From the AP:
“By the numbers: Stats that
tell story of Biden's first year”
By some counts, President Joe
Biden can lay claim to a banner first year in office. But numbers also reveal
plenty of setbacks. Most in the United
States got their COVID-19 vaccines, but other countries fared better. Economic
growth surged; so did inflation. America exited Afghanistan, but the war ended
with a chaotic evacuation and a suicide bombing that killed 13 U.S. troops.
Pandemic aid and infrastructure bills passed. Pricey legislation to advance
Biden's social and climate proposals shrunk and then stalled.
Some notable numbers from
Biden's first year:
—63.5% vaccination rate.
Most Americans got jabbed. Countries with higher vaccination rates: Argentina,
Australia, Brazil, Cambodia, Canada, China, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Norway,
Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.
—3.9% jobless rate. The
low unemployment rate is a big highlight of Biden's first year. He inherited a
coronavirus-thrashed economy with unemployment at 6.4%. Employers added 6.4
million jobs last year as unemployment dropped well below the 4.6% that the
Congressional Budget Office had anticipated in July for the end of 2021.
—7% inflation. In running
the economy hot, Biden got burned as inflation reached a nearly 40-year high.
Higher prices led to disapproval of Biden's economic leadership. Gasoline and
groceries cost more, and some notable economists said higher prices were a sign
that Biden's relief package was too large.
—$1 trillion. The cost of
Biden's bipartisan infrastructure law, which includes $550 billion in new
spending. To get an agreement, Biden pulled back from the $2.3 trillion he
initially proposed. He separately proposed $1.8 trillion for a package of
social and climate initiatives, but that was modified and unable to clear the
Senate. So Biden got about one-quarter of the $4 trillion in spending he
proposed.
—13 deaths. The number of
U.S. troops who died in a suicide bombing at the gate of Kabul's airport during
the U.S. evacuation of more than 124,000 people from Afghanistan. At least 169
Afghans were killed, with the evacuations leaving scores of Americans and tens
of thousands of Afghan allies behind. More than 2,460 U.S. service members died
in Afghanistan over the course of the two-decade war.
—1.78 million border crossings
in the Southwest. Migrants began streaming across the U.S.-Mexico border once
Biden became president. There were 1.78 million encounters with border agents
during his first 10 full months, a four-fold increase compared with President
Donald Trump's last 10 months in office.
—20 natural disasters.
There were 20 extreme weather and climate disasters that each caused damages in
excess of $1 billion and killed a combined 688 people. These included a
drought, two floods, 11 severe storms, four tropical cyclones, a wildfire and a
winter storm. Adjusted for inflation, the U.S. has averaged 7.4 disasters
annually since 1980 that caused $1 billion or more in losses.
—24 states. Biden visited
nearly half of America's 50 states during his first year. Excluding stops at
his homes in Delaware, top destinations were Pennsylvania (seven times) and
Michigan (five times). Both were key states in his 2020 election victory. Jill
Biden went to 35 states.
—41 federal judges. Biden
had 41 judges confirmed to the bench during his first year in office, more than
any of his recent predecessors at the same time in their presidencies. Of
those, 80% are women, and 53% are people of color, according to the White House.
—103 days. It took an
average of 103 days for Biden nominees requiring Senate confirmation to be
confirmed. That’s longer than the average for nominees in the first years of
the previous six administrations and nearly three times longer than during Ronald
Reagan’s first year in office, according to an analysis by the Partnership for
Public Service’s Center for Presidential Transition.
—9 news conferences. There
will be a 10th on Wednesday. Biden has been remarkably press shy. He held nine
news conferences (six solo and three joint) and 22 media interviews during his
first year. That’s fewer news conferences than any of his five immediate
predecessors at the same point in their presidencies, and fewer media
interviews than any of his recent predecessors.
—32 “not a joke"
references. It's one of Biden's favorite speech lines. Among the things he
said were “not a joke”: Civil rights icons, labor unions that built the middle
class, air pollution from Delaware chemical plants, climate change as a
national security risk, California voters, Biden's disregard of polls on his
economic agenda.
^ We are coming onto the 1 year
anniversary of his Presidency and these numbers say a lot about Biden and what
he has and (more importantly) has not done for the country and the world in
that time. ^
https://www.aol.com/numbers-stats-tell-story-bidens-140724696-100504188.html?
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