US Give Biden a Break - LEAVE BRITTANY ALONE!

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Joe Biden has been president of the United States for 43 days. He inherited power from a predecessor who was trying to overturn the 2020 election results via insurrection just two weeks before Inaugural Day, and whose appointees refused the kind of routine transition cooperation other administrations took for granted. His party has a four-vote margin of control in the House, and only controls the Senate via the vice presidential tie-breaking vote (along with a power-sharing arrangement with Republicans). Democratic control of the Senate was not assured until the wee hours of January 6 when the results of the Georgia runoff were clear. Biden took office in the midst of a COVID-19 winter surge, a national crisis over vaccine distribution, and flagging economic indicators.

Biden named all his major appointees well before taking office, and as recommended by every expert, pushed for early confirmation of his national security team, which he quickly secured. After some preliminary discussions with Republicans that demonstrated no real possibility of GOP support for anything like the emergency $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief and stimulus package he had promised, and noting the votes weren’t there in the Senate for significant filibuster reform, Biden took the only avenue open to him. He instructed his congressional allies to pursue the budget reconciliation vehicle to enact his COVID package, with the goal of enacting it by mid-March, when federal supplemental unemployment insurance would run out. Going the reconciliation route meant exposing the package to scrutiny by the Senate parliamentarian, It also virtually guaranteed total opposition from congressional Republicans, which in turn meant Senate Democratic unanimity would be essential.



The House passed the massive and complex reconciliation bill on February 27, right on schedule, with just two Democratic defections, around the same time as the Senate parliamentarian, to no one’s great surprise, deemed a $15 minimum wage provision (already opposed by two Senate Democrats) out of bounds for reconciliation. The Senate is moving ahead with a modified reconciliation bill, and the confirmation of Biden’s Cabinet is chugging ahead slowly but steadily. Like every recent president, he’s had to withdraw at least one nominee – in his case Neera Tanden for the Office of Management and Budget, though the administration’s pick for deputy OMB director is winning bipartisan praise and may be substituted smoothly for Tanden.

Add in his efforts to goose vaccine distribution which has more than doubled since he took office and any fair assessment of Biden’s first 43 days should be very positive. But the man is currently being beset by criticism from multiple directions. Republicans, of course, have united in denouncing Biden’s refusal to surrender his agenda in order to secure bipartisan “unity” as a sign that he’s indeed the radical socialist – or perhaps the stooge of radical socialists – that Donald Trump always said he was. Progressives are incensed by what happened on the minimum wage, though it was very predictable. And media critics are treating his confirmation record as a rolling disaster rather than a mild annoyance, given the context of a federal executive branch that was all but running itself for much of the last four years.

To be clear, I have never been a big Joe Biden fan. I found fault with his presidential candidacy early and often. I voted for Elizabeth Warren in California’s 2020 primary, and worried a lot about Biden’s fetish for bipartisanship. I support a $15 minimum wage, and as a former Senate employee, have minimal respect for the upper chamber’s self-important traditions. But c’mon: what, specifically, is the alternative path he could have pursued the last 43 days? Republican criticism is not worthy of any serious attention: the GOP is playing the same old tapes it recorded in 2009 when Barack Obama (and his sidekick Biden) spent far too much time chasing Republican senators around Washington in search of compromises they never intended to make. While they are entitled to oppose Biden’s agenda, they are not entitled to kill it.

Progressive criticism of Biden feels formulaic. Years and years of investment in the rhetoric of the eternal “fight” and the belief that outrage shapes outcomes in politics and government have led to the habit of seeing anything other than total subscription to the left’s views as a sell-out. Yes, Kamala Harris could theoretically overrule the Senate parliamentarian on the minimum wage issue, but to what end? So long as Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema oppose the $15 minimum wage, any Harris power play could easily be countered by a successful Republican amendment to strike the language in question, and perhaps other items as well. And if the idea is to play chicken with dissident Democrats over the fate of the entire reconciliation bill, is a $15 minimum wage really worth risking a $1.9 trillion package absolutely stuffed with subsidies for struggling low-income Americans? Are Fight for 15 hardliners perhaps conflating ends and means here?



