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XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
https://freebeacon.com/columns/a-sorry-president/
Column: In trying to block Trump's return, Biden made it inevitable
According to a Gallup survey released on January 7, most Americans say
history will treat Joe Biden's presidency unfavorably. The next day, USA
Today published an interview with Biden that reminded us why.
Biden's lack of self-awareness is incredible. He believes he would have
beaten Donald Trump if his disastrous debate performance hadn't forced him
from the race. Biden told reporter Susan Page that his laughable claim is "based on the polling." What polling—from Mars? As CNN's Harry Enten
pointed out, when Biden withdrew from the race in July, he was on track to
lose not only the battlegrounds but also reliably blue states such as
Virginia, New Mexico, and New Hampshire.
Democratic elites shoved Biden aside for Kamala Harris because his June 27 debate with Trump revealed to the world that the oldest president in
history was not up to the job. And yet, to this day, Biden pretends that
his age and physical and mental condition did not contribute to either his unpopularity or his belated decision not to run for a second term. When
Page asked Biden delicately if he would have had the "vigor" to serve
until January 2029, Biden replied, "I don't know." He must be the only
person alive who's unaware that the answer to Page's question is NO.
Biden's ego led him to conclude he could gaslight the public into thinking
that he was able to execute the duties of president until age 86. His ego prevented him from recognizing that the surprising Democratic performance
in the 2022 midterm election was a perfect opportunity to announce he
would let other, younger candidates run in a contested, competitive
primary for his party's 2024 nomination. In the end, the attractions of
power were too strong. Biden tried to keep up the charade. And everything
fell apart.
The president carries a chip on his shoulder visible from space. His
desire to prove that he's better than his predecessors, especially his
former boss Barack Obama, was behind foreign policy blunders such as the retreat from Afghanistan, dilatory resupply of Ukraine, ambivalence in the Middle East, and blocking Nippon Steel's acquisition of U.S. Steel on
national security grounds. The other day Biden yelled at a group of
journalists that "I might be the oldest president, but I know more world leaders than any one of you have ever met in your whole g—m life!" Who
cares? Did no one tell him that geopolitics isn't a game of Six Degrees of Separation?
Above the fireplace in the Oval Office hangs a portrait of FDR. In 2021, a group of academic flatterers told Biden that he could succeed, perhaps
even surpass, the four-term president who gave us the New Deal and victory
in World War II. And Biden fell for it. As usual, his reach exceeded his
grasp. His American Rescue Plan Act, Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, CHIPS
and Science Act, and Inflation Reduction Act unleashed a torrent of
spending that contributed to record inflation, higher interest rates, and
the national debt. Biden is unapologetic. "There are things that are going
to create enormous wealth and work out there," he told USA Today, "but it
takes time." Not soon enough for the Democrats.
A decade from now, voters may or may not recognize that the bridge they
are driving over was built using money from the Bipartisan Infrastructure
Law. But they certainly could tell, and quickly, that Biden's spending and energy policies were responsible for the inflation eroding their standard
of living. Biden's argument was that government policy could weaken
national populism by improving the fortunes of the working class. The
opposite happened.
Why? Because voters are not dopes. You can't tell members of the working
class that their lives are improving when the price of gas is rising, a
trip to the grocery store eats up much of a paycheck, and asylum-seekers
from the southern border are camping down the street.
Biden and his apologists tout job growth and a record stock market. These
are accomplishments, to be sure, but positive macro data do not override
voter dissatisfaction with prices and interest rates. Also, Americans are unhappy about more than the economy. Biden combined big spending with a left-wing cultural agenda. The big spending created inflation, and the
cultural agenda turned off normal people. Not even the shiniest
semiconductor plant in Wisconsin can silence popular outrage at DEI,
gender ideology, open borders, and slavishness to teachers' unions.
Biden has repeated these personal and ideological errors throughout his
months as a lame duck. It's as if the whole horrible exercise has been distilled into two-and-a-half months. Biden abused the pardon power twice: First, he forgave his son preemptively of all crimes Hunter has committed
or may one day commit; then, he commuted the death sentences of all but
three federal prisoners. Biden acted according to a lunatic double
standard. Why the expansive pardon for Hunter but not for others convicted
of similar offenses? Why spare a child murderer but not the Boston
Marathon bomber? (To be clear, I support the death penalty and am
disgusted by Biden's commutations.)
Part of the reason for Biden's moves is spite. He wants to "Trump-proof"
his unpopular legacy. That's why he auctioned off materials for the border wall, honored Hillary Clinton and George Soros with the Presidential Medal
of Freedom, and banned offshore drilling across a record 625 million acres
of ocean. It’s why he told USA Today that he is considering preemptive
pardons for allies who might be investigated by the GOP Congress and Trump Justice Department.
Yet the lesson of Biden's presidency is that the Left's attempts to stop
Trump only make him stronger. "Middle-out, bottom-up" economics made
voters look back fondly on the Trump economy. "A foreign policy for the
middle class" made voters reminisce about the world before 2021. And
Democratic lawfare turned the former president into a victim of a two-
tiered system of justice.
Biden is left defending decisions that history will judge—has
judged—harshly. He is lackadaisical when he's not being defensive. At one point, Biden asked USA Today, "Who knows what I'm going to be when I'm 86
years old?"
I do. When he's 86 years old, Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. will still be the one-term president responsible for Donald Trump's return to the White
House.
Published under: 2024 Election , Biden Administration , Donald Trump , Government Spending , Joe Biden , Polls
--
November 5, 2024 - Congratulations President Donald Trump. We look
forward to America being great again.
The disease known as Kamala Harris has been effectively treated and
eradicated.
We live in a time where intelligent people are being silenced so that
stupid people won't be offended.
Durham Report: The FBI has an integrity problem. It has none.
Thank you for cleaning up the disaster of the 2008-2017 Obama / Biden
fiasco, President Trump.
Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
queer liberal democrat donors.
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