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Polishing Biden’s Image

The⁣ Last ⁢Politician: Inside‍ Joe Biden’s White House and the Struggle for America’s‌ Future

In ⁤popular esteem, the politician today ranks somewhere⁤ between the telemarketer and the journalist. With a‍ long ‌and dishonorable ⁣record of dishonesty and chicanery, he was never much admired for ⁢sure. But in the last decade or so, as the burden of America’s multiplying political and social pathologies​ have ​been laid at Washington’s door, his standing ‍has plumbed⁣ new depths.

So to most Americans, a ​suggestion of ‌the extinction of the species of homo politicus might be a welcome development. The Last Politician would​ surely go unmourned.

Not in Franklin Foer’s estimation. For Foer, a⁢ former editor of the New Republic and fully reliable purveyor of all of the⁢ left’s verities, labeling President Joe Biden the Last Politician is a form of secular canonization. ⁢The⁣ 46th president is, in his accounting, among the very noblest of a noble breed.

Foer was given‍ extensive access by the⁤ White House to ⁢write ​ The Last Politician, one of those fly-on-the-wall accounts ⁣of the first two years ‍of a ⁢presidency​ of the sort popularized by ‌Bob Woodward. The officials’ ⁤decision to​ cooperate ‌clearly paid off.

The Biden of Mr. Foer’s depiction—imagination might ⁤be a ⁣more accurate description—is not the fumbling, mumbling, stumbling president⁣ we have all come to see on our screens these last two years nor the⁢ predictable Democratic party hack we have ⁣known throughout his more than half a century in national politics.

The⁣ figure who emerges from the pages of this book would make the sculpted residents of ‍Mount Rushmore climb⁣ down from their rocky perch in glad abdication. ⁣Biden is the savior ⁤of the ​nation, the man who rescued America⁤ from the various scourges of recent years: ⁢former president Donald Trump, of course, and the existential threat his MAGA‌ Republicans posed to our democracy; COVID-19 and the existential threat the pandemic posed to our health; climate change and the existential threat it represented to our ​planet.⁤ Foer⁤ could have gone on, presumably but, like Alexander the Great who wept⁢ salt⁤ tears at the‍ age of 30 because⁣ he had no​ more worlds left to conquer, Biden has apparently slain all comers.

You think I’m exaggerating? Foer ⁤faithfully recounts and endorses Biden’s soaring self-estimation: There are more references in the book to Franklin Delano⁤ Roosevelt than to Bill Clinton: Early on in the presidency, we are told that “comparisons to FDR … felt strangely‌ within reach, especially to Biden.” By half way through ⁤year two, he was convinced his legislative ‍achievement was⁣ already “greater than the combined‌ accomplishments of FDR ‍and⁣ [Lyndon B. Johnson].” ​(Historical footnote: FDR was⁢ president for 13 years; LBJ for more than⁤ 5.)

Most of these real-time ​contemporary-historical accounts—even‌ the most hagiographical—offer at⁣ least some revelatory material that, even ‌if only for ‍color, offers some valuable insight⁢ into a presidency, warts⁣ and all.‌ You will ⁣find none in Foer’s book. Instead, almost all the accounts of the major‍ episodes of the Biden presidency he relates are essentially the versions we have been told already by those ever-so-reliable narrators who appear at the podium ⁢in the White House briefing room every​ day.

Foer⁢ perpetuates the myth that⁤ Biden strained mightily to achieve bipartisanship but was rebuffed‌ all‍ the time by those cynical ⁤Republicans.

“Joe Biden believed in the‍ gospel of unity with his whole heart.” Oddly there ⁢is⁤ no ‌attempt to square‌ his supposed commitment to ⁤this creed with Biden’s routine denunciations of his opponents⁤ as neo-fascists, or episodes such as his condemnation of immigration enforcement agents for doing⁢ their job.

The claim also sits oddly with the​ fact‌ that the ‍main antagonist throughout the book is not⁣ Trump​ or Sen. Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.), but Sen. Joe Manchin (W.Va.), who, at‍ last count‌ was a Democrat, but whose reluctance to⁤ go along with Biden’s aggressive progressive agenda clearly better represented the views of middle ‌America⁣ than‌ the rest of his party.

While lovingly⁢ painting in the detail of Biden’s many talents, Foer glosses gently over the evident flaws.⁤ The question of his “age issue and ‍mental powers,” ⁤as it is neatly described in the index, gets only a few mentions in the book and even these ⁤are cited mainly in support of ⁣the president’s claim to greatness. In his handling of the Ukraine crisis, for example, his advanced age enabled⁢ Biden to be “the West’s ‌Father figure”—his “calming presence and strategic‍ clarity” helped lead the NATO alliance’s response so successfully.

Hunter Biden‍ gets one mention—and ‌this only‍ as a criticism of Trump’s attempts to get Ukrainian president Volodymyr ‍Zelenskyy ⁢to investigate the former vice president’s son in 2019.

As for​ Biden’s long history of making​ up stories about ⁢himself, these are neatly euphemized: “A ​good ‍Biden story often gets better ⁣with age.” And that famous moment from an earlier campaign where he⁤ was forced to leave the race after he was exposed for ‍having used the words ⁢of a British ‍politician? This we are told came ‌about because⁤ he “inadvertently⁢ plagiarized sentences ‍from Neil Kinnock.”

This Kremlin-level historical⁤ whitewashing takes only a small break for‌ obvious Biden administration failures: Foer ⁢can’t quite portray ⁤the withdrawal from Afghanistan as a stunning success, and he does at least channel some ‌of the concerns of ‍the senior military about Biden’s insistence on a hasty departure from Kabul. But even here the Biden who comes across is‌ empathetic and strategic. After all,⁢ as ‌the author tells us, “When ‍it came to foreign policy, ⁣Joe Biden believed he was‍ the business.”

Try​ as he might, Foer can’t quite avoid‍ the subject of inflation, an old, almost forgotten economic torture that has been⁣ unleashed in the last few years under Biden’s presidency. But rather than ascribing any‍ responsibility for the surge in prices to Biden’s massive government spending programs, especially ‍the American Rescue Plan Act, the first​ item of legislation that pumped $2 trillion into the economy, Foer echoes the‍ president ⁤in finding other culprits. The spike in⁢ oil prices, we are told, was in part at least the ‌result of a “malicious ploy”⁤ by the‍ Saudis to cut oil production in the fall of 2022.‌ Meanwhile domestic oil companies were “vindictively … dumping money into Republican coffers and keeping⁣ prices artificially high at the‌ pump.”

It’s no surprise that Foer⁤ can’t find much space to explain why, with all this ⁢bipartisan​ unity, FDR- ⁣and LBJ-eclipsing ⁢legislative achievement, an economic transformation, and ​such great wisdom and governing skills, ⁢Biden finds himself so deep in ​the dumps, according ⁤to all opinion polls.

If the book had spent ⁣more time assessing the ⁢reality of Biden’s presidency and the politics that defined it and less trying to portray ⁣this deeply flawed and failing old pol as the national hero without equal, he might have gotten closer to an understanding of ​the reality of the last two years.

That⁤ reality is that Biden had a historic opportunity at the outset of his presidency to unite a fractured nation, ⁢to acknowledge the fragile‍ margins by which his ‌party had ⁤prevailed in the presidency ‌and the Congress, and pursue a genuinely unifying approach.

Instead, ⁤he ⁤chose ‌to embrace the most progressive and partisan elements of his own party.

It was​ an instinctively⁢ political decision by a ⁣man​ who‌ has probably done as ⁢much as anyone over the last ‌half ​century‍ to discredit politicians. Still, it’s unlikely he’ll be ⁣the last.

About the Author:

Gerard Baker is editor at large of the Wall Street Journal and author of American Breakdown: Why We No Longer ​Trust Our Leaders and‍ Institutions and How We Can Rebuild Confidence (Twelve).

In what ways does “The Last Politician” offer a ⁢biased and hagiographic account of Joe Biden’s presidency, lacking in critical analysis and ⁤new insights

Lity to Biden’s policies or ‌decisions, Foer blames it on global supply ‍chain disruptions and the COVID-19 pandemic, ⁢conveniently ignoring the fact that Biden’s massive spending proposals and expansionary fiscal policies have exacerbated the problem.

In his eagerness to portray Biden as the Last Politician, the savior of America, Foer turns a⁢ blind eye to the many challenges and controversies that⁣ have plagued Biden’s‌ presidency. From the border crisis, where record numbers of illegal immigrants have surged into the country, to rising crime rates in major cities, to the disastrous handling of the Afghanistan withdrawal, the ‍book conveniently overlooks or downplays these issues.

Perhaps the most glaring omission in Foer’s book ‍is the cognitive decline and ⁢lack of mental ⁣sharpness that Biden has displayed.⁤ While critics ⁣have raised concerns about his ability to effectively govern, Foer⁣ brushes this⁣ aside and instead presents Biden as a wise and strategic leader.

Overall, “The Last Politician” is a highly biased and hagiographic account of Joe Biden’s presidency. It offers little in the way of new insights or critical analysis, instead presenting a rose-tinted view of Biden’s policies and actions. The book ‌reads more like a campaign pamphlet ⁤than a rigorous examination​ of the 46th president’s⁤ tenure. While it may find a receptive audience among Biden’s most ardent ​supporters, those looking for a balanced and objective assessment of ‍his presidency will‌ be sorely‍ disappointed.


Read More From Original Article Here: Putting the Shine on Biden

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