The highs and lows of Biden presidency after one year in office
On the eve of the anniversary of his inauguration, the president will defend his record so far in the White House at a 4 p.m. news conference in Washington
Summary:
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President to hold White House news conference Wednesday
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Average approval rating in first year worst other than Trump
Joe Biden limps into his second year facing a cascade of perils, at home and overseas, as well as the prospect his party will lose control of Congress in November's midterm elections.
On the eve of the anniversary of his inauguration, the president will defend his record so far in the White House at a 4 p.m. news conference in Washington.
Biden inherited the pandemic, and in his first months accelerated the US vaccination campaign while spending political capital to win $1.9 trillion in relief for virus-stricken Americans. But he's getting little love from voters for staving off a recession, as they contend with soaring energy and food bills while the omicron variant of the coronavirus surges across the country.
At the same time, Russia is poised to spark Biden's worst foreign policy crisis yet with a potential invasion of Ukraine.
Here's a look at the highs and lows of his presidency so far.
The Pandemic
The omicron variant of coronavirus has set new US records for daily cases and hospitalizations while pushing the American death toll over 850,000. The White House was caught flat-footed, with even Democratic allies complaining the administration wasn't prepared for a spike in demand for testing.
More Infections
Average daily cases hit more than three times last winter's peak
The Supreme Court, meanwhile, gutted Biden's best hope to get shots in the arms of American holdouts, blocking a rule that would require large employers to impose vaccine mandates or weekly testing on their workers.
The president's advisers are planning for the virus to potentially become endemic, and his latest attempt to navigate the crisis revolves around shipping Americans millions of free test kits and masks.
Economy
Biden's tanking approval ratings are tied, at least in part, to surging inflation. Consumer prices were up 7% in December from a year earlier, the largest 12-month gain in nearly 40 years. A combination of factors are to blame, including snarled supply chains, capacity constraints and tremendous American demand for goods.
Hottest in Decades
US headline inflation jumped in December by the most since 1982
But following massive job losses when the pandemic began in 2020, the US added a record 6.4 million jobs in 2021, and the unemployment rate fell sharply to 3.9%, well below forecasts. Biden's sought to claim credit for the job market, but higher prices have voters anxious about his leadership.
Balance of Power: 117th Congress
Among post-World War II presidents elected to their first terms