Biden’s 100 days: bold action and broad vision
amid grief and turmoil
Biden’s solution to the myriad crises is an ambitious
economic agenda that promises to ‘own the future’ by expanding the role of
government in American life
by Lauren
Gambino in Washington DC
Mon 26 Apr
2021 07.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/26/biden-100-days-bold-action-broad-vision
On the 50th
day of his presidency, Joe Biden marched into the Oval Office and took a seat
behind the Resolute desk, where the massive, 628-page American Rescue Plan
awaited his signature. Across the room hung a portrait of Franklin D Roosevelt,
a nod to the transformative presidency Biden envisions for a nation tormented
by disease, strife and division.
The $1.9tn
package was designed to tame the worst public health crisis in a century and to
pave the way for an overhaul of the American economy. It overcame unanimous
Republican opposition in Congress, where Democrats hold the barest majority.
“This historic
legislation is about rebuilding the backbone of this country and giving people
in this nation, working people, middle-class folks, people who built the
country, a fighting chance,” Biden said. And with the flick of a pen, he signed
into law one of the most expensive economic relief bills in American history.
Biden took
office at a moment of profound grief and turmoil, inheriting from Donald Trump
a virus that has killed more than 550,000 and exposed glaring inequalities in
healthcare, education and the economy. Fear and anxiety still gripped the
nation in the aftermath of the 6 January insurrection at the Capitol, when
Trump loyalists stormed the building in a bloody attempt to stop lawmakers
certifying Biden’s electoral victory. All of this amid a generational reckoning
on race and the ever-accelerating threat of climate change.
Joe Biden,
First Lady Jill Biden, US Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug
Emhoff, hold a moment of silence in honor of those who lost their lives to the
coronavirus.
One hundred
days into his term, Biden’s solution to the myriad crises is an ambitious
economic agenda that promises to “own the future” by dramatically expanding the
role of government in American life.
The White
House is guided by the belief that if it can lift the nation from the Covid-19
crisis and the economic havoc it wrought, it can begin to restore Americans’
faith in government and pave the way for the next phase of the Biden
presidency.
“We need to
remember the government isn’t some foreign force in a distant capital,” Biden
said in his first primetime address, hours after signing the American Rescue
Plan. “It’s us. All of us.”
The
pandemic remains an inescapable challenge. But the picture is inarguably
brighter than it was when Biden delivered his inaugural address in January to a
sea of American flags marking the crowds absent from the Mall. Now, Biden is
dangling the prospect of backyard barbecues by the Fourth of July.
Marshaling
a “full-scale, wartime effort”, his administration has built one of the largest
and most effective mass immunization campaigns in the world.
At its peak
the US was administering more than 3m shots a day. In a nation of nearly 330
million, more than 50% of adults including 80% over 65 are at least partially
vaccinated. Last week, Biden surpassed his goal of administering 200m shots by
his 100th day. The problem is rapidly becoming too much vaccine and not enough
people willing to be vaccinated.
“That was
arguably one of his main jobs as president – to start getting this pandemic
under control,” said Dr Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of
Public Health, “It’s not fully under control yet, but it is clearly in much
better shape than it would have been had this incredible vaccination effort not
happened.”
Jha credits
the campaign’s success to several factors, from improving coordination between
the federal government and states to tweaking the way doses are extracted from
vials. He added that such success is due in part to the Trump administration’s
Operation Warp Speed, which dramatically accelerated vaccine development.
Deaths from
the coronavirus have declined sharply since a peak in January, as many of the
most vulnerable Americans are vaccinated. Yet infections are rising again in many
parts of the country. The more contagious B117 variant of the coronavirus that
was first discovered in the UK has emerged as the dominant strain in the US,
and young people are at particular risk. Even so, a number of Republican states
have ignored Biden’s pleas to keep mask mandates and other restrictions in
place.
Reaching
the roughly 130 million Americans who have yet to be inoculated remains a
challenge, as demand softens and vaccine hesitancy persists. As of 19 April,
all adult Americans became eligible to receive a vaccine, marking what Biden
called a “new phase” of the immunization effort.
Public
health experts are working to confront misinformation and conspiracy theories.
The decision by federal health officials to temporarily halt the use of the
Johnson & Johnson vaccine after rare instances of blood clots among
millions who have received the shot further fueled mistrust in some corners.
“The
biggest challenge that the administration faces over the next 100 days is in
building confidence in people who are not sure they want the vaccine,” Jha
said. “That is going to take an enormous amount of effort and, in some ways,
it’s much harder than simply building vaccination sites because it’s
sociological.”
