It is remarkable that an elected official like President Joe
Biden can serve in public life for over 50 years and yet remain so
misunderstood by most Americans. The Trump wing of the Republican Party and
many other conservatives have labeled him as a far-left progressive, ready to
take the country down the road of free spending socialism. On the other hand, progressives see a
President who is too eager to compromise with his political foes at the expense
of needed social, economic and political reform.
Few observers have grasped the obvious. President Biden is
and has always been a liberal humanist in the catholic social tradition, one who
does not adhere to any steadfast political ideology. Biden is guided by
tolerance toward human differences and is of the opinion that disagreements
should most often be resolved through compromise and debate.
A socialist revolution or a populist tearing down are not in
the moderate Biden toolbox. As so aptly
described by Adam Gopnik, in his excellent analysis, The Moral Adventure of
Liberalism: “Liberalism is a hatred of brutality, a recognition of the
primacy of sympathy as social cement, a feeling for frailty and for mercy and
for humanity before dogma.” These are the empathy driven qualities that have
defined Joe Biden throughout his career and that remain at the center of his
thinking.
In the first weeks of the Biden administration, those on the
right are crying foul, as the President issued a number of executive orders
addressing immigration, climate change, LGBTQI rights, health care, the
economy, the census and the Coronavirus. These executive orders were not
radical policy revisions. They were
promulgated to reverse Trump policies that had imbedded right wing extremism
into the bureaucracy. Overall, the orders returned federal policy to moderate
pre-Trump positions.
There
has also been a great deal of Republican consternation that Biden will utilize
the budget reconciliation process (requiring only 50 Senate votes and a Vice Presidential
tiebreaker instead of 60 votes) to pass his stimulus bill. The claim is that if
Biden wanted to govern as a moderate compromiser, he would avoid this partisan
result by working with Republicans to develop a bill that would satisfy both
parties.
To
his credit, the President has met with Republican leadership and listened to
their position on a comprehensive stimulus package. However, he is concerned that
further delay would damage the economy and cause unneeded hardship to millions
of Americans. Moreover, the public overwhelmingly
supports all elements of his plan. This approach
is not an attempt to use the slim Democratic majority to force through radical
new policies. He views the stimulus bill as a practical, necessary move to save
the economy.
The
concept of political unity has been discussed in many forums since Biden took
office. Unfortunately, those who disagree with the President often
misunderstand “unity”. Political unity
connotes common agreement on facts and evidence, not necessarily on policies or
results. In seeking unity both sides must work to understand the problem, then
define the problem and lastly to apply solutions which may differ.
Political
adversaries must be willing to agree that the other may be right and to base a
final resolution on practical concerns not ideology or partisanship. As
negotiations play out over Biden’s term in office, ask yourself whether the
White House or the Republicans are basing each of their respective final positions
on pragmatic problem solving or on unbending dogma. Over time, Biden will be
the clear winner when it comes to encouraging unity.
The
President is well aware that there are five distinct groups of Americans with
differing political views that must be reconciled to move the country forward.
The progressive and conservative political elites are “conviction” factions
that have embraced specific ideologies on how to run the federal government.
These two groups are well educated, wealthy and make up many of the elected
officials and activists in both parties. They as well as their close allies contribute
large sums of money to support the cause.
The
next two groups are aligned to one of the two elites through “necessity” as opposed
to conviction. First, minorities, recent immigrants, young voters and members
of the LGBTQI community see their path to social and economic equality linked
to the progressives. Second, white,
middle-class, middle-aged and rural voters have most often hitched their wagon
to the nativist, populist positions espoused by Donald Trump. They view this
alignment as a necessity to recapture family values, social status and lost
economic opportunity.
The
fifth group is a coalition of apolitical Independents. Independents favor predictability
and minimal, negative impact to their economic interests. This group consists
of suburban and upper middle-class voters. Similar to Biden, Independents tend
to view government in practical rather than ideological terms.
As the Biden administration progresses, it will find paths
away from the destructive tribalism of the last four years. The President will
move the country toward unity. Once the
public square is governed by transparent facts rather than lies, disinformation
and divisive statements, millions of Americans will discover it is not in their
best interest to be at war with each other.
Underserved urban and rural voters alike will join with
Independents in the practical goals of Biden liberalism to defeat COVID-19, to
create jobs in the new economy and to rejoin the world community as the leader
of the free world.
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