By Rich Lowry
Friday, September 10, 2021
Not too long ago, supporters imagined Joe Biden
might be the next LBJ, and perhaps they were right — just not how they thought.
Biden bears no resemblance to the Lyndon B. Johnson who
entered office after the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963 with a 75
percent approval rating and over the next couple of years passed a raft of
historic legislation. No, if there’s any comparison, it is to the LBJ who by
1967 had seen his approval rating dip underwater in a deeply riven
country.
After a lot of happy talk over the past half year,
the real Biden presidency has emerged. It is not a colossus
bestriding the political universe, rather a middling administration, at best,
that will have trouble imposing its will even on its own party in Congress.
Biden was always fundamentally a default president,
elected in opposition to Donald Trump and initially buoyed by the contrast to
his outlandish predecessor.
Now, he’s lost his foil in Trump, who is still issuing
harsh and thunderous press releases but isn’t driving every news cycle or
occasioning mass protests in the streets.
The best case for Biden was that he could ride in the
slipstream of good economic growth and a receding pandemic.
Instead, the labor market is still rocky, and the Delta
variant has surged, leading to headlines about overstretched health-care
systems that most people assumed that we’d left behind in the spring of 2020.
On top of this, Biden made the first major, historic
decision of his presidency, and completely botched it. The White House may tell
itself that his withdrawal from Afghanistan will come to seem farsighted, and
it’s possible that the harmful political effect will wear off over time.
Leaving Americans behind in a foreign country after an
enemy of the United States swept to power and chased us out with our tails
between our legs, though, is not likely to be forgotten, certainly not in 2022
or 2024, if ever.
The prime directive for any president is, to the extent
possible, to seem in control. Biden failed this test repeatedly during the
evacuation crisis. Events moved faster than he did, and his rationales for what
was happening had to be constantly revised.
Privately, Democrats must know that his performances at
his press conferences weren’t reassuring, let alone commanding. The problem
Biden has is that any act of incompetence will, fairly or not, raise questions
about his age, even if he would have done exactly the same thing at 38 that
he’s now done at 78.
The most notable feature of the resulting Biden drops in
the polls that have him underwater in both the RealClearPolitics and 538
polling averages is his awful standing among independents (in the mid 30s in
reputable polls).
This isn’t a position of strength from which to deal with
another structural problem that was submerged by his initial success getting
new COVID-19 spending and by wishful press coverage — uncomfortably narrow
margins in Congress.
Biden can’t lose anyone in the Senate and can lose only a
handful of votes in the House, giving both the relative moderate wing of the
party and its leftmost flank the ability to kill off his spending plans for
being too profligate or too stingy, respectively.
Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia is a constant
reminder of this. The fate of Biden’s presidency, or at least huge pieces of
his domestic agenda, depends on a senator representing a Trump state who is
largely immune to pressure from the national party and indeed may be helped if
the national party calls him names for not going along with its priorities.
When all is said and done, Biden may get enough spending
to allow Republicans to attack him as a wastrel and not enough spending to
excite his own partisans.
Welcome to Biden’s reality. The heroic period of his
presidency was always a mirage, and the effort to muddle through now begins in
earnest.
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