Analysis-Biden's 2022 pitch: target Trump acolytes, woo swing voters
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[January 10, 2022]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe
Biden heads into his second year in office with two unfinished aims:
ending Trumpism and unifying a polarized country.
To achieve both, Biden will more regularly attack the values of
Republicans aligned with former President Donald Trump as a threat to
democracy, while holding out an olive branch to opponents, people close
to the Democratic president said in multiple interviews inside and
outside the White House in recent weeks.
Biden's speech on Thursday, the one-year anniversary of the deadly Jan.
6 attack on the Capitol, outlined the new approach. Biden savaged Trump,
who egged on his supporters to march on the seat of Congress one year
ago with unproven claims of fraud in the 2020 presidential election, and
struck out at other members of the Republican Party who continue to
support his predecessor.
"'The Big Lie' being told by the former president and many Republicans
who fear his wrath is that the insurrection in this country actually
took place on Election Day," Biden said in a speech from inside the
Capitol.
"Can you think of a more twisted way to look at this country - to look
at America? I cannot."
Ahead of congressional elections in November, Biden and his closest
allies have made fresh calculations about a country at a crossroads, the
people close to the president said.
They see a divided public gorging itself on misleading information, not
just about the 2020 election but a range of other issues including
whether COVID-19 vaccines are effective. They believe the White House is
hobbled by a Republican Party hell-bent on ensuring Biden's failure,
even if it damages the United States overall.
Biden is dismayed by the "silence and complacency" of Republicans in a
Congress he served in for decades, White House press secretary Jen Psaki
said on Wednesday.
On Friday, he lashed out again, in a speech about the U.S. economy,
which is outperforming those of other developed nations. "Republicans
want to talk down the recovery because they voted against the
legislation that made it happen," Biden said. "I refuse to let them
stand in the way of this recovery."
Republicans accuse Biden of having tacked hard to the left since winning
the White House on a largely center-left message and of pushing spending
initiatives and tax proposals that they say will hurt the economy and
boost already-high inflation.
'NOT OUR PRESIDENT'
Biden stacked his first year in office with policies Democratic polling
showed most voters would embrace: an aggressive COVID-19 response,
stimulus checks, spending on roads and bridges, a military withdrawal
from Afghanistan and cutting drug prices.
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U.S. President Joe Biden speaks to reporters on the one-year
anniversary of the January 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol in
Washington, U.S., January 6, 2022. Stefani Reynolds/Pool via REUTERS
Proposing fixes for those
"kitchen-table" issues, mostly avoiding divisive topics like
abortion and police reform, and hewing closely to a career-long
belief that simple, empathetic explanations can woo America's
centrist majority, moved the country no closer to a key goal he set
out as a candidate for the presidency.
Uniting the United States "is turning out to be one of the most
difficult things" he has tried to do as president, Biden admitted
last month in Missouri, a state that he lost handily to Trump in the
2020 election.
Biden's motorcade there was greeted with someone carrying a sign
that read "Not our president," another reminder that polls show most
Republican voters still believe Trump's false story about the
election having been stolen. On Christmas Eve, when Biden called
children to discuss Santa Claus, he was greeted by one parent with a
crass shout-out popular among Trump supporters.
Aiming for the center has not helped the president's popularity.
About 48% of Americans approved of Biden's performance in December,
compared to a 55% approval rating around his inauguration in early
2021, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling.
The White House believes a new effort to push core Democratic
values, including speeches to tout voter-enfranchisement concerns
and shoring up election laws in time for the 2022 vote, could have
broad support among the American people, no matter how they
previously voted.
But a shift in emphasis is risky: swing voters like it when Biden
appears to be trying to work with the other side, the president's
aides and allies believe. Biden tried to thread that needle in
Thursday's speech, pledging to work together with Republicans "who
support the rule of law and not the rule of a single man."
The president is willing to take short-term political heat
associated with attacking Trump, allies say.
"Joe Biden has always played the long game," said Richard
Harpootlian, a South Carolina lawyer, Democratic state senator and
longtime Biden supporter, who met with the president last month.
"He's not worried about the week-to-week polls and the day-to-day
polls. He believes what he's doing in the long run will pay off."
However, he added, "It may have some consequences in 2022 that he
might not prefer."
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Heather Timmons and Paul
Simao)
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