So far, Joe Biden has read and played the political situation brilliantly in his first three weeks in office and he's done so in ways a lot of experts -- and I -- did not expect.
First off, the days of entering office with a low disapproval rating are gone. Maybe they will return, but Biden entered the office with a bunch of people already against him, more than any President in modern history not named Donald Trump.
But his policies have been popular -- his COVID-19 relief package is more popular than he is and the individual elements of the program are extremely popular, including the direct checks.
He's recognized this early on and yet still met with the Republicans. Why? A few reasons.
1. It allows him to contrast with Trump in showing his negotiation behavior.
2. It allows him to hear Republican ideas that might improve the bill as a whole.
Most of all, he showed that he wasn't going to vilify the Republicans for disagreeing with him -- but rather make it clear their counter-proposal wasn't enough in a way that portrays it as a fundamental disagreement rather than partisan bickering.
His willingness to negotiate on the specifics, but not the basics, shows a commitment to the plan but a willingness to improve and adapt. His focus on securing vaccinations and funding for schools is key.
And he's been able to support a robust liberal policy platform because he's fulfilled his promise to surround himself with serious people and to take foreign policy and the position of the Presidency seriously, which will keep the #NeverTrump crowd satisfied for now.
It helps that Republicans have repeatedly embarrassed themselves, first with their laughable COVID-19 counter-proposal that went nowhere because even some of them knew it was too weak, to their inability to craft an intellectually honest defense of Trump during his impeachment.
He's also dodged major bullets:
He was reportedly considering Cuomo for a cabinet position which likely would have blown up in his face this week and distracted from his COVID-19 vaccination story with the news of the Cuomo nursing home death toll coverup.
(it's unclear if he elected not to have that fight with the Senate or if this information was clear from his vetting, mind you, so it could be less a bullet dodged and more an sign of a good research team)
Biden isn't trying to appeal to the FoxNews crowd, he knows they are too far gone to help. The biggest risk he's taking is a relief package that may cause mild inflation--but even that's unlikely because he knows that as we vaccinate people will want to return to the workforce.
As such, when the economy grows, so will the workforce and the people looking for jobs -- as the more vaccinations means the more businesses can reopen and more people feel comfortable looking for jobs.
Even if mild inflation does occur, that will be driven by grocery stores in the minds of most Americans, one of the only businesses that have only seen mild setbacks throughout this crisis, so it will be an easy enemy for Biden to fight as they are in a fiscal position to help.
The biggest challenge Biden will face is getting to a high enough vaccination rate to be able to establish herd immunity -- and he will likely have to rely on corporations wanting workers back in offices and businesses wanting people to vaccinate to enter their business.
But that fight is about six months down the road. Some businesses will be reluctant to pick up that fight, but others will be eager to require vaccinations, as they will see that as key in returning to whatever "normal" is going to look like going forward.
Which is why Biden has largely avoided even attacking obvious corporate villainy thus far in his Presidency. No reason to do that now when he's relatively popular and his policies are as well.

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More from @WillMcAvoyACN

12 Feb
The Hollywood blacklist was a massive systematic decision across studios that actually began in the late 1930s and the early 1940s with government investigations into Hollywood, and included people who were merely suspected of having private sympathy to the Communist Party.
Keep in mind that during this timeframe Hollywood, in particular Disney, was interested in Union-busting and they attempted to use an overblown accusation of Communists in Hollywood as an excuse to deny film workers rights, or to bust their unions.
That said, after the Soviet Union switched sides in World War II, this activity died down until after the war when anti-Semitic neofascists like Gerald Smith began to reintroduce the idea to the American populace, referring to "alien minded Russian Jews in Hollywood" in speeches.
Read 11 tweets
5 Feb
I’ve been talking about this all morning, and I’ve got to move on to other things, but first I have an observation from today that I just cannot escape:
A lot of people seem to think the problem with remote learning is remote learning isn’t working for their kids.

But a lot of these people don’t seem to care if their child’s teacher(s) live or die, so I think that maybe the problem begins there.
I have talked (and heard from) plenty of parents and teachers on this subject. Most of them acknowledge that this isn’t ideal. Some bring up the mental health of our youth; which of course is something I am attuned to and aware of, but I’m not convinced reopening schools helps.
Read 10 tweets
25 Jan
So, one claim I have seen repeated over and over and over again the past few days is that “Joe Biden reversed a rule lowering the price of insulin.”

This is not really accurate for a number of reasons.
1. Biden paused all rules made within the last 60 days of the Trump administration for review. This is fairly standard for any new executive from a competing party.

2. The rule that is related to insulin prices was not yet in effect, so for now it is just delayed.
3. The rule did not apply to most sources of insulin. The rule required community centers providing insulin to pass any manufacture discounts they received onto customers. That’s it. Even the Trump administration said the economic impact would be minimal.
Read 4 tweets
10 Jan
Something that is not lost on me but I forgot to mention is that the runoff system in Georgia was created explicitly to keep men like Raphael Warnock from taking office.
This seems like time for a mini-thread, as multiple people have already asked me to explain why.

So here we go:

The racist origins on Georgia’s runoff elections.
Before 1962 Georgia’s elections operated under a county-unit system where counties were individually given a vote and a candidate had to earn the majority of the units. Ostensibly to mirror the electoral college, instead what it did was eliminate the power of urban counties.
Read 8 tweets
12 Nov 20
Maybe it’s time to talk about what happened in Georgia in 2018 and why it is completely different than what is happening now, since this seems to be making the rounds of conservative talking points. since she was a Black woman no one actually paid attention to her complaints.
First off Brian Kemp, who was running against Abrams, was Secretary of State at the time and he purged 340,000 voters from the state’s voter registration, disproportionally targeting Black voters. theguardian.com/us-news/2018/o…
Kemp also put over 53,000 voter registrations on hold due to extremely minor discrepancies, again targeting Black voters. vox.com/policy-and-pol…
Read 9 tweets
9 Nov 20
The first example of a concession is said to be John Adams private congratulations to Jefferson after the latter’s victory in 1800. While concession speeches did not become a thing until the 1920s when radio became a popular medium. Still concessions by telegram were common.
But the election I want to focus on here is the Election of 1916.

Democrat Woodrow Wilson was running for re-election against Charles Evans Hughes, who had resigned from the Supreme Court in order to run for President. Hughes was a compromise candidate for the GOP.
1912 had famously split the party between Taft and Roosevelt, which allowed Wilson to coast to victory. 1916 was different, especially among the early returns. The race was close but early returns were pointing to a Hughes victory. Indeed crowds began to gather in Times Square...
Read 7 tweets

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