USA TODAY International Edition

Biden’s agenda at home founders

Crisis overseas threatens to take over his message

- Joey Garrison

WASHINGTON – After disembarki­ng Air Force One in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, President Joe Biden was ready last week to talk about the historic infusion of infrastruc­ture spending passed under his watch that will improve the city’s harbor.

Instead, he was met by a reporter who asked about his latest call with Western leaders about Russia’s war in Ukraine.

“New Hampshire,” Biden responded. “I’m here to talk about New Hampshire.”

The moment captured a struggle for the White House: articulati­ng the president’s domestic agenda and biggest legislativ­e achievemen­ts amid the growing carnage in Ukraine, which has consumed global and national politics for two months.

Biden’s swing Friday through Seattle to commemorat­e Earth Day capped a two- week stretch that included visits to five states – Iowa, North Carolina, New Hampshire, Oregon and Washington – and marked the busiest period of travel of his presidency. It was an effort to get the president talking less about the war in Ukraine and more about Americans’ top concerns: the economy and inflation.

Torpedoed by a 40- year high in inflation, Biden’s approval ratings have hovered around 40% for months. A Quinnipiac University poll earlier this month found it dropped to 33%, matching his low from January. But with every speech he gives on defending Ukraine, Biden risks looking more fixated on global issues than Americans’ pocketbook­s.

“The Ukraine war is obviously huge,” said Carly Cooperman, a Democratic pollster and CEO of the firm Schoen Cooperman Research. But “at the end of the day,” she said, the president hasn’t turned his response to Russia’s invasion into wider support for his presidency. “It’s just of utmost importance to be connecting with voters about the economic hardships that they’re facing.”

During last week’s stops, Biden framed his proposal to lower prescripti­on drug prices as one way to relieve rising costs for Americans. He blamed supply chain interrupti­ons stemming

from the pandemic and Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine for high gas prices. He also has talked about making child care and senior caregiving more affordable.

Yet four months after Biden’s Build Back Better bill stalled in Congress, the administra­tion hasn’t submitted a trimmed- down proposal. The White House has declined to discuss negotiatio­ns publicly in what officials call a “strategic decision.” Previous talks that died with moderate Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia often spilled into the media.

“I think if we had a bill that was ready to pass with 50 votes, we would make that clear,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters. “So, not having a public speech from the president is not a reflection of what’s happening behind the scenes.”

One more push?

Ahead of the 2022 midterm elections in November, political experts warn it won’t be enough for Biden and Democrats to sell last year’s passage of the $ 1.2 trillion infrastruc­ture law or $ 1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan.

“The American public tends to ask ‘ What have you done for me lately?” said David Cohen, a political science professor at the University of Akron in Ohio, calling it “extremely important” that Biden and Democrats, who face major headwinds to retain power in Congress, pass something more they can run on in the coming months.

If they don’t, Cohen said, Democrats will undermine their claim as the party that “gets things done” and Republican­s “the party of obstructio­n” led by Donald Trump.

Some Democrats in Congress sense time is running out to pass major legislatio­n in Congress through reconcilia­tion, which would allow Democrats in the Senate to pass a budget bill without Republican­s’ support.

Although that strategy failed after the White House was unable to secure votes from Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D- Ariz., they want to see the White House make one more push.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D- Mass., in a New York Times op- ed, argued that Democrats should use “every single one of the next 200 days” to pursue promises Biden and Democrats campaigned on. She said Democrats win elections when they show “we understand the painful economic realities facing American families” and deliver on change. She highlighte­d Biden using executive authority to cancel student loan debt among a wish list of progressiv­e priorities.

“To put it bluntly,” Warren said, “if we fail to use the months remaining before the elections to deliver on more of our agenda, Democrats are headed toward big losses in the midterms.”

In North Carolina recently, Biden highlighte­d his work to fund historic Black colleges and universiti­es and boost domestic supply chains with high- tech workforces. In New Hampshire and Oregon, he hailed an “infrastruc­ture decade” thanks to the new infrastruc­ture law. He tried to localize that package, touting $ 1.7 million for maintenanc­e dredging for Portsmouth Harbor and a $ 20 million upgrade at the airport in Portland.

But Biden’s vision for the remaining year isn’t so clear. The White House has retired the “Build Back Better” slogan, replacing it with “Building a Better America.” In stops over the past two weeks, Biden made the case for raising taxes on multimilli­onaires and billionair­es. The president also talked about proposals to lower the cost of insulin to help about 200,000 children in the U. S. who have Type I diabetes.

“It’s the best way Congress can address inflation right now,” Biden said in New Hampshire as he tried to connect the war overseas to pain at home. “Folks, look, the fact is that we are in a situation where the war in Ukraine is going to continue to take its toll on the world economy.“

Psaki later said steps to improve child care, health care, elder care and lower prescripti­on drug prices “are no- brainers for most people.” And yet these and other ideas have not been packaged in a new spending proposal for Congress.

Despite the lack of progress, Ron Klain, White House chief of staff, said the president has a “robust agenda between now and November” that includes a reconcilia­tion bill, while acknowledg­ing time is of the essence.

“I think what really serves as the motivator,” Klain said in an interview April 13 on an NBC podcast, “is understand­ing that the calendar has only so months left in this year.”

Sun sets on FDR comparison­s

In moves aimed at curbing high gas prices, Biden tapped the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, called for oil companies to drill on federal land where they’ve already received permits and allowed higher- ethanol gas to be sold this summer. The White House hasn’t ruled out the possibilit­y of a gas tax holiday.

Trying to counter the narrative that the economy is struggling, Biden has hailed record job growth during his presidency, a 3.6% unemployme­nt rate and increases in average wages

“Notwithsta­nding all that,” Biden said at a Democratic fundraiser in Seattle last week, people feel “concerned and uncertain” because of inflation. “They’re angry.”

Shortly after taking office, Biden pushed a historic expansion of the social safety net, drawing comparison­s of his domestic agenda to those of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon B. Johnson.

But in the absence of a new social spending plan, the White House has zeroed in on smaller wins. This month, Biden welcomed back former President Barack Obama to highlight improvemen­ts to the Affordable Care Act. The president hosted a ceremony for legislatio­n to overhaul the U. S. Postal Service. In Seattle, Biden announced new executive action to make the nation’s forests more resilient against the threat of wildfires and climate change.

Those smaller moments came as he has confronted the war in Ukraine with $ 4 billion in U. S. military aid.

Biden “is going to have to run on a record. And if he doesn’t get anything else through, they’ll have to just have to run on the record that he does have.

”Barbara Perry University of Virginia’s Miller Center

Other presidents have struggled

Barbara Perry, director of presidenti­al studies at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, said it’s not unusual for presidents’ domestic agendas to be challenged by events overseas. She said Johnson struggled to get credit for his Great Society programs during the Vietnam War – which, unlike today’s events in Ukraine, involved U. S. occupation. President Bill Clinton juggled conflicts in Somalia and the Balkans to push his economic agenda.

“It’s not as though he had a choice,” Perry said of Biden having to navigate the crisis in Ukraine with economic concerns at home. She said that though Biden is “not going to get Build Back Better,” he needs to “retool and reshape” a message around what’s realistic.

“He’s going to have to run on a record. And if he doesn’t get anything else through, they’ll have to just have to run on the record that he does have.”

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 ?? NATHAN HOWARD/ GETTY IMAGES ?? President Joe Biden talks infrastruc­ture at the Portland Air National Guard Base in Oregon.
NATHAN HOWARD/ GETTY IMAGES President Joe Biden talks infrastruc­ture at the Portland Air National Guard Base in Oregon.

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