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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsBTRTN: Biden Battles to Avoid Dreaded "B" Word
Born To Run The Numbers on how the Biden administration's recent string of setbacks invites the invoking of the one word that must not be uttered: "beleaguered."
http://www.borntorunthenumbers.com/2021/10/btrtn-biden-battles-to-avoid-dreaded-b.html
Excerpts: "It is a word that conjures up images of LBJ after Tet, Carter and the botched hostage rescue attempt, and George W. Bush after Katrina. And while those singular events may have triggered the label, each were a culmination of sorts, the crushing blow in a series of disasters. It is the kiss of death for an administration note the single-term fates of the three presidents mentioned above -- a term that implies not only incompetence but also the sense of being overwhelmed by events, and ill-suited to manage them...
"Biden is not quite at 'beleaguered' yet. But he and his administration are certainly in a bad stretch, which began with the messy Afghanistan pull-out and continued with the revelation that the revenge attack against ISIS-K instead killed an innocent family; the apparently needless blindsiding of France in an arms deal with the UK and Australia; a Haitian migrant crush under a bridge in Texas; the persistence of COVID, where the corner has yet to be turned and confusion still reigns amongst policy guidance emanating from the FDA, CDC and the Administration; and then the current hot button, the legislative pile-up of 'hard' and 'soft' infrastructure legislation, an epic budget resolution (now resolved) and an economy-threatening impasse on raising the debt ceiling...
"The problem with these issues apart from the substance is that each undercuts one of Bidens supposed core strengths ...
"But the question is, can Biden, the LBJ-wannabe, display the skills required to get it all through, a la the 'Master of the Senate' himself? To avoid that "B' word, it is surely time for Biden to start tugging on some lapels."
True Blue American
(17,982 posts)Buy that for a minute. It takes time to negotiate a deal. Trying to pacify the little self important 535 members of Congress takes patience. Something the media is sadly missing.
JustAnotherGen
(31,798 posts)17 GOP Senators could possibly vote to convict Trump last January.
http://www.borntorunthenumbers.com/2021/01/btrtn-seventeen-gop-senators-who-could.html
Almost Certain to Convict (5)
· Mitt Romney, Utah. The 2012 GOP presidential nominee has become the conscience of the right, often critiquing Trump and the only GOP vote to impeach in 2019. Plus he is solid in Utah, where Trump is not terribly popular, and is not up for reelection until 2024.
· Lisa Murkowski, Alaska. The longstanding thorn in Trumps side has all but announced she is going to vote to convict.
· Pat Toomey, Pennsylvania. Toomey has announced he will not run for reelection in 2022. Like other Republicans before him who were on the verge of leaving office (see: Jeff Flake), Toomey has broken with Trump and has been openly supportive of impeachment.
· Susan Collins, Maine. Collins just won a surprisingly easy reelection in Maine over a well-funded opponent. She has long been lampooned for her concern with Trump, and vilified for her view that Trump had learned his lesson in the Mueller investigation. It is time for her to shore up support from center-left Mainers and translate that concern into a conviction vote.
· Ben Sasse, Nebraska. Sasse has been unsparing of his critiques of Trump throughout the transition, and at times before then, and just won reelection, so he is a near certain conviction vote.
Open to Impeachment and Possibly Waiting for McConnell (12)
I'm not taking him seriously- and Biden is not beleaguered.