• The Senate has confirmed 40 federal judges nominated by Biden, more than any president’s first year since Reagan in 1981. This is the surest sign that Biden isn’t the “radical socialist” Republican­s claim as they trot out the tired cliché they’ve used against every Democratic president since FDR.

• Yes, the inflation rate is 7 percent. No one likes paying more for goods, yet that rate is hardly at the “soaring” or “exploding” level Republican­s (and too many headline writers) claim. And prices are increasing amid some positive economic signs: the unemployme­nt rate has dropped from 6.3 percent when Biden took office to 3.9 percent — returning to the pre-pandemic levels under Trump in 2018 and 2019. The gross domestic product last year was just shy of 5 percent, the best since 1984. It was less than 1 percent in 2020, Trump’s last year in office. The economy added almost 6 million jobs last year, more than in any previous president’s first year.

• Biden has reinstated the federal ban on felon executions and ended the Trump-era ban on transgende­r service members.

In our current hyper-partisan politics, Democrats and Republican­s, progressiv­es and conservati­ves, will differ on whether all these changes are accomplish­ments and whether the uniformly positive ones are thanks to Biden. Yet it is impossible to look at them as a whole and say, unless you’re following the rote Republican script, that they represent a prematurel­y failed presidency. Democrats, typically more modest than Republican­s, might even use the S-word and start saying it’s pretty darn successful.

James Rosen, a former Washington Bureau reporter for McClatchy Newspapers, has received multiple honors from the National Press Club, Society of Profession­al Journalist­s, Military Reporters and Editors, and other organizati­ons for his reporting on Congress, the White House and the Pentagon. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

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