Report Card: Six Months Into Biden’s Presidency
By Robert
Reich
The economy is
roaring back – still 7 million jobs short of where it was in January 2020 but
on track to return to the starting gate by the end of the year. Biden’s
“American Rescue Plan” is a major success.
But it’s not clear Biden will get America back to where it was before Trump. His initial slew of executive orders erased most of Trump’s executive orders, but he hasn’t yet demolished all of Trump’s cruel immigration policies.
Trump’s xenophobic rhetoric is gone but Biden
hasn’t repaired relations with China. Many of Trump’s tariffs are still in
place. And even with a bare Democratic majority in the US Senate, there’s
little chance Congress will repeal all of Trump’s tax cuts for corporations and
the wealthy.
What about Biden’s big plans to remake America? Depending on your point of view, they’re either on hold or stalled. He’ll likely get bipartisan support for over half a trillion dollars of new spending for “hard” infrastructure. That’s not nothing.
Beyond that, it’s anyone’s guess what
Senate Democrats will agree to on legislation covering childcare, the
environment, and healthcare and education that can circumvent a Republican
filibuster.
The biggest potential disaster concerns voting rights. As Republican-dominated states continue to restrict voting on the basis of Trump’s big lie about 2020 election fraud, and the Supreme Court signals its reluctance to get in the way, the only hope lies in what was supposed to be the Democrats’ highest priority – the For the People Act, setting minimum national standards for voting, and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act, restoring the potency of the old Voting Rights Act after the Court gutted it in 2013.
But Senate Republicans
won’t go along, and the refusal of a few Senate Democrats to alter the
filibuster rule to allow them to be passed by a bare majority has condemned
them to limbo.
Biden’s failure to make the right to vote his highest
priority – to visibly fight for it, make it his own personal cause, and
go on the road to take that cause to the American people – is not only bad
policy for the nation. It’s also bad politics. It may cost Democrats dearly in
next year’s midterm elections, and beyond.
Robert Reich's latest book is "THE SYSTEM: Who
Rigged It, How To Fix It." He is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy
at the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum
Center. He served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for
which Time Magazine named him one of the 10 most effective cabinet secretaries
of the twentieth century. He has written 17 other books, including the best
sellers "Aftershock," "The Work of Nations," "Beyond
Outrage," and "The Common Good." He is a founding editor of the
American Prospect magazine, founder of Inequality Media, a member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning
documentaries "Inequality For All," streaming on YouTube, and
"Saving Capitalism," now streaming on Netflix.