Sunday, November 12, 2023

Editorial: Don’t Panic on Joe Biden

 Progressives need to settle down about polls that show criminal defendant Donald Trump running neck and neck, or even slightly ahead of President Joe Biden a year before the election. 

Sure, Biden is 80 years old, he will be 81 when the election is held and he’ll be 82 when he starts his second term, but he is healthy, alert and appears to be vigorous as he handles the nation’s affairs. Some of our friends believe Biden should step down and let somebody else lead the Democratic ticket in 2024, but the incumbent Biden certainly is in better shape, physically and mentally, than Trump, who appears increasingly disconnected from reality, as shown in his public ravings as he faces criminal trials on 91 state and federal felony charges in four different jurisdictions, and civil trials for fraud and sexual assault. And if anything happens to Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris is well-qualified to take over, unlike US Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., a little-known third-term congressman from Minnesota who recently entered the Democratic race in the hopes of opening the primary to a “new generation of leaders,” which would seed the corporate media with “Democrats in disarray” stories.

The New York Times fed the paranoia with its Nov. 5 report on a poll conducted by Siena College for the Times from Oct. 22 to Nov. 3 that found Biden trailing Trump by margins of four to 10 percentage points among registered voters in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania. Biden was ahead only in Wisconsin, by two percentage points, the poll found. “Discontent pulsates throughout the Times/Siena poll, with a majority of voters saying Mr. Biden’s policies have personally hurt them,” the Times reported. “The survey also reveals the extent to which the multiracial and multigenerational coalition that elected Mr. Biden is fraying. Demographic groups that backed Mr. Biden by landslide margins in 2020 are now far more closely contested, as two-thirds of the electorate sees the country moving in the wrong direction.”

The Northwest Progressive Institute, based in Redmond, Wash., concluded that Republican voters were oversampled in these polls. 

“A whopping four-fifths of the total sample said they consider themselves something other than liberal, or refused to answer. Thirty-nine percent identified as ‘moderate’ — a label that sounds good but doesn’t stand for anything — and 36% identified as conservative, nearly twice as many as those who said liberal.”

The poll found 53% of respondents said Biden’s policies have hurt them, which the NWI analysts found “objectively nonsensical,” as Biden has signed into law a long list of bills to help most Americans. For example, the Inflation Reduction Act is finally allowing Medicare to negotiate the price of prescription drugs. The American Rescue Plan reduced child poverty with the Child Tax Credit. The administration is using its authority under existing law to try to forgive student loan debt. 

The same poll found 51% of respondents said Trump’s policies helped them, despite Trump’s policies having been incredibly destructive.

Biden’s actions have been popular among those who know about them. But other polling has showed Americans simply don’t know about these things.

“Americans have heard the most about the Biden administration lowering prescription drug costs, ramping up clean energy, and investing in infrastructure, but even on these accomplishments, fewer than three in five Americans have heard about each one,” Navigator Research reported Oct. 24.

“Communicating around Biden’s accomplishments improves his net job approval rating by double digits, especially among people unfavorable to both Biden and Trump, younger Americans, and college-educated women.” Dems need to spread that information.

The key takeaway: Once voters learn about what Biden and Vice President Harris have gotten done, they become more enthusiastic about supporting the ticket in 2024.

On Capitol Hill, fourth time was the charm in late October as Republicans finally settled on Mike Johnson as House Speaker, three weeks after they ousted Speaker Kevin McCarthy Oct. 3 for cooperating with Democrats to keep the federal government operating for six weeks into the new fiscal year.

Johnson, a little-known congressman in just his fourth term representing northwest Louisiana, played the long game: First up was Majority Leader Steve Scalise of the New Orleans suburbs, who was nominated by the Republican conference in a secret 113-99 vote over Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan of Ohio, but Scalise dropped the bid after more than a dozen hardliners declared their opposition. He could only afford to lose four GOP votes. Next up was Jordan, a leader of the right-wing “Freedom” caucus, who got the nomination but couldn’t consolidate the GOP vote despite a bullying campaign, which reportedly included death threats to the families of holdouts, before the conference dropped Jordan as their nominee. Next up was House Majority Whip Tom Emmer of Minnesota, but two dozen MAGA Republicans opposed his bid after Trump suggested Emmer was a RINO (Republican in Name Only) because he accepted the 2020 election results. Emmer withdrew. At that point, Johnson stepped forward with support of the MAGA Republicans. As a Christian Dominionist leader of Trump’s efforts to overturn the election, Johnson had support of the Lyin’ King, who dubbed him “MAGA Mike,” and he consolidated GOP support. including some who set aside their resistance to election deniers. Johnson won with 220 votes Oct. 25. 

