Four takeaways from Biden's first State of the Union speech
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[March 02, 2022]
By James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe
Biden faced a formidable challenge in his first State of the Union
speech, after a year in office buffeted by the COVID-19 pandemic, a
jittery economy and now Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Biden served notice on Tuesday that much of the world is united against
Russian aggression while also trying to seize the moment to make
Americans feel optimistic about the days ahead.
Here are some takeaways from his speech:
UNITY ON RUSSIA
The conflict in Ukraine has given Biden some rare bipartisan support,
and the American public is slowly warming to his handling of the crisis.
A new Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Tuesday showed Biden at 43%
approval for his response – a jump of nine points from last week. Even
with the bump, Biden’s overall approval rating, however, remained
underwater at 43%.
In his speech Biden stressed two points crucial to maintaining public
support for his actions: He pledged to continue organizing a global
coalition to place financial pressure on Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin, while
at the same time ensuring that U.S. forces will not be involved in the
fighting. For that he received sustained applause from Republicans in
the chamber.
"He did a high-level job explaining to the American public why this
matters," said Rodell Mollineau, a strategist and longtime Democratic
Senate aide.
Most significantly, Biden warned viewers at home there will be not be a
quick resolution to the crisis and that some sacrifices – including
higher energy prices – might have to be made.
Those were sobering words coming after two years of wrestling with the
pandemic, societal upheaval and rampant inflation. “This is a real
test,” Biden said. “It’s going to take time.”
A NEW PHASE OF COVID-19
The president sought to use his address to signal that the nation was
entering a new phase of the pandemic, one where, as he put it, “COVID-19
need no longer control our lives.”
Aiding Biden's argument were the optics: There were few masks worn by
members of Congress in attendance, and Biden himself wore no mask. All
of it suggested that the country was in a different place than just a
few months ago.
"That was important for the public to see," said Mark Riddle, executive
director of Future Majority, a moderate Democratic research firm.
Republicans have used school closings in part to mount an all-out attack
on Democrats on education issues and plan to continue that ahead of
November's midterm elections, when control of Congress is at stake and
Biden's Democrats are considered vulnerable.
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President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address to a
joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC, U.S,
March 1, 2022. Saul Loeb/Pool via REUTERS
While Biden pledged that the nation
would remain vigilant for new strains of the virus, he stressed that
the era of business lockdowns and school closings was over. “Our
kids need to be in school,” he said, earning applause from both
Democrats and Republicans.
A LONG-TERM PLAN ON INFLATION
Biden spent much of the rest of his remarks advancing his largely
stalled domestic agenda — and in doing so, also attempted to blunt
Republican attacks this election cycle.
He sought to persuade Americans that the way to battle rising prices
was to lower costs, either through manufacturing more goods in the
country or through making drugs and childcare more affordable.
A problem for Biden and his party is that none of those solutions
can happen quickly – certainly not in the time Democrats need to
campaign before November.
"His plan, to fight inflation by lowering costs, not wages, and
increasing productivity capacity could dampen inflation in the
longer term but not in the near-term," David Chao, a global markets
analyst with Invesco in Hong Kong, told Reuters.
Riddle said it was important for Biden to stress domestic
manufacturing.
"It's critical to our success moving forward," he said.
FIGHTING CRIME
Biden took on the issue of rising gun violence in the nation’s
cities by explicitly pushing back against calls by progressives in
his party to defund police departments.
“The answer is to fund the police with the resources and training
they need to protect our communities," he said, a line that drew
applause from some Republicans in the chamber.
At the same time, Biden called for increased community services and
bans of high-powered assault weapons, an appeal to progressives.
Biden's remarks on crime, inflation, education and, most of all, the
pandemic, were meant to send a signal that he understands what
Americans have been through during the past two years, Mollineau
said.
"We are stronger today than we were a year ago," Biden said in
concluding his speech. "And we will be stronger a year from now than
we are today."
(Reporting by James Oliphant. Additional reporting by Alun John in
Hong Kong; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Howard Goller)
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