Media carping about Biden’s legislative record so far is frankly just ridiculous. Presumably writing about the obscure and complicated details of reconciliation bills is hard and unexciting work that readers may find uninteresting, while treating Tanden’s travails as an existential crisis for the Biden administration provides drama, but isn’t at all true. The reality is that Biden’s Cabinet nominees are rolling through the Senate with strong confirmation votes (all but one received at least 64 votes), despite a steadily more partisan atmosphere for confirmations in recent presidencies. The COVID-19 bill is actually getting through Congress at a breakneck pace despite its unprecedented size and complexity. Trump’s first reconciliation bill (which was principally aimed at repealing Obamacare) didn’t pass the House until May 4, 2017, and never got through the Senate. Yes, Obama got a stimulus bill through Congress in February 2009, but it was less than half the size, much simpler, and more to the point, there were 59 Senate Democrats in office when it passed, which meant he didn’t even have to use reconciliation.

There’s really no exact precedent for Biden’s situation, particularly given the atmosphere of partisanship in Washington and the whole country right now, and the narrow window he and his party possess – in terms of political capital and time – to get important things done. He should not be judged on any one legislative provision or any one Cabinet nomination. So far the wins far outweigh the losses and omissions. Give the 46th president a break.
 
Well, ~90% of blacks are going to vote Democrat no matter what and no matter who.

She can't be all that popular if they picked white men over her in the primary though.
Kamala Harris has done many great things for black people, you know, like providing free food and shelter courtesy of our fine slave labor camps correctional facilities. I seriously think that both parties' bases suffer from a severe case of collective Stockholm Syndrome, but the black community seems to have it much more.

Joe Biden could dress up in full Ku Klux Klan regalia and light a cross in every yard in America, and he would not lose a single vote from anyone, let alone the African American base.
 
Kamala Harris has done many great things for black people, you know, like providing free food and shelter courtesy of our fine slave labor camps correctional facilities. I seriously think that both parties' bases suffer from a severe case of collective Stockholm Syndrome, but the black community seems to have it much more.

Joe Biden could dress up in full Ku Klux Klan regalia and light a cross in every yard in America, and he would not lose a single vote from anyone, let alone the African American base.
 
Buyer's Remorse is going to be a running theme for the next few years.
 
The dems knew almost a year ago That Creepy Uncle Joe was mentally unstable.. The media did a whole lot to divert attention away from this frighting fact. Harris will pull a "Showgirls" and push Creepy Uncle joe down the stairs any day now.. Mark my words.
 
Not even reading it. Y'all fuckers spent the last 5 years finding every single minutia you could about Trump and anyone who dared to support him, and now you're complaining when you get maybe 50% of it back now that you're in power? And it largely isn't coming from established media either?

Welcome to a fraction of the last 5 years of the people you call "deplorables" lives were like.
 
I doubt that's true now. Biden has burned a lot of bridges already and it's only been 2 months.
And even worse, if he croaks that whore of a prosecutor takes the wheel. I suppose there's nowhere you can't go in life if you blow enough creepy old men with smelly balls.
 
No it is the fact that your go to insult is whore.
If I tried to explain her history as a prosecutor who has imprisoned thousands of young black men who have either been falsely accused or only guilty of minor offenses, and how this has continued over the course of many years, it would be too hard for the smoothbrains in this thread to understand. Also most politicians get blowjobs while in office, she's the first to enter office by giving one. Quite the achievement to celebrate for International Women's Day.
 
No it is the fact that your go to insult is whore.
She is a literal whore, like all politicians. She spent months calling Joe Biden a racist and a sexist but when he won the nomination for Presidency she immediately accepted and pretended like she hadn't been his enemy a week prior.

 
She is a literal whore, like all politicians. She spent months calling Joe Biden a racist and a sexist but when he won the nomination for Presidency she immediately accepted and pretended like she hadn't been his enemy a week prior.

Progressives are the real racists, Exhibit A
 
She is a literal whore, like all politicians. She spent months calling Joe Biden a racist and a sexist but when he won the nomination for Presidency she immediately accepted and pretended like she hadn't been his enemy a week prior.
You forgot the time she called him a rapist. Since that whole thing seemingly disappeared during the election.
 
You forgot the time she called him a rapist. Since that whole thing seemingly disappeared during the election.
I find it baffling, terrifying and sad that fucking libtards are ignoring this tidbit

Liberal bigots are the ones who trouble me the most. I distrust the extremes. Scratch a conservative and you find someone who prefers the past over any future. Scratch a liberal and you find a closet aristocrat. It’s true! Liberal governments always develop into aristocracies. The bureaucracies betray the true intent of people who form such governments. Right from the first, the little people who formed the governments which promised to equalize the social burdens found themselves suddenly in the hands of bureaucratic aristocracies. Of course, all bureaucracies follow this pattern..."

Frank Herbert (from God Emperor of Dune)
 
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