As the
vaccine campaigns help Americans push past the pandemic, and the economy begins
to show signs of recovery after a year of hardship, Biden is turning to the
potentially legacy defining pieces of his agenda. He plans to spend trillions
more on an infrastructure package.
“It is not
a plan that tinkers around the edges,” Biden said, introducing the first half
of a multi-trillion dollar agenda in a speech outside Pittsburgh. “It is a
once-in-a-generation investment in America.”
The
president’s “Build Back Better” agenda widens the definition of infrastructure
to include investments in home care, an expansion of broadband and a
restructuring of the tax system in addition to more traditional public works
projects like roads, bridges and railways.
It also
represents the cornerstone of Biden’s fight against climate change, which he
has called the “the existential crisis of our time”. Embedded throughout the
plan are proposals to reduce carbon emissions by investing in green
infrastructure and technologies, electric vehicles and clean energy, as well as
a clean electricity standard that aims to decarbonize the nation’s power
sector by 2035 – and the whole economy by mid-century.
At a White
House virtual climate summit with world leaders, Biden unveiled an ambitious
new pledge to cut US carbon emissions by at least half by 2030.
A
forthcoming piece of his infrastructure agenda is expected to center on
expanding childcare services and making education more affordable and
accessible. It too envisions hundreds of billions of dollars of spending.
It is
perhaps a surprising approach for a man who has spent nearly four decades in
public life building a reputation as a consensus-minded moderate eager to
negotiate with his “friends across the aisle”. In the Democratic primary, he
was cast as the establishment alternative in a field of rising stars and
progressive challengers.
But since
emerging as the party’s standard bearer, Biden has steadily embraced a more
expansive vision, arguing that the social and economic moment demands bold
action.
During his
first press conference last month, Biden said repeatedly he wanted to “change
the paradigm” – a stark shift in tone from the early days of his presidential
campaign, when he promised donors that under his leadership “nothing would
fundamentally change”.
Congressman
Jim Clyburn, the Democratic majority whip and a close ally and friend of the
president, said Biden’s tenure has so far “exceeded my expectations – not my
hopes are my dreams – but my expectations.”
Clyburn,
who is widely credited with saving Biden’s campaign by endorsing him weeks
before the South Carolina primary, said he was pleasantly surprised by Biden’s
infrastructure proposal, which he “didn’t expect to be as bold as it is”.
“A lot of
people, I among them, felt that because of this 50-50 split in the Senate, he
would go less bold,” Clyburn said. “But I think that he has calculated, the way
that I would, that in the legislative process, you never get all that you ask
for … so it’s much better to get some of a big bill, then some of a little
bill.”
Republicans
are balking at the scale and cost of Biden’s plans, as well as his proposal to
pay for it by raising taxes on corporations and the wealthy. Senate minority
leader Mitch McConnell has vowed to fight Democrats “every step of the way” on
Biden’s infrastructure plan, which he has panned as a “Trojan Horse” for
liberal priorities.
“It won’t
build back better,” he said last week. “It’ll build back never.”
Democratic
leaders have yet to choose a legislative path forward for Biden’s
infrastructure plan, but, thanks to a recent ruling by the Senate
parliamentarian, they now have multiple avenues to circumvent Republican
opposition.
Biden’s
infrastructure plan has not sat well with moderate Republicans, who say they
were expecting a governing partner in the White House.
“A Senate
evenly split between both parties and a bare Democratic House majority are
hardly a mandate to ‘go it alone’,” Mitt Romney, a Republican senator from Utah
who is part of a working group that hopes to find a bipartisan solution on
infrastructure, wrote recently on Twitter.
The group
unveiled a counterproposal hat is a fraction of the size of Biden’s public
works plan, touting it as a “very generous offer”. The White House welcomed the
effort but the vast spending gap suggested the differences between the parties
may be too wide to overcome.
The
president is keenly aware of the difficult math in the Senate, having spent
more than 30 years in the chamber. Even if bipartisan discussions collapse and
Democrats go it alone, Biden will still face challenges keeping his ungainly
coalition together.
But in
choosing bold action over incrementalism, Biden is gambling that voters will
forgive the price tag if Democrats can deliver tangible results like universal
broadband and affordable childcare while seeking to put Republicans on the
defensive over their opposition to a plan that polling suggests is broadly
popular.
