Biden's governance secret: Less is more

Dan Drezner reflects how President Biden is different than — and similar to — former President Trump.
Daniel Drezner

On Wednesday, Politico's AM Playbook opened with a venting of the spleen from GOP Hill staffers. These aides worked for one of the "Group of 10″ senators who have said they were willing to work with President Biden but have yet to actually do so. They are frustrated that Biden stiff-armed their outreach during the coronavirus emergency bill and are sure the same thing will happen again on infrastructure. (They may well be right.)

One staffer laments that standard Republican tactics to hurt Biden have not really worked: "'Biden is a horrible villain for us,' said the G-10 staffer, meaning not that he was an actual villain but that he was difficult to villainize. 'There are deeply entrenched narratives that have some truth but are no longer totally true. Reporters believe them despite all evidence to the contrary.'"

The GOP Hill staffer has half a point. Biden's presidential style does evoke some deja vu about Donald Trump. As president, the one thing Trump was assiduous about was courting the GOP base. They had reasons to be skeptical that a thrice-married New York socialite who did not sound like a standard conservative Republican would cater to their views. As unconventional as Trump was as president, however, he catered to his base.

Biden has done something similar with the liberal wing of the Democratic Party. Biden was most definitely not their guy when he won the nomination. Since his inauguration, however, there has been story after story about the Biden White House's cultivation of liberals. Writing in the Atlantic, Anand Giridharadas acknowledges that he was "skeptical of Biden" but recognizes that "a president associated with the politics of austerity is spending money with focused gusto, a crisis isn't going to waste, and Senator Bernie Sanders is happy."

This has been reflected in the polling on Biden, too. Last month Gallup showed Biden with 96 percent support from Democrats — a figure higher than Republican support for Trump at any time during his presidency. This is not just an artifact of Gallup, either. As the New York Times's Lisa Lerer and Giovanni Russonello report, "In separate polls released on Wednesday by Monmouth University and Quinnipiac University, Mr. Biden's approval was at 95 percent and 94 percent among members of his own party."

Weirdly, Biden is better at being Trump than Trump ever was. He is catering to his base with big liberal policies. That is reflected in his polling, which if anything is more stable and rock-solid than Trump's. So why is the media narrative about Biden so different?

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