Johnson’s immediate responsibility was to get a continuing resolution to fund the government into the new year, while Republicans finish work on appropriation bills, but his first legislative priority was to reject additional support for Ukraine and link $14.3 billion in emergency aid to Israel with roughly equivalent cuts to the IRS, disregarding reports from the Congressional Budget Office that the cuts to the IRS would reduce tax collections and add $26.8 billion to the deficit over the next decade.

As speaker, Johnson is expected to pursue proposals to cut Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, as he did as chairman of the Republican Study Committee between 2019 and 2021. Johnson helped craft budget resolutions that called for $2 trillion in Medicare cuts, $3 trillion in Medicaid and Affordable Care Act cuts and $750 billion in Social Security cuts, noted Bobby Kogan of the Center for American Progress. Johnson also has proposed raising the Social Security retirement age further, lowering annual cost of living benefits and advancing privatization efforts, said Alex Lawson, executive director of the progressive advocacy group Social Security Works. 

Charles Pierce of Esquire.com suggested that after the shutdown is avoided, Democrats should start filing motions to vacate the chair every few days. “Make the Republicans vote to keep the Speakership in the hands of a slick theocratic grifter a few times a week. After all, that stupid Matt Gaetz rule on vacating the chair when one member proposes it is still a ticking time bomb. Maybe it’s time to have a little fun.” — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, December 1, 2023


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Selections from the December 1, 2023 issue

 COVER/Sarah Jane Tribble 

Rural hospitals feel the pinch as Medicare Advantage plans grow

EDITORIAL 
Don’t panic on Joe Biden


FRANK LINGO
International Energy Agency paints false rosy future

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 

DON ROLLINS 
Sports betting in Ohio: All bets are still on

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
Biden should withdraw

DISPATCHES 
Trump’s ominous plan for revenge.
Telling the truth costs Meadows.
Gushing: US oil output under Biden beats Trump record.
Families go hungry since Republicans and Joe Manchin ended child tax credit.
Economy adds 150,000 jobs, unemployment stays below 4%.
Trump reminds workers how weird he is.
Republicans are tanking in battleground House districts.


ART CULLEN 
Listening to rural working families

ALAN GUEBERT 
Now for the really hard, chaotic part


SARAH GERTLER 
Americans need to hear more Palestinian voices

JOHN YOUNG 
Thou shalt not impede gun hobbyists’ fun

POOJA SALHOTRA
COVID-19 funding halted rural hospital closures across Texas, until now


DICK POLMAN 
The most pro-union president in history has scored another big win, in case anyone cares

LAURA CLAWSON 
UAW wins for workers and the environment — and knocks down a favorite Trump talking point

DAVID McCALL 
Pathway to the Middle Class

SAM PIZZIGATI 
Is a ‘Mayday!’ now looming for our billionaire class? 

SARAH ANDERSON 
Why is Biden cracking down on stock buybacks in just one industry? 

ROBERT KUTTNER 
Debunking the latest attack on Social Security 

THOM HARTMANN  
Universal Basic Income: If it works for billionaires’ children, why not the poor? 


SONALI KOLHATKAR  
What’s behind the Texas GOP’s latest attack on people of color? 

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
A plan, a plan, our kingdom for a plan

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
The new pseudo-physician legislators

SAM URETSKY 
Pick the right Medicare before you need it

SETH SANDRONSKY 
Pfizer grows by merging with Seagen

WAYNE O’LEARY 
Reaping what’s been sown

LEW KINGSBURY  
Stop warrantless government spying now

WINSLOW MYERS  
Gaza and Maine

JUAN COLE 
If Gaza is a conflict over oil money investments, Norway points to a near future where petroleum is worthless

N. GUNASEKARAN 
The unheard voice of the Global South

JAMIE STIEHM 
Giant pandas make it all better — for a while

BARRY FRIEDMAN 
The box of ducks

PAUL HELLWEG 
Talk to a neighbor, feel better, save humanity

RALPH NADER 
Mass media needs to probe deeper re: Israel/Gaza conflict


DAVE MARSTON 
Creative builders get rural housing done

ROB PATTERSON 
A masterful examination of a music scene

ELWOOD WATSON 
Matt Gaetz is right about the new Republican speaker 

ED RAMPELL  
An anti-racist cinematic masterpiece: ‘Stamped from the Beginning’


GENE NICHOL
Mocking justice


From The Progressive Populist, December 1, 2023


Populist.com

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Copyright © 2023 The Progressive Populist