A recent
New York Times survey found that two in three Americans, including seven in 10
independents, approve of Biden’s infrastructure spending.
Progressives
are pressing the 78-year-old president to act urgently, knowing Democrats’
precarious hold on Congress is only guaranteed through January 2022. Declaring
the “era of small government” over, they argue that there is a political risk
to being too cautious. Pursuing an expansive economic agenda, they say, is not
only good policy but good politics.
Biden, for
the most part, appears to agree. He has argued that spending too little
confronting the nation’s crises is riskier than spending too much. He told
Republicans at a meeting last week that he was open to compromise, but vowed
that “inaction is not an option”.
In a recent
speech, Biden said it was time to retire the theory of “trickle down”
economics, saying now was the time for building an economy that “grows from the
bottom up and the middle out”.
“This is
the first time we’ve been able, since the Johnson administration and maybe even
before that, to begin to change the paradigm,” the president said.
Shortly
after former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was found guilty of
murdering George Floyd last week, Biden placed an emotional call. Huddled in
the courthouse, Floyd’s family put the president on speakerphone.
“At least,
God, now there is some justice,” Biden told them. “We’re all so relieved.”
Their
attorney, Ben Crump, urged the president to pressure Congress to pass policing
reform and to use this moment to confront America’s violent legacy of racism.
“You got
it, pal,” Biden said. “This gives us a shot to deal with genuine, systemic
racism.”
The murder
of Floyd, who was Black, at the hands of a white police officer touched off
global protests against police brutality and systemic racism. Biden said then
that the long overdue racial reckoning created a once-in-a-generation
opportunity to directly historic racial injustices.
As president,
Biden has placed emphasis on racial equity, drawing support from civil rights
activists and criticism from conservatives.
He
assembled a cabinet that is the most diverse in history, including the first
female, first African American and first Asian American vice-president, as well
as the first Native American and first openly gay cabinet secretaries, the
first female treasury secretary, the first African American defense secretary
and the first immigrant to lead the Department of Homeland Security.
Confronting
systemic racism is the “responsibility of the whole of our government”, the
White House declared, laying out steps the new administration would take to
address inequality in housing, education, criminal justice, healthcare and the
economy.
He has
emphasized equity in vaccine distribution and targeted underserved communities
with his $1.9tn relief plan. His infrastructure plan dedicates funding to
neighborhoods harmed by pollution and environmental hazards as well as to
homecare aids, predominantly women of color. He endorsed statehood for the
District of Columbia, a heavily Black city that does not have voting
representation in Congress. He warned that some states were “backsliding into
the days of Jim Crow” by imposing new voting restrictions.
Yet a major
voting rights bill remains stalled along with a long-promised policing
overhaul. Biden’s sweeping immigration reform has yet to gain traction as
Republicans hammer the administration over an influx of migrant children at the
Mexico border. Spasms of gun violence have renewed calls for gun control.
Biden’s
first in-person meeting with a foreign leader began with the Japanese prime
pinister, Yoshihide Suga, extending his condolences for a mass shooting at a
FedEx facility in Indianapolis, which left eight people dead. Suga also
condemned a rising tide of violence against Asian Americans and Pacific
Islanders since the start of coronavirus lockdowns.
The summit
underscored Biden’s belief that the nation’s crises are not only an inflection
point for America – but for the world. Biden has framed his domestic
revitalization effort as part of a global conflict between authoritarianism and
democracy.
“That’s
what competition between America and China and the rest of the world is all
about,” Biden said in his infrastructure speech. “It’s a basic question: Can
democracies still deliver for their people?”
Jonathan
Alter, author of The Defining Moment: FDR’s Hundred Days and the Triumph of
Hope, said Biden, like the 32nd president, has a rare opportunity to transform
the political landscape for generations.
“Roosevelt
and his New Deal represented a new social contract between the government and
the people in terms of what the government owed Americans,” he said. That
lasted for nearly five decades, he said, until Ronald Reagan gave rise to a new
era of small-government and free-market competition.
Whether
Biden can forge a new social contract to meet the most urgent challenges of the
21st century – yawning inequality, a warming climate and rising
authoritarianism – is a question unlikely to be answered by his 100th day in
office, Alter cautioned. But he expects the next 100 to be revealing.
“It’s hard
to imagine but Biden has already spent several times as much in 1933-dollars as
Roosevelt did in his first 100 days,” Alter said. “And the odds that a
Rooseveltian achievement in American political life will take place this year
are highly likely.”

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