The Real Joe Biden

Shares

As the U.S. president’s era draws to a close, Stefan Moore takes stock of his signature domestic and foreign policies.

U.S. President Joe Biden heading to Oval Office in May 2022. (White House, Adam Schultz)

By Stefan Moore
Special to Consortium News

“Joe Biden’s legacy of accomplishments over the past three years is unmatched in modern history” proclaimed Kamala Harris one day after her cognitively deteriorating boss dropped out of the presidential race. 

The hosannas were echoed by a chorus of pundits and celebrities including MSNBC’s Rachael Maddow who gushed, “What a man. What a patriot. He has been a phenomenal president,” said Late Show comic Stephen Colbert,  who called Biden “… a great president [who] reasserted America’s place on the world stage,” and filmmaker Ken Burns who declared that, “Biden will go down as one of the great ones … up there with LBJ and FDR.”

Indeed, the Biden administration’s policy initiatives have been full of impressive sounding promises to deliver jobs, reduce poverty and tackle climate change. 

But outside the media bubble, as inequality continues to surge, Harris’s and the others’ rosy views of Biden’s accomplishments are not likely shared by the millions of Americans living pay check to pay check, for whom real wages are down 2.4 percent, prices up by 15 percent; by the 150 million people who don’t have more than $500 savings for emergencies; the 100 million underinsured American who can’t afford to pay their medical bills, or by the thousands dying in U.S.-financed wars from the Ukraine to Gaza.

As the Biden era draws to a close it’s time to take stock of what Biden’s signature domestic and foreign policies and promises have actually achieved. It matters because waiting in the wings is his VP and anointed successor who, as second in command, has been identified with his policies over the past four years. 

Here’s the record.

Child Poverty

As part of the American Rescue Plan in the midst of the Covid pandemic Biden introduced an increase in the child tax credits that promised to reduce child poverty across America. There was an initial decrease but the program was later abandoned and child poverty soared to 12.4 percent, more than doubling from 5.2 percent in 2021. 

In addition, federal benefits meant to help families afford food, housing and other basic needs all expired as the government became more concerned with rising inflation and budget deficits. As a result, low-income Americans are now worse off than at the height of the Covid pandemic.

Health Care

While the Biden administration has increased the number of Americans enrolled in the Affordable Care Act, there are still more than 100 million people, 1-in-every-3 Americans, critically underinsured and in dire medical debt. Biden is strenuously opposed to a single-payer, government-run health system, like many U.S. allies have. 

In a 2020 primary debate he turned to Senator Bernie Sanders and, puffing out his chest, offered this unexplained reason why the U.S. can’t have the health insurance system of Denmark: “Because we are the United States of America!” What could he possibly have meant other than he would protect an American capitalist system that put profit before health care for all citizens. 

Jobs

Biden claimed to have created 13 million new jobs, however, 72 percent of the gains were jobs recovered from losses during the pandemic.  When compared to pre-pandemic levels, employment is up by only 3.7 million, not an impressive figure.  And job growth claims are misleading in another way —part-time jobs are outpacing full time employment. In June alone, part-time jobs increased by 50,000 while full-time workers fell by 38,000. 

Wages

Biden, right, campaigning for president at a Teamsters event in Clinton, Iowa, June 12, 2019. (Adam Schultz / Biden for President, Flickr, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

Accounting for inflation, real wages are down 2.24 percent since Biden took office and prices have soared 15 percent.  As a result, real disposable income has decreased by a whopping 9.04 percent between 2021 and 2024 as wages failed to keep pace with inflation.

Minimum Wage

During his campaign Biden promised to raise the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour but once in office he threw up his hands saying he was powerless to get it passed. The U.S. minimum wage of $7.25 per hour ranks near the bottom of all OECD countries and has not been raised since 2009.

Infrastructure

Biden is credited with huge investments in the country’s infrastructure and climate change initiatives through the $1 trillion Infrastructure and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act. “Last year,” Biden bragged, “we funded 700,000 major construction projects – 700,000 all across America. From highways to airports to tunnels to broadband.” Sounds impressive, but the figure is “wildly inaccurate” according to a CNN fact check. The actual figure is 7,000 projects.   

Also, Biden’s claim to spend $1 trillion over the next decade is misleading. Again, sounds great until you consider that the gross national product will be $300 trillion over the next decade. As Paul Krugman points out, this will amount to about one third of 1 percent of GDP. “Hardly massive,” says Krugman. 

Inequality

Income inequality under Biden is more obscene than ever — the most recent data shows that the top 1 percent own 31.4 percent of American wealth, more than the entire bottom 90 percent. “Mr. Biden ignores the inequality at the heart of Bidenomics at his political peril,” warned Karen Petrou, author of Engine of Inequality: The Fed and the Future of Wealth in America, in a New York Times op-ed last year. “America’s top 1 percent always got far more than 1 percent of national income and wealth, but they have rarely gotten as much as they do now.” 

Climate Change

People’s Plenary, COP27, Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, Nov. 17, 2022. (UNclimatechange, Flickr)

Hailed as America’s first “climate president,” Biden promised “the largest investment in combatting the climate crisis in U.S. history” paving the way for hundreds of thousands of good paying jobs. Despite this, the Trump-era drilling boom continues unabated.  

In addition to opening up vast tracts for drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and elsewhere, last year Biden approved one of the largest oil exploration projects in decades in the Alaskan wilderness, “effectively adding the emissions of the entire country of Belgium, via just one project,” writes environmental journalist Oliver Milman.  

Under Biden, U.S. oil and gas production are now at record highs and seriously threaten U.S. ability to reach its goal of zero net emissions by 2050.

Foreign Policy

Biden on the phone with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, on Jan. 27, 2023. Sitting in on the call, from left, are National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Mark Milley. (White House, Carlos Fyfe)

Of all Biden’s promises, there is nothing more consequential than his abandoned pledge to make the world safer and keep the U.S. out of war. In September 2021, after the U.S. withdrew from Afghanistan, Biden promised the United Nations that “relentless war” would be supplanted by “relentless diplomacy,” proclaiming that the U.S. “had turned the page.” 

Instead, Biden has signed the largest military budget in history ($886 billion), spent over a hundred billion dollars to finance the devastating and avoidable proxy war in Ukraine, ramped up military confrontation with China, and supplied the diplomatic cover and bombs for Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza where, daily, the shattered bodies of tiny children are strewn across blood-smeared hospital floors as helpless doctors rush to save what lives they can. 

With the urgent need to end Israel’s criminal assault on the Palestinian people where over 40,000 people have died (volunteer physicians put the toll at over 90,000), Biden’s record doesn’t hold out much hope.

Throughout his career, Biden has been a self-described Zionist (an Irish-American Zionist as Benjamin Netanyahu said in his recent speech to Congress) and declared his “unwavering” support for Israel. His loyalty has been repaid in spades with more money from the Israel lobby (AIPAC) going into his election coffers than any other U.S. politician in history. It comes as no surprise that the Biden administration has unconditionally supported Israeli war crimes in Palestine and has blocked United Nations Security Council resolutions calling for a ceasefire in Gaza. 

Harris’s record, both as a senator and as Biden’s VP is not much more promising. During her 2020 presidential bid, Harris was backed by an array of Jewish groups including Democratic Majority for Israel, J Street, the Jewish Democratic Council of America and the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) where she has spoken at their conferences about the “unbreakable” bonds between the U.S. and Israel.

More recently however, after meeting with Israel’s Prime Minister and ICC-charged war criminal Benjamin Netanyahu after his address to the U.S. Congress Harris told reporters:

“What happened in Gaza over the past nine months is devastating. We cannot look away in the face of these tragedies. We cannot allow ourselves to become numb to the suffering and I will not be silenced.” 

Of course, at a time when the war in Gaza is becoming a political liability for the Biden administration, Harris is hedging her bets. Given the shallowness and deceitfulness of performative politics, however, it will be difficult to decipher whether she will hold Israel accountable for its crimes or continue Biden’s lethal alliance. 

If history is a guide, we can’t rely on our politicians for serious foreign or domestic policy change.  We have to make our voices heard.

Stefan Moore is an American-Australian documentary filmmaker whose films have received four Emmys and numerous other awards. In New York he was a series producer for WNET and a producer for the prime-time CBS News magazine program 48 HOURS. In the U.K. he worked as a series producer at the BBC, and in Australia he was an executive producer for the national film company Film Australia and ABC-TV.

The views expressed are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

Show Comments