From Yahoo:
“Biden ties his domestic
agenda to global goals”
Four years ago, then-President
Donald Trump opened his first address to the United Nations General Assembly by
boasting about the stock market and American military might. He acknowledged
the world leaders before him, then promptly put them in their place. “As long
as I hold this office, I will defend America’s interests above all else,” he
said.
On Tuesday afternoon, in his own
first speech before the United Nations in New York, President Biden struck a
markedly different tone, promising to lead a global renewal modeled on his own
domestic policy. The speech included references to infrastructure spending and
“good-paying jobs,” popular refrains when Biden is speaking at a manufacturing
plant in Ohio or before reporters in the White House. He alluded to Build Back
Better World, a global infrastructure plan modeled after Build Back Better, its
domestic progenitor. “Infrastructure can be a strong foundation that allows
societies in low- and middle-income countries to grow and to prosper,” he said
of that partnership between the world’s seven leading economies.
As the president spoke in New
York, lawmakers in Washington, D.C., remained sharply divided over his domestic
agenda, with fights over the debt ceiling and spending on social programs dominating
Capitol Hill, where lawmakers returned to work on Monday. Should Biden’s agenda
collapse in the coming weeks, he could see his clout as an international leader
sharply diminished. Standing before other world leaders on Tuesday, though,
Biden relished the opportunity to demonstrate a clean break with Trumpism.
References to infrastructure were punctuated with moments of more sweeping
rhetoric. “Simply put, we stand, in my view, at an inflection point in
history,” Biden said, echoing — if only faintly — the New Frontier vision
evoked by John F. Kennedy in 1960.
Describing the severity of what
he called a “borderless climate crisis,” Biden announced he intended to double
U.S. support for the financing of climate-related projects in the developing
world to about $11 billion. And he said the United States will make “additional
commitments” in fighting the coronavirus around the world, details of which are
expected when he meets with world leaders to discuss the pandemic on Wednesday.
After four years in which the United States was often at odds with its
long-standing partners, Biden heralded a return to normal, at a time when
normalcy seems like a distant dream for a world caught in the tumult of a
pandemic. In remarks ahead of a bilateral meeting with U.N. Secretary-General
António Guterres, he previewed the main theme of his speech: “America is back.
We believe in the United Nations and its value.”
Such assurances aside, the United
States has recently fallen out with several allies. The World Health
Organization has asked the U.S. and other nations to hold off on coronavirus
booster shots, urging them to donate doses instead to countries where few, if
any, people have been vaccinated at all. The Biden administration has denied
that request, describing it as premised on a “false choice.” France is furious
with the United States over a canceled submarine deal with Australia. Anger at
the botched U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan continues to reverberate among
allies who had invested in the military and reconstruction effort there.
In Tuesday’s speech, Biden
defended the withdrawal from Afghanistan, though without the defiance that
characterized earlier remarks on the same topic. “I stand here today for the
first time in 20 years with the U.S. not at war,” he said. Biden assured his
listeners in Tuesday’s speech that the United States was “not seeking a new
Cold War,” in an apparent reference to China. But tensions between Washington
and Beijing have hardly eased since he took office, and Biden often uses
competition with China as an argument for selling his domestic agenda. In
contrast to Trump, he promised an era of “relentless diplomacy,” including a
renewed effort to reenter the Iran nuclear deal, from which Trump withdrew, and
peacefully resolve the ongoing crisis on the Korean Peninsula — presumably
without the kind of overtures to the North Korean dictator, Kim Jong Un, in
which Trump regularly engaged. His broader vision of a U.S.-led global renewal
could be imperiled back in Washington, where a handful of centrist Democrats —
namely, Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona —
could ruin the prospects of his infrastructure package, which contains the
kinds of investments Biden wants made around the world.
As the president flew to New
York, aides and Capitol Hill surrogates continued to furiously shore up
congressional support for his domestic agenda, which is threatened not only by
moderates like Manchin and Sinema but by progressives who believe that agenda
is not bold enough. Biden has argued in the past that authoritarianism thrives
when democracies show themselves to be ineffectual and ineffective, incapable
of keeping the promises they make. He made a similar point on Tuesday.
“Democracy remains the best tool we have to unleash our full human potential,”
he said. It was a hopeful premise that Washington routinely puts to the test.
^ He just keeps living in a world
of "Lemon Drops and Moon Beams" rather than in reality. He has failed
on his Domestic Policies (42% of all Americans think so) and he has failed on
his International Policies (the majority of our Allies think so.)
I really wish he would stop making promises he
doesn't intend to keep ("We will get you out.") and statements that
aren't true ("America is back.")
Right now, because of his words
and actions, he just seems like the old relative you only let out for a few
minutes during the holidays who says random things no one understands and then
you put back into his room until the next holiday. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/biden-ties-domestic-agenda-to-global-goals-170425282.html
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