Biden seeks to escape Trump's ghost
BY AMIE
PARNES - 02/20/21 12:09 PM EST
https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/539640-biden-seeks-to-escape-trumps-ghost
When
President Biden appeared at a town hall with CNN’s Anderson Cooper this week,
he declared that he was “tired of talking about Donald Trump” not once but
twice.
“I don’t
want to talk about him anymore,” he told Cooper at one point.
But a
couple of minutes later, he was talking about Trump again.
“You may
remember in one of my debates with the former president, I asked him to condemn
the Proud Boys and he wouldn’t do it,” Biden said. “He said ‘Stand by, stand
ready,’ or whatever the phrase exactly was.”
A month
into his presidency, Biden has had a tough time shaking the ghost of Trump —
even with the former president largely silenced by Twitter’s ban on his tweets.
In the
first few weeks of Biden’s presidency, Trump’s impeachment trial loomed large,
garnering much of the news cycles and headlines.
The trial
was only a week, but it was the dominant story as the Senate considered
arguments to acquit or convict Trump.
Even after
it ended, there was a focus on the future of the post-Trump GOP, particularly
as the former president traded blows with Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell (R-Ky.).
Much of
Biden’s agenda is also about rolling back Trump’s policies. On Friday, the U.S.
formally rejoined the Paris climate accords that the U.S. exited under Trump. A
day earlier, the Biden administration announced it was open to new talks with
Iran after Trump pulled the U.S. out of the nuclear deal spearheaded by former
President Obama.
Democrats
also rolled out an immigration reform proposal backed by Biden this week that
is a 180-degree turn from the Trump years.
It all
makes Trump difficult to escape even when his all-caps tweets aren’t making
headlines on their own. And it perhaps explains some of Biden’s evident frustration
during the interview with Cooper.
“It’s kind
of like when you wake up from a horrible nightmare,” said one Democrat close to
the Biden White House. “You wake up but you’re still haunted by it the next day
and maybe the next day after that."
“And this
is worse. It was a nightmare for so many of us for four years. So of course
it’s going to linger for a while because it’s a tough thing to get over and
because we’re trying to undo so much of the shit he did for four years,” the
Democrat added. “That takes time.”
Trump was
also central to Biden’s presidential campaign. If it hadn’t been for Trump,
Biden wouldn’t have run for president and his political career may have ended
after 2016.
“President
Biden ran against everything Donald Trump did while in office and everything he
stood for,” said Tobe Berkovitz, a communications professor at Boston
University who has served as a political consultant. “It will be a challenge to
pivot away from this line of communication.”
There are
risks to Biden talking about Trump too much, just as there are risks for any
president focused on their predecessor.
Trump was
criticized for being focused on erasing Obama’s legacy to the detriment of his
own agenda.
Similarly,
Republicans sought to hammer Obama for blaming a laggard economy on his
predecessor, former President George W. Bush.
Berkovitz
said Trump “shouldn’t loom over Biden’s presidency,” but acknowledged the
difficult balancing act.
“Biden
should be doing everything he can to put some distance between his White House
and Trump’s policies and Trump’s White House,” he said. “But it’s tough to go
cold turkey.”
Appearing
at the National Institutes of Health earlier this month, Biden went after Trump
over his handling of COVID-19, saying he failed to set up adequate vaccination
supplies.
“While
scientists did their job in discovering vaccines in record time, my predecessor
— I’ll be very blunt about it— did not do his job in getting ready for the
massive challenge of vaccinating hundreds of millions,” Biden said in remarks
at the NIH. “He did not order enough vaccines. … It was a big mess. It’s going
to take time to fix.”
Vice
President Harris has also invoked Trump’s name when talking about the vaccine
challenges, saying his administration left no national strategy.
“In many
ways, we are starting from scratch on something that’s been raging for almost
an entire year,” she told Axios on HBO.
Trump can
of course be a benefit to Biden, too, by playing the foil.
“I have
always believed that Biden benefits from the chaos of Donald Trump,” said
Democratic strategist Joel Payne. “Biden’s decency and relative calm vis a vis
Trump is a political benefit for the President and his team.”
Democratic
strategist Jamal Simmons agreed.
“I don’t
know if they wanted it but I bet they don’t mind it right now,” Simmons said.
“As much as he reminds us how much of a whirlwind there was during the Trump
White House and shows that contrast, it works in his favor.”
At the same
time, many see Trump’s absence from Twitter as benefitting Biden.
Trump
tiptoed back into the spotlight this week with interviews on Fox News and other
cable networks after the death of conservative talk radio host Rush Limbaugh.
But that
wasn’t anything like Trump’s formerly-ever-present Twitter account.
“There’s
been a huge difference,” said David Litt, who served as a speechwriter to
former President Obama. “It’s really remarkable to see how much the landscape
has changed. If Trump was still on Twitter, the political press would be
required to write about it all and it would create pressure on Biden to
respond.
“A
Twitter-less Trump does put the Biden team in a much better position,” Litt
added.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário