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Showing posts with label PRESIDENT BIDEN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PRESIDENT BIDEN. Show all posts

Thursday, February 3, 2022

RSN: FOCUS: Adam Serwer | Republicans Seem to Think Putting a Black Woman on the Supreme Court Is the Real Racism

 

 

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03 February 22

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U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C. (photo: Eric Baradat/Getty)
FOCUS: Adam Serwer | Republicans Seem to Think Putting a Black Woman on the Supreme Court Is the Real Racism
Adam Serwer, The Atlantic
Serwer writes: "Joe Biden hasn't yet picked a nominee to fill the seat of retiring Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, but conservatives already know that the nominee is unqualified. After all, Biden has vowed to nominate a Black woman."

Biden hasn’t even named his nominee yet, and already conservatives are saying she’s undeserving.


Joe Biden hasn’t yet picked a nominee to fill the seat of retiring Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, but conservatives already know that the nominee is unqualified. After all, Biden has vowed to nominate a Black woman.

As New York magazine’s Jonathan Chait writes, conservative outlets are lamenting that Biden has elevated “skin color over qualifications,” accusing Biden of trying to foment “tribal warfare” and of engaging in “discrimination,” and insisting that the eventual nominee would be “an affirmative-action hire, a kind of a trophy in a display case. The token Black woman.” One conservative legal commenter sneered that instead of his preferred choice, the president would be appointing a “lesser black woman.” Republican senators have already indicated that they will not support anyone Biden nominates, so it’s not like the nominee’s qualifications would actually make a difference to them.

If this all sounds somewhat familiar, it’s because the last time a Democratic president nominated a woman of color to the Court, legal elites on the right and the left insisted that Sonia Sotomayor was an unqualified affirmative-action pick who was chosen only because she is of Puerto Rican descent. The idea that conservatives would not be making such arguments if Biden had not announced in advance that he would be appointing a Black woman is nonsense; Barack Obama did not announce any such criteria before nominating Sotomayor, and they said virtually the same things about her—conservatives attacked her as a “quota pick” who was chosen “because she’s a woman and Hispanic, not because she was the best qualified.” At the time, Sotomayor had more judicial experience before being nominated than any other sitting justice, and that remains the case today, with the appointment of three new justices by Donald Trump.

Now, I could point out that, like Sotomayor, every person on the shortlist of potential nominees has impeccable credentials. I could note that Supreme Court seats have long been about ethnic-coalition politics and patronage, as Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern have written. I could point out that Ronald Reagan promised to appoint a woman to the bench during his campaign, because it was “time for a woman to sit among our highest jurists” and because such “appointments can carry enormous symbolic significance”; he ultimately nominated Sandra Day O’Connor. I could point out Reagan’s ongoing concern with representation when he nominated Antonin Scalia because he wanted a candidate of Italian “extraction.” I might note that George H. W. Bush’s nomination of Clarence Thomas to replace Thurgood Marshall, the first Black justice on the Court, was in keeping with previous eras’ tradition of having “Jewish” and “Catholic” seats. I might argue that under Trump, who similarly pledged to appoint a woman before selecting Amy Coney Barrett, having a law degree and a crank blog was sufficient qualification for the federal bench. And I could point out the absurdity of arguing that racism is when you first nominate a Black woman to the Supreme Court after more than 200 years, not when you exclude Black women from the nation’s highest court for more than 200 years.

These are all relevant points, but none of them would change anything, because the coordinated attack on the qualifications of a nominee who has not yet been named is not about preventing her from being confirmed. This is a relatively low-stakes judicial battle, because Biden’s choice will not alter the 6–3 conservative majority on the Court, and the Democrats’ slim Senate majority will likely be sufficient to confirm the nominee, barring unforeseen complications. This is not an argument that can be won by facts and logic, because it is not about winning an argument at all.

Rather, these attacks are meant to reiterate the narrative that liberals elevate unqualified Black Americans at the expense of others who are truly deserving, as part of a larger backlash narrative, one that echoes past eras in American history, in which advocacy for equal rights is turning white conservatives into an oppressed class. Republicans will likely be unable to block the nominee, but they can extract a political price, motivate their own voters, and dull the historic significance of Biden’s choice by orienting the political conversation around the idea that another shiftless Negro is getting free stuff at others’ expense.

“Black women are, what, 6 percent of the U.S. population?” Senator Ted Cruz of Texas helpfully summarized on his podcast. “He’s saying to 94 percent of Americans, ‘I don’t give a damn about you.’” Cruz continued, “He’s saying, ‘If you’re a white guy, tough luck. If you’re a white woman, tough luck. You don’t qualify.’” All of the nonwhite justices in American history would fill a third of the current Court. For Cruz, this is apparently far too many.

This kind of political narrative predates affirmative action by more than a century. During Reconstruction, President Andrew Johnson complained that Congress’s attempt to defend the rights of the emancipated as the white South tried to force them back into conditions of near slavery amounted to establishing “for the security of the colored race safeguards which go infinitely beyond any that the General Government has ever provided for the white race.” Running for president in 1868, a few short years after abolition, Horatio Seymour, the Democratic nominee, argued that the “laborers at the North” had been made to “feed and clothe these idle Africans,” as though all the South’s wealth had not been built on their labor. The Supreme Court justices who struck down a law in 1888 barring discrimination on the basis of race, helping pave the way for Jim Crow, argued that the time had come for Black Americans to cease being a “special favorite of the laws.” The idea that Black people are getting something they have not earned by gaining access to something white people have long had began the second that slavery was abolished.

Of course, Black Americans are not the only ethnic minority that has been attacked in this way in Court confirmation battles. Sotomayor is far from the first or only example. In his history of the Thurgood Marshall confirmation fight, the journalist Wil Haygood recounts that the patrician nativist Senator Henry Cabot Lodge attacked the first Jewish nominee, Louis Brandeis, in similar terms. “If it were not that Brandeis is a Jew, and a German Jew,” Lodge insisted, “he would never have been appointed and he would not have a baker’s dozen of votes in the Senate. This seems to be in the highest degree un-American and wrong.” The segregationist Strom Thurmond accused Marshall, by then a judge, former solicitor general, and litigator of great renown, of lacking “an elementary knowledge of basic constitutional principles.”

As the above examples show, the initial appointment of a member of an underrepresented minority to the Court has frequently been met with the insistence that he or she does not deserve the position. Attacks on a nominee’s qualifications, especially when a nominee has extensive legal experience, or in this case, when she has not yet been named, tend to be proxies for ideological objections. Republicans would have few concerns about nominating some baby-faced Federalist Society ideologue who had been shoveled onto the federal bench a few months prior. Thurmond objected to Marshall both because he was Black and because Marshall had spent his life fighting for racial equality, a principle Thurmond had spent his life opposing. Questioning Marshall’s qualifications was a way to register those objections in the language of constitutional fidelity rather than mere prejudice.

Marshall’s opponents failed to block his nomination, but they nevertheless used it as a platform for their own narrative, which was that the civil-rights movement and a liberal Supreme Court, rather than centuries of discrimination and exclusion, were responsible for the riots erupting across the nation, and that confirming Marshall would make such problems worse. Marshall’s opponents, Wil Haygood writes, “figured it a potent time to bring up issues of crime and security, which they imagined would greatly weaken Marshall given his reputation as an attorney who had fought to give the accused equal rights.”

Those objecting to Biden fulfilling his pledge to nominate a Black woman in this manner are similarly using this opportunity to put forth a familiar narrative, that liberals elevate unworthy Black candidates at the expense of those more deserving.

Appeals to meritocracy in this context are not about merit; they are a means to diminish people whom these critics would see as undeserving no matter what they achieve. If the Republicans seeking to stoke resentment over this appointment can successfully turn the story of the first Black woman on the Supreme Court into another example of Black people getting free stuff they haven’t earned, they will be perfectly satisfied, even if she is confirmed. The important battles over the future of the Court have already taken place, and the right has already won them.

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Tuesday, January 25, 2022

RSN: FOCUS: David Rothkopf | DC Is a Donut. There Is No Center in Washington Politics

 

 

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25 January 22

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Joe Biden. (photo: Frank Franklin II/AP)
FOCUS: David Rothkopf | DC Is a Donut. There Is No Center in Washington Politics
David Rothkopf, The Daily Beast
Rothkopf writes: "'Blame the left' is Washington's latest craze."

“Blame the left” is Washington’s latest craze.

It would not be surprising if it were just coming from the GOP. But scapegoating progressives is now an increasingly popular sport among Washington-based pundits—and even some Democratic Party strategists—trying to identify who or what to blame for President Joe Biden’s low poll numbers and the myriad struggles of his first year in office.

Unfortunately, these analyses are based on several fallacies. First, Biden’s poll numbers after one year in office, while undoubtedly sagging, are still substantially ahead of Donald Trump’s.

Next is the obvious but somehow underrated truism that poll numbers after one year in office are fairly meaningless. Comparisons to prior decades—when partisan politics weren’t nearly as divisive—are also not particularly useful.

Biden’s poll numbers cannot be attributed to any specific action he has or has not taken. In fact, it is highly likely that a combination of factors beyond his control—such as the emergence of a highly contagious and vaccine-resistant strain of COVID-19, and the GOP campaign to reject essential public health measures—has had more of an impact on his numbers than anything for which Biden is personally responsible.

President Biden’s achievements, in fact, outweigh his struggles. On his watch, more than 6.5 million new jobs were added to the economy. Over 200 million Americans got vaccinated. The $1.9 trillion American Rescue Package lifted half of America’s poorest children out of poverty. The $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill was passed with bipartisan support. Biden appointed more judges than any previous president and ended America’s longest war. He’s brought a semblance of stability back to the White House after four years of chaos, irrationality, and corruption.

Yes, the president’s Build Back Better (BBB) spending bill and voting rights reform have stalled. But there is no reason to define Biden solely in the areas where he has faced opposition, especially given the very slim congressional majorities he inherited.

Furthermore, the argument that Biden’s legislative agenda has been co-opted by progressives at the expense of the support of centrists is based on a fallacy.

Nearly everything Biden has done in his first year has been supported by either all the Senate’s Democrats, or all but one or two of them. Does this mean that 48 out of 50 senators are “far-left” and that Biden needs to tailor his policies to suit the other two? And does it mean that the president should be adjusting his policies in a futile attempt to win the votes of so-called “centrist” Republicans who have voted as a bloc of opposition on nearly everything Biden has sent them?

When it comes to elections—and the politics of the nation as a whole—there is, of course, a center.

Look at polling. Look at the “progressive” ideas discussed or supported by Biden—from protecting the climate to providing child care, from better health care to fairer taxation, from gun control to voting rights, from a woman’s right to choose to education reform—they are all supported by a substantial majority of Americans.

Biden is not advancing a “left” agenda, he is fighting for a majoritarian agenda, for goals sought by the vast majority of us that would, in turn, benefit the vast majority of us.

But the grim reality is that D.C. is a donut. There is no “center” in Washington politics. There are two parties and a tiny handful of people caught between them. The only way for Biden to win legislatively in the nation’s capital is for Democrats to win bigger majorities this November.

The problem is that D.C. politics are increasingly unresponsive to the majority of Americans. The system protects and super-empowers a right-leaning minority. Legislators represent states or congressional districts that either lean toward extremes or are gerrymandered to behave that way.

Some ideas associated with progressive causes haven’t been great for Democrats. Defunding the police is one such idea. This was not a good framing of the need for police reform. It may have done some damage, electorally. But it’s not an idea endorsed in any way by Biden, his administration, or Democratic leadership.

However, many of Biden’s biggest triumphs were seeded by the progressives, and thus should be praised as essential to his success. Conversely, many of the things opposed by the GOP—as well as the centrist Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema—actually transcend politics. Ensuring the right to vote or combating the climate crisis or granting families and working mothers protections every other developed country in the world gives them are all broadly popular with Americans, and not at all “leftist” initiatives.

But advancing those policies does not require a more centrist president. What’s needed is fewer Republicans and their “centrist” allies in the House and Senate. That will mean embracing Democratic candidates who share the values and goals that are in tune with their states and districts. Once you’re outside of D.C., one size definitely does not fit all in politics. In some states that will mean candidates that are more centrist, though it just as likely could mean turning out more of the left-leaning Democratic base.

Of all the national leaders in the Democratic Party, the reality is that there is one who is best positioned to lead the campaign to achieve that kind of success in November. It just so happens to be the one whom Democrats chose as their candidate for president in 2020 and who, by virtue of his broad national appeal and his commitment to a majoritarian agenda, won by eight million votes.


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Monday, January 24, 2022

RSN: FOCUS: Evan Osnos | Why Biden Bet on a Senate That No Longer Exists

 


 

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It took a long, costly year in the White House for President Biden to confess that he had bet wrong on the Senate he once knew. (photo: Kent Nishimura/LA Times/Shutterstock)
FOCUS: Evan Osnos | Why Biden Bet on a Senate That No Longer Exists
Evan Osnos, The New Yorker
Osnos writes: "On the eve of the President's first anniversary in office, members of the chamber he served for so long voted for paralysis over action."

On the eve of the President’s first anniversary in office, members of the chamber he served for so long voted for paralysis over action.

"I’m proud to say I am a Senate man,” Joe Biden wrote, in 2007, his thirty-fourth year on Capitol Hill. “The job plays to my strengths and to my deepest beliefs.” Even by the standards of the Senate, Biden gloried in the club and its clichés. In his memoir, “Promises to Keep,” he cited the old saw that George Washington hailed the institution as a “cooling” body, a saucer where the boiled-over passions of the moment could dissipate. (Senators still cite it today, though historians aren’t sure that Washington ever said it.)

His faith in the Senate’s potential was not just empty pride. Since Biden was first elected to that chamber, from Delaware, in 1972, he had witnessed a variety of examples of feuds over big issues in which senators ultimately accepted personal political risk in the name of a larger national purpose. In 1977, President Jimmy Carter appealed across the aisle to Howard Baker, of Tennessee, the Republican Minority Leader, to support a treaty transferring the Panama Canal to local control (a move primarily intended to improve Washington’s dealings with Latin America). Baker’s aides warned him that collaborating with Carter would doom his dream of becoming President, but Baker, it is said, weighed the national-security implications and replied, “So be it.” He backed the treaty and there was no Baker Presidency. (As a consolation prize, Baker is remembered as the “Great Conciliator.”)

When disputes erupted within parties, senators spoke admiringly of those who found their way to manage their ambitions within the larger goals. In 1993, during Bill Clinton’s first year in office, he pressed Democrats to support higher taxes in his economic program, but Senator Bob Kerrey, of Nebraska, wouldn’t budge. Clinton, in a profane, private phone call, accused him of dooming the prospects of his Presidency. Kerrey resented it, but eventually backed Clinton, saying, in a speech on the Senate floor, “I could not and should not cast the vote that brings down your Presidency.”

When Biden entered the Presidential race in 2019, he had abundant firsthand knowledge of how far the Senate in the era of the Republican leader Mitch McConnell had fallen from its self-image. As Vice-President, he had witnessed McConnell’s famous pledge to stymie the Obama Administration at every turn; his blockage of Barack Obama’s right to nominate a Supreme Court Justice; his exponential growth of the use of the filibuster. But that evidence competed in Biden’s accounting with his own history of finding a way to work with unsavory and obstreperous counterparts, including the segregationists Strom Thurmond and James Eastland. Biden had even found a way to a deal with McConnell in the final days of 2012, agreeing to leave tax cuts in place in order to avert the Republicans’ threat to default on the debt ceiling. It had irritated fellow-Democrats, but served as fresh evidence of Biden’s contention that nobody was truly immune to negotiation.

As the election approached in 2020, even as the toxicity of the Trump era infected more of Washington, Biden held fast to his contention that he could persuade enough of his opponents to join him. “All you need,” he told me in an interview that summer, “is three, or four, or five Republicans who have seen the light a little bit.” He added, “I don’t think you can underestimate the impact of Trump not being there. The vindictiveness, the pettiness, the willingness to, at his own expense, go after people with vendettas.”

It took a long, costly year in the White House for Biden to confess that he had bet wrong on the Senate he once knew. On Wednesday, during a marathon press conference on the eve of his first anniversary in office, Biden conceded, “I didn’t anticipate there’d be such a stalwart effort to make sure that the most important thing was that President Biden didn’t get anything done.” Speaking to reporters in the East Room of the White House, he returned to the subject several times. “My buddy John McCain is gone,” he said, lamenting the absence of the late senator from Arizona, who had been a frequent partner on legislation and, not incidentally, one of the few Republican senators who ever challenged the calumnies and cruelties of Donald Trump. At one point, Biden posed a question to the audience that seemed at least as much a question to himself: “Did you ever think that one man out of office could intimidate an entire party, where they’re unwilling to take any vote contrary to what he thinks should be taken, for fear of being defeated in a primary?”

There were, of course, some who had urged Biden against believing that he could win Republican support. During the campaign, a Democrat who had served in the White House asked, of Biden’s assumptions, “Does he see his role as someone who can bring in the Never Trumpers and build some bipartisan consensus? I know from experience that’s a trap. We walked right into it. Your people lose faith, the Republicans never give you credit, you waste a lot of time—and you end up with the Tea Party.”

In the end, of course, it was not just Republicans who dented Biden’s hopes for the Senate; members of his own party lent a hand. For months, Biden and other Democratic leaders indulged and romanced the dissidents within, chiefly Joe Manchin, of West Virginia, and Kyrsten Sinema, of Arizona—cutting one proposal after another to meet their demands on infrastructure, voting rights, and social-safety-net programs under the Build Back Better plan. In public, Senate colleagues avoided criticizing the holdouts, who would eventually be needed for votes in the future. Manchin stoked that belief, telling reporters, in a faint echo of Kerrey’s comments from 1993, that, for all his objections, he intended to “make Joe Biden successful.” As Democrats pushed to finalize the Build Back Better plan, patience was running thin. “You have made your mark on this bill, you’ve dramatically cut its cost,” Dick Durbin, the second-ranked Democrat in the Senate, told CNN, referring to Manchin. “Now close the deal.” Instead, Manchin killed it, announcing on Fox News that he could never support the bill as written.

In that light, it was a fitting bit of scheduling that, while Biden was in front of reporters at the White House on Wednesday, Manchin was speaking in the Senate, in an effort to prevent his party from changing Senate rules to allow passage of voting-rights legislation in the face of Republican resistance. All fifty Republicans later voted against the voting-rights bill, but Manchin did not suggest a way around it; on the contrary, he urged his colleagues, in effect, to embrace a high-toned paralysis. “The Senate’s greatest rule is the one that is unwritten,” he said. “It’s the rule of self-restraint, which we have very little of anymore.” By the end of the evening, Manchin and Sinema had voted with the Republicans against changing the rules, a moment that seemed to crystallize the frustrations of Biden’s first year of dealing with the Senate he revered.

For voters, activists, and reporters who have come of age in the era of intractable divisions, it can be difficult to relate to a time when Congress found a way to compromise. “It is so dramatically different from the place I worked,” Ira Shapiro, a Senate staffer from 1975 to 1987 and the author of “Broken: Can the Senate Save Itself and the Country?,” told me on Wednesday. “There were certainly times when the Senate brought legislation to the floor when you didn’t know what the outcome would be, whether it was energy legislation, or labor-law reform, or the Civil Rights Act of ’64.” Shapiro went on, “You were counting on debate on the floor, persuasion in the cloak rooms, time for the interest groups to do their lobbying, coalitions to form, and compromises to be offered. But those were times when people were operating in good faith, and bipartisan compromises were possible.”

Biden’s pitch, as a candidate, always contained the sources of both his strength and his vulnerability. His odes to unity and his faith in government seemed positively countercultural, after four years in which Trump had bathed Americans in his sulfurous brand of cynicism. During the campaign, Biden’s broad, if vague, assurances that Washington could be redeemed effectively contrasted with Trump’s undisguised politico creed—a jumble of whataboutism, contempt for human rights and American ambition, a Putinist assumption that everyone operates in bad faith. Even voters who found Biden uninspiring gravitated to him out of sheer exhaustion with the Trumpian gloom.

As Biden passed his first anniversary, the assessments of his tenure mapped, in predictable fashion, on to the terrain of Washington. The White House pointed to the creation of 6.4 million jobs, more than had been created in any previous year; to an unemployment rate of 3.9 per cent that was far below the level when he took office; and to generational investments in infrastructure. But his approval ratings were dismal—lower than those of any post-Second World War President except for Trump at the end of his first year—and no matter how many times it was noted that the President was only at the end of the first quarter of his term, columnists already seemed to be competing to declare game over as early as possible. If Washington ever had a “cooling” saucer, it has rarely been harder to find.

Among the assessments of Biden’s first year, it was tempting to fault him for a stubborn naïveté, but Ira Shapiro understands the impulse to see the Senate redeem itself. “I doubt that Biden was under any illusions about the changes in the Senate, or about McConnell. I think he believed that the multiple crises in the country were clear enough that people, in good faith, would come together and make our government work. And he would’ve thought—most of us would’ve thought—that the fundamental assault on our democracy would be clear enough that at least Sinema and Manchin, and, perhaps, one or two Republicans, would recognize the threat.” He added, “The tragedy is we’re still living in McConnell’s America, aided and abetted by Manchin and Sinema.”


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Saturday, January 22, 2022

President Biden’s nominees need your help

 

President Biden just announced three highly qualified nominees to fill open seats on the Federal Reserve Board:

  • Sarah Bloom Raskin would be the vice-chair for bank supervision. She has previous experience as a Federal Reserve governor, the Deputy Secretary of the Treasury under President Obama, and the chief financial regulator of Maryland. Bloom Raskin is an experienced public servant and bank supervisor, with a deep understanding of the supervisory process.
     
  • Dr. Lisa Cook’s exceptional academic and research background make her a stand-out nominee to join the Federal Reserve. Her extraordinary research focuses on the intersection between race and our economy. If confirmed to her post, she would be the first Black woman to serve on the Federal Reserve Board.
     
  • Dr. Philip Jefferson joins a slate of nominees who are committed to maintaining stability in our economy in the midst of the pandemic. A former Federal Reserve employee, Dr. Jefferson brings his expertise as a professor specializing in labor markets and poverty to the institution.

The Federal Reserve Board oversees the American banking system and economy.

Bloom Raskin, Cook, and Jefferson are strong nominees who aren’t afraid to rein in Wall Street and the Big Banks to stop them from causing another financial collapse.

And their presence in the Federal Reserve will better represent the diversity of our country, including the women and communities of color that were hit hardest by the pandemic.

However, CNBC is reporting that President Biden’s nominees could face a tough battle to be confirmed in the Senate.

At least one of your senators is on the Senate Banking Committee. The first step to confirmation is a favorable vote in committee.

Please send an email to your senator right away and urge them to support President Biden’s highly-qualified Federal Reserve Board nominees.

(If you’re not sure who is on the Banking Committee, don’t worry — our online tool will help make sure your message goes to the right person.)

Thanks for taking a minute to make your voice heard,

East
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Thursday, January 20, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Biden gets his annual review

 



 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY MYAH WARD

Presented by AT&T

President Joe Biden answers questions during a news conference in the East Room of the White House.

President Joe Biden answers questions during a news conference in the East Room of the White House. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT — President Joe Biden gives his presidency pretty high marks at the one-year mark.

“I think the report cards look pretty good, if that’s where we’re at,” Biden said during today’s press conference, when asked about Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s comment that the midterm elections would serve as a report card for Biden’s performance on key issues.

That’s the self-evaluation. What does the rest of the class think? Nightly reached out to a panel of insiders and experts and asked them to evaluate the Biden administration’s first 365 days. The assignment: How would you assess the Biden administration’s first year? Give the administration’s performance a letter grade and point out any areas that have room for improvement. These answers have been edited.

“On the plus side, I strongly believe we are in an AI and semiconductor arms race to be the dominant military and economy of the world. It is a zero-sum game we have to win. The Biden administration is technologically literate and the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act and the NDAA will make a huge difference and hopefully allow us to win this race.

“On the downside, while there have been plenty of mistakes made and policies I disagree with, as in any administration, I think the glaring problem is that there is absolutely zero charisma in the Biden administration. It may be unfortunate that it is even a consideration, but in a social media and sound-bite world where everyone is a performer, someone has to have some charisma that connects to people and overwhelms memes, headlines and soundbites as a source of information.” Grade: B — Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks

“Biden may have had some very ambitious promises on his website, but he was elected to be a reassuring, competent, moderate caretaker president — a “bridge” to the next generation as he put it — who would 1) not be Donald Trump, 2) handle the pandemic, and 3) turn down the temperature of American politics by working on a bipartisan basis. He achieved #1 easily enough. But he has failed to one degree or another on the rest.

“It didn’t have to be this way. He defeated Sanders, Warren, and the other progressive primary candidates. He was under no obligation to take up the base’s agenda. But misled by a surprise victory in the Georgia senate runoffs, he let himself be convinced that he had a mandate to be a ‘transformational’ FDR-style president, despite the fact Democrats had the narrowest congressional majority in history. So instead of declaring victory after passage of his $1.9 trillion Covid relief package and his traditional infrastructure bill (achieving what Trump could not: “infrastructure week!”), he caved to the demands of Blue Checkmark Twitter liberals and Democratic congressional leaders and swung for the fences, even accusing his opponents of racism in furtherance of a failed project, while letting Covid, inflation, Afghanistan and the confidence of the voters get away from him. He took his eyes off the ball because he had his eye on history.” Grade: D+  Jonah Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Dispatch

“After the four most egregious years of racism and hateful rhetoric we’ve ever seen come out of the White House, the fabric of our democracy is worn thin. The fault lines in our society are exposed, and Black Americans are harmed the most. Our nation is in dire need of course-correcting legislation. To do nothing would be a betrayal of the principles America claims to stand on. The Biden presidency has an opportunity to move us forward and ensure equitable treatment of all Americans.

“Congress and the Biden Administration must be committed to delivering federal policy in favor of the people who elected them: communities of color. But, unfortunately, we’ve yet to see that happen in a real and meaningful way when it comes to voting rights, police reform, educational outcomes for debt-laden college graduates, and economic opportunities for small businesses. President Biden has made progress on racially diverse appointments in the executive and judicial branches — more than we’ve ever seen. However, it has yet to translate to policy and implementation to detect, address and remedy systemic racism. The real mark of his presidency lies in the outcomes, not the optics.” Grade: B — Derrick Johnson, president of the NAACP

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Plenty more insiders pulled out their red pens and graded Biden’s first year as president. Read on to see what Donna Brazile, Alicia Garza, Pat Toomey and more had to say. And reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at mward@politico.com, or on Twitter at @MyahWard.

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Supreme Court rejects Trump’s bid to shield records from Jan. 6 committee: The Supreme Court rejected former President Donald Trump’s bid to use executive privilege to block a House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection from accessing a trove of records created by Trump’s White House. Investigators have sought the documents to determine Trump’s actions and mindset in the weeks leading up to the Jan. 6 attack, as well as what he did as his supporters were rioting at the Capitol.

— CDC: Vaccinated Americans with a prior infection fared the best during Delta: Americans who received their primary series of vaccines and previously contracted Covid-19 had the highest protection against reinfection and hospitalization during the Delta variant-fueled outbreak, according to a new study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The study, published Wednesday, looked at four categories of people in New York and California — individuals who were unvaccinated with and without a prior infection and vaccinated people with and without a prior infection.

— Chaos in the skies averted — for now — as 5G switches on: Today’s debut of new 5G wireless arrived with some isolated diversions or delays of air traffic — but so far, no signs of mass chaos. The single largest disruptions so far appear to involve international airlines, a handful of which had canceled some or even all of their flights to the U.S. starting Tuesday. Among domestic flights, a handful of large cargo jets that were already midair when 5G went into effect overnight ended up diverting to another airport, according to the plane-tracking website FlightRadar24.

 

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— Gorsuch, Sotomayor deny beef over masks on the bench: The U.S. Supreme Court sought to defuse speculation of tensions between two of its sitting justices following a recent NPR report that chronicled divisions over Covid protocols within the nation’s highest court. Justices Neil Gorsuch and Sonia Sotomayor, in an unusual joint statement released today, insisted that Sotomayor had not asked Gorsuch to wear a mask during court proceedings. But the statement issued today diverged on key details from the NPR report and denied events that don’t actually appear in the report that the justices seemed to be rebutting.

— Top donors threaten to cut off funding to Sinema: A group of big-dollar donors who have spent millions electing Kyrsten Sinema and other Democratic senators is threatening to sever all funding to her if she doesn’t drop her opposition to changing Senate rules in order to pass voting rights legislation. In a letter to the Arizona lawmaker, which was first obtained by POLITICO, 70 Democratic donors — some of whom gave Sinema’s 2018 campaign the maximum contribution allowed by law — said they would support a primary challenge to Sinema and demanded that she refund their contributions to her 2018 campaign if she doesn’t budge.

 

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BIDENOLOGY

AND NOW, THE REST OF THE STORY — More Biden grades from our insiders:

Grade: A-

“Looking back on President Biden’s first year in office, I think his most important accomplishment was securing the passage of the American Rescue Plan, which I was proud to support. Covid-19 has wrought a once-in-a-lifetime crisis, and President Biden, along with congressional Democrats (and not a single Republican) met the moment by acting quickly to get shots in arms, put checks in pockets, support our small businesses, and help our economy get back up and running. Not to mention, slashing child poverty in half and creating more than 6 million jobs.

“President Biden showcased tremendous leadership in muscling through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which is nothing short of a historic investment in our nation’s future. And President Biden has already done more than any previous administration for our nation’s cybersecurity, which is among the most pressing threats of the 21st century. Between Chris Inglis, Jen Easterly and Anne Neuberger, the team he has assembled is the most talented I’ve ever seen.

It’s no secret that I disagreed with how President Biden handled the Afghanistan evacuation, but prior administrations also left him few good options.” — Rep. Jim Langevin (D-R.I.)

“Biden entered office facing a Category 5 storm of bad news: the worst pandemic in 100 years; a weak economy and high unemployment; razor-thin majorities in the House and Senate; Republicans opposing almost every administration initiative; two Democratic senators determined to preserve the filibuster; a defeated former president spreading the Big Lie that Biden-Harris didn’t really win the election; and a still dangerous anti-government insurrection.

“Given these obstacles, Biden deserves credit for remarkable achievements including: enactment of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan that funded the successful rollout of U.S. vaccines while putting money in the pockets of most families and state and local governments; enactment of the $1.2 trillion Bipartisan Infrastructure Law; winning confirmation of 41 federal judges; repairing U.S. relations with allies; and issuing 76 executive orders and 46 memoranda to make progress on climate change and other major areas.

“Even their shortcomings highlight the heroically ambitious nature of their agenda. The biggest disappointments have been the failure to win enough Senate support to pass the Build Back Better Act or voting rights legislation, and the collapse of Afghanistan’s government as a result of former Trump’s failed peace deal. The challenge ahead is to elect more Democrats to overcome congressional obstruction.” — Donna Brazile, former DNC chair

Grade: D+

“The Biden administration started off strong: Covid-19 vaccine distribution and child care tax credits. Infrastructure was a significant concession to white communities on economic relief, and the stimulus package was an important first step. Making Juneteenth a federal holiday and speeches (though contradictory) on police reform and voting rights amount to symbolic victories.

“Yet attempting to govern like the 1990s in the 2020 political landscape has been disastrous, as evidenced by little progress made to hold white nationalist insurrectionists accountable for attempting to overthrow the government, concessions to obstructionist Democrats on bread and butter issues that matter, immigration reform disasters with no clear policy aims (i.e. don’t come here), too few executive orders to address the failures of Congress, no substantive action on policing and democracy reform, backward motion on Covid relief and economic recovery, and a failed strategy of back-room bipartisanship that has more than earned the low grade.

“Black communities, a critical component of the Biden/Harris victory and the slim majority in Congress and its most consistent and active base, gave a mandate for action on issues that matter to America, but have been sorely disappointed and disregarded, spelling disaster for the midterm elections.” — Alicia Garza, principal, Black Futures Lab and cofounder of the Black Lives Matter movement

President Joe Biden delivers an opening statement during a news conference in the East Room of the White House.

President Joe Biden delivers an opening statement during a news conference in the East Room of the White House. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Grade: D

“In only one year, the Biden administration has squandered majority job approval and an opportunity to lessen some of the country’s divisions. The president was nominated and elected as a competent moderate, but he has governed as an incompetent liberal.

“The administration was initially successful in passing massive bipartisan Covid relief and infrastructure bills. Rather than go on the road to sell those bills to the country, the president linked the infrastructure bill to a massive BBB bill that obviously had no chance of passing the Senate. By continuing to fruitlessly beat its head against the BBB and voting rights bills in an effort to kowtow to his party’s left wing, the President does three things: raise expectations of the left wing before dashing them, look impotent before Congress, and make many voters believe they were sold a bill of goods when they voted for what they thought was moderate governance. Coupled with the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan, the administration’s decisions have driven the president’s job approval down to one of the lowest ratings in modern times. That’s quite an accomplishment in only 12 months. — Whit Ayres, political consultant for the Republican Party and president of North Star Opinion Research

Grade: F

“I am not submitting as a partisan, since I’m retired, but judging from the polls and just from talking to normal people in D.C. and New Orleans and Mauertown, Va., under 50 percent is an F.

Decreasing confidence in every institution, every hallmark of a representative republic from free speech to objective media to equal justice under the law, has accelerated at warp speed under this administration. Not one single kitchen table issue has escaped the wretched fallout of failed so-called progressive policies.

“The likely resultant Republican resurgence will not restore confidence or hope in our institutions; the GOP should not presume a victorious political season is the equivalent of support or trust. The only way forward is less federal foolishness and more Federalism. Results will triumph, regardless of their party label.” — Mary Matalin, former Republican Party strategist

“President Biden has mistaken a narrow election victory for a mandate to transform America, but his far left agenda fails to align with the majority of Americans. In his inaugural speech, President Biden promised to unify our country, yet, in contrast to his inaugural speech, has pursued divisive policies and rhetoric.

“He started with an untargeted and unnecessary $1.9 trillion spending blowout deceptively marketed as Covid relief and that supercharged inflation, which is now at a 40-year high. This was followed by an attempt to ram through the largest tax increase since 1968; create enormous new middle class entitlements; and enact a radical climate plan. All of these have been opposed even by members of his own party.

“At the same time that the president was prioritizing polarizing legislation and nominees, he ignored the crisis at the southern border, made a misguided re-engagement with Iran, launched a deadly and humiliating withdrawal from Afghanistan, and did nothing to keep Russian aggression at bay.” — Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Penn.)

The Hampshire College professor: No letter grade

“The combination of the Covid virus, razor-thin majorities in Congress, and the likelihood of unyielding Republican opposition gave the new president the toughest set of conditions of any incoming chief executive since Lincoln.

“That unhappy reality has defined the first year of Biden’s tenure. Apart from the chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan, much of what has gone wrong this first year is linked directly to the conditions Biden faced when he was sworn in: a Democratic base that did not understand the fragility of Democratic majorities, leading to legislative overreach; a false dawn of a post-Covid nation that did not anticipate new variants and a political resistance to vaccinations and masks; a failure to understand just how committed the ‘loyal opposition’ was to a narrative that defined the new president as an illegitimate usurper, and that clung to the ex-president even after his (potentially criminal) attempt to cling to power.

“Since it is unlikely that Biden and company can travel back in time to avoid the strategic and tactical failure to deal with the hand they were dealt, the question that remains is: Do they have a coherent plan for the next three years?” — Jeff Greenfield, five-time Emmy-winning network television analyst and author

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
AROUND THE WORLD

BLINKEN SIGNIFIES SOLIDARITY IN KYIV — Secretary of State Antony Blinken, visiting Kyiv today, called on Ukrainians “to stick together,” warning that — with 100,000 Russian troops massed on the border — one of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s aims was to provoke internal divisionsDavid M. Herszenhorn writes.

“Our strength depends on preserving our unity, and that includes unity within Ukraine,” Blinken said, appearing with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy before a meeting. “One of Moscow’s longstanding goals has been to try to sow divisions between and within countries, and quite simply we cannot and will not let them do that.

“So our message to all of our friends here and to all of Ukraine’s global leaders, to its citizens alike, is to stick together and to hold on to that unity, to strengthen it. It’s never been more important, particularly as the country faces the possibility of renewed Russian aggression.”

Blinken noted that he was among a parade of Western officials to make appearances in the Ukrainian capital in recent days. German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock was there Monday, ahead of a visit to Moscow Tuesday.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

Unknown

The number of hospital workers who remain unvaccinated, according to U.S. officials, a blind spot that makes it difficult for public health officials to predict and assess vulnerabilities at facilities already facing staffing crises.

PARTING WORDS

Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey speaks during a press conference.

Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey speaks during a press conference. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

DEMOCRATS GO FOR CLEAN SWEEP IN BEANTOWN Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey, a progressive lawyer known for taking on former President Donald Trump and Purdue Pharma, will launch her campaign for governor on Thursday, according to two people familiar with her planning.

Healey’s entrance could maximize Democrats’ chances of retaking the office the party has so rarely held in recent decades, Lisa Kashsinky writes.

It’s also likely to keep another potential contender, Labor Secretary Marty Walsh, out of the open-seat race. Walsh has been weighing whether to return home and run, but people close to the former Boston mayor have repeatedly said he was unlikely to enter the fray if Healey did, despite the more than $5 million that remains in his campaign war chest.

Healey, who’s been “seriously considering” running for governor for the better part of a year, has long been viewed as Democrats’ best shot at reclaiming the governor’s office. Republicans have held the position for most of the past 30 years, a streak broken only by former governor and presidential hopeful Deval Patrick.

Her path became much clearer after GOP Gov. Charlie Baker and Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito both bowed out of the 2022 contest in early December, tipping the race toward the Democrats.

 

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