Weekly Opinion Editorial
DEER IN THE HEADLIGHTS
by Steve Fair
On
Wednesday, President Joe Biden held a rare news conference that ran nearly two
hours. According to the American Presidency Project
at the University of California, Biden has held only nine news conferences in his
first year in office. That is less than half
of President Trump, who had twenty-two his first year and one third of
President Obama, who held twenty-seven his first year in office. After
listening the POTUS for two hours, it’s clear why he doesn’t face the press. His verbal communication skills are lacking
and it appears his cognitive function is questionable. Three observations from the news conference:
First,
Biden continues to blame Republicans for his inability to get his agenda passed
by Congress. “What are Republicans for?”, Biden asked during the news
conference. Well, Republicans are for having
safeguards at the ballot box like voter ID to insure those who are voting are
who they say they are. They are for
working to ensure votes are counted correctly and honestly. The voter rights act undermines both of those
principles. It puts the federal
government in charge of elections, which is unconstitutional.
The reason
Biden hasn’t been able to get his agenda passed is not the Republican Party’s
fault. The blame belongs to Democrat
leadership who cannot hold their caucus together. Democrats control both chambers of Congress by
narrow margins. On Wednesday, two Democrat
Senators- Sinema of Arizona and Manchin of West Virginia voted with the fifty Republican
senators to defeat the controversial so-called voter rights bill. Biden wants
a bipartisan coalition to pass his ideas, but his ideas are so polarizing that
even some in his own Party can’t support them, his outrage is misdirected.
Second,
Biden’s foreign policy is murky. During
the news conference Biden said, “I think that Russia will be accountable if
it invades(the Ukraine) and it depends on what it does. It’s one thing if it’s a minor incursion, and
then we end up having a fight about to do and not do,” the POTUS said. One
reporter questioned why Biden was giving Vladimir Putin permission to invade
the Ukraine. Biden tried to walk back
the statement in his answer and the White House issued a statement after the
news conference that contradicted what the POTUS had said at the podium. President Biden has been critical of
President Trump’s foreign policy. But Trump’s
foreign policy had more clarity and he never publicly granted Russia permission
to invade a country.
Third,
Biden admitted inflation is a problem. “We have faced some of the biggest
challenges that we’ve ever faced in this country these past few years. We need to get inflation under control,”
Biden said. The POTUS went on to blame
consolidation in certain market sectors for fueling inflation. “A handful of giant companies dominate the
market in sectors like meat processing, railroads, shipping and other areas. That isn’t the only reason we have inflation,
but it is one reason,” Biden said. What?
Consolidation
in business has been going on for thirty years.
Most of it was caused by government regulations and tax laws that forced
small family farms, food processors, retailers and hundreds of other businesses
to sell out to larger concerns. The lack
of diversification in 2022 was created as the result of bad government policy
in 1970. Blaming the monster, you
created for the terror it creates is dimwitted and myopic.
Biden appeared
to be confused, befuddled, and baffled during the two-hour briefing. He looked like a deer in the headlights. Those who have known Biden for decades say it
was Biden being Biden. That explains why
his handlers keep him away from the press, but the POTUS has a moral obligation
to regularly address the American public.
It would be nice if it would was in an understandable, logical way, but
that is probably too much to ask. Biden’s press conferences are like his
policies-puzzling, and confounded.
1 comment:
I agree with a lot of what you've said, but, come on, Steve. It's not called "the Ukraine" anymore. The use of the article adjective before the country's name is a relic of the past. The nation's constitution reinforces the use of "Ukraine" as the sole name of the country without any alternative names listed. Saying "the Ukraine", I'm going to assume, is an innocent mistake, given the nature of usually benign words like "the", but it could also be seen as a reinforcement of the idea that Ukraine as a sovereign nation is still strongly a part of the Soviet Union, which dissolved some 30 years ago. This usage just does not look good when talking about the nation in today's political landscape, even without considering the threat of war with Russia.
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