In North Carolina, Biden defends handling of inflation
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[April 15, 2022]
By Jeff Mason
GREENSBORO, N.C. (Reuters) -President Joe
Biden on Thursday defended his handling of the U.S. economy amid a
40-year-high spike in inflation that he blamed in part on Russia's
invasion of Ukraine.
Speaking at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
in Greensboro, Biden promoted his efforts to strengthen U.S. supply
chains, accelerate American production of semiconductors and ease
dependence on foreign makers.
But he spent a considerable amount of his speech talking about his
handling of the economy, a factor in a dip in his job approval rating
that could spell trouble for Democrats in November congressional midterm
elections.
Biden said job growth had accelerated in his first year in office,
including 365,000 new manufacturing jobs, and that the unemployment rate
had dropped sharply.
Dogging Biden, however, are persistent increases in prices across the
board.
"I know that we're still facing the challenge of high prices and
inflation," said Biden. "Putin's invasion of Ukraine has driven up gas
prices all over the world." He said food prices have been impacted as
well by a drop in exports of Ukraine wheat.
Biden called on Congress to give final approval to the Bipartisan
Innovation Act to boost spending for emerging technologies and American
manufacturing and to compete with China.
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U.S. President Joe Biden speaks while visiting a POET Bioprocessing
plant in Menlo, Iowa, U.S., April 12, 2022. REUTERS/Al Drago
White House officials say Biden
wants Congress to pass the legislation as soon as possible, and is
heartened that lawmakers from both the House of Representatives and
the Senate have begun working to iron out differences between each
chamber's version of the legislation, the official said.
"Congress needs to get this bill on my desk as quickly as possible.
Our economic strength is on the line and national security as well
is on the line," Biden said.
Biden spoke after watching a four-legged robot named Spot march
around a room at the university, an example of the research going on
at the school. The robotic dog was said to be able to maneuver
through complex environments to conduct remote missions.
Biden's visit to a historically Black university in a competitive
election state comes as a November Senate race there is expected to
be among those that decide whether Biden's Democratic Party retains
their narrow control of Congress.
The president's popularity has slipped, with his public approval
standing near all-time lows at 41%, according to a Reuters/Ipsos
opinion poll this week.
(Writing by Steve Holland; Additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt;
Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and Aurora Ellis)
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