Biden in crisis mode as specter of one-term
Carter haunts White House
Biden on Friday during a visit to CIA headquarters in
Langley, Virginia to mark the agency’s 75th anniversary.
Lauren
Gambino
Lauren
Gambino in Washington
@laurenegambino
Sat 9 Jul
2022 09.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jul/09/biden-democrats-jimmy-carter-crisis-white-house
At an
Independence Day barbecue, crises cascading around him, Joe Biden declared that
he had “never been more optimistic about America than I am today”.
Of course
there were challenges, grave ones, the US president told the military families
assembled on the south lawn of the White House. And the nation had a troubling
history of taking “giant steps forward” and then a “few steps backwards”, he
acknowledged.
But Biden
gave a hopeful speech that reflected his often unshakable faith in the American
experiment on the 246th anniversary of its founding.
Yet many
Americans, even his own supporters, no longer share the president’s confidence.
To many observers Biden appears to be at a moment of profound crisis in his
presidency: and one he is struggling to address. The specter of Jimmy Carter –
a one-term Democrat whose failure to win the 1980 election ushered in the
Ronald Reagan era – is starting to haunt the Biden White House.
With
decades-high inflation, near-weekly mass shootings, a drumbeat of alarming
disclosures about Donald Trump’s attempts to overturn his election defeat, and
successive supreme court rulings that shifted the country’s political landscape
sharply rightward, Biden’s rosy speech-making struck even his fellow Democrats
as ill-suited for what they view as a moment of existential peril for the
country.
A new
Monmouth poll captured the depth of America’s pessimism: at present just 10% of
Americans believe the country is on the right track, compared with 88% who say
it is on the wrong track. Confidence in the country’s institutions fell to
record lows this year, according to the latest Gallup survey. The presidency
and the supreme court suffered the most precipitous declines, while Congress
drew the lowest levels of confidence of any institution at just 7%.
“If that
sunny optimism were paired with actual steps to secure the future that the
president claims to be excited about, it would ring less hollow,” said Tré
Easton, a progressive Democratic strategist. “But right now it seems
disconnected from the reality that many people, especially people who worked
very hard to get President Biden and Vice-President [Kamala] Harris elected,
are experiencing.”
Last month,
a conservative super-majority on the supreme court ended the constitutional
right to abortion, paving the way for new restrictions and bans in
Republican-controlled states across the country. Meanwhile, democracy experts
are sounding the alarm as Republican candidates who embraced conspiracy
theories about the 2020 election win primary elections for key positions of
power.
With
control of Congress, governorships and statehouses at stake this November, many
supporters and allies are pleading with Biden to lead with the urgency and
force they believe this moment demands.
Under
mounting pressure from supporters and allies to deliver a more assertive
response, Biden on Friday signed an executive order that the White House said
would protect women seeking an abortion. In his most impassioned remarks to
date, Biden said the supreme court’s decision was “an exercise in raw political
power” and warned that Republicans would seek a national ban on abortion in
they win control of Congress in November.
Democrats
broadly welcomed the order and the passion. Still others hoped it was just a
“first step,” noting that the action did not include some of the more novel
actions Democrats have called for, such as opening abortion clinics on federal
lands in states where the procedure is banned or declaring a national
emergency.
Before the
signing ceremony on Friday, Bloomberg reported that the White House considered
declaring a national public health emergency as a number of Democratic
lawmakers and activists have urged him to do, but ultimately decided against
it.
That
caution, a hallmark of Biden’s decades-long political career, has frustrated
many Democrats who fear democracy itself is under an assault.
“Everything’s
on the line right now. It’s truly existential,” Easton said. “It just doesn’t
seem like he understands that.”
New reports
of a White House struggling to respond to mounting challenges have even fueled
a discussion among Democrats over whether Biden should seek re-election in
2024.
In recent
weeks, speculation has mounted over potential alternatives. Among them are
California governor, Gavin Newsom, has positioned himself as a pugnacious
leader in the fight to protect abortion rights and Illinois governor, JB
Pritzker, offered a guttural response to the Independence Day shooting in his
state that drew contrast with Biden’s more restrained approach.
“If you are
angry today, I’m here to tell you to be angry,” Pritzker said. In a statement,
Biden condemned the attack as yet another “senseless act of violence” and held
a moment of silence for the victims at the White House.
The White
House has rejected that criticism, arguing that Biden has responded – quickly
and forcefully – to the mounting crises facing the nation. Asked about
Democrats’ criticism of Biden, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre
said the president has been quick to tackle the nation’s crises.
“The
president showed urgency. He showed fury. He showed frustration,” she said of
Biden’s response to the recent mass shootings, and that his leadership paved
the way for a bipartisan gun safety compromise, breaking decades of gridlock in
Washington over how to address gun violence.
Democrats
fears’ come as the party faces a historically challenging electoral landscape,
with prognosticators anticipating a Republican takeover of Congress in
November.
Cristina
Tzintzún Ramirez, the president and executive director of NextGen America, a
youth-vote mobilization organization in the country, said the supreme court’s
ruling on Roe clarified the stakes for many young people. But she said they’re
looking for bold leadership in Washington.
Democrats
must put “everything on the table” to keep an “ultra-rightwing and extremist
minority from overtaking every major institution in our country,” she said.
“That’s what’s on the ballot in 2022.”
Biden on
Friday said his executive powers were limited and Democrats lacked the numbers
in Congress to protect abortion rights at the nation level.
“Vote,
vote, vote vote,” he implored Americans angry over the ruling. “We need two
additional pro-choice senators and a pro-choice House to codify Roe. Your vote
can make that a reality.”
For months,
the White House has careened from crisis to crisis. Inflation, war in Europe,
record gas prices, an irrepressible pandemic and a baby formula shortage have
all contributed to the national malaise and Biden’s low approval rating.
Sarah
Longwell, a moderate Republican strategist who holds focus groups with suburban
women, said voters constantly tell her that they wish they heard from Biden
more.
Facing a
difficult political landscape, she said voters want to see that Biden is
willing to take on the “most extreme elements of the Republican party”.
“Even if he
can’t do anything about it, the bully pulpit is a powerful thing,” she said
adding: “People think this is madness. They want to be able to take their kids
to a July Fourth parade and not worry about somebody getting shot. And they
want their leader to reflect that back to them.”
On Friday,
Biden sought to do just that. He hammered Republicans for pursuing bans on abortion
without exceptions for rape or incest and highlighted the case of a 10-year-old
rape victim who was forced to travel out of state for an abortion.
He
previously endorsed an exception to the Senate filibuster rule in order to pass
abortion protections, but he’s so far declined to embrace calls for court
reform like term limits or court expansion. And in response to the
extraordinary revelations about the 6 January attack on the Capitol, Biden has
mostly declined to comment, deferring to the congressional committee
investigating the attack and the justice department, which is weighing whether
to prosecute Donald Trump for his role in the violent assault on American
democracy.
“In this
hour, if you want to commit to democracy, the thing to do is to not laud the
institutions that we have as they’re currently constituted, but to set to work
on amending these institutions to meet present exigencies,” said William
Howell, a political scientist at the University of Chicago and the author of
Presidents, Populism, and the Crisis of Democracy.
He said
Biden’s commitments to democratic norms and traditions are critical,
particularly after the Trump years, but that should not impede him from
addressing the “acute need for us to revisit our institutions”.
‘The ante-status
quo was dysfunctional – it was unacceptable in the face of the pressing
challenges that our country faces,” he said. “While there’s a need for a reset,
there is a greater need for leadership in terms of institutional reform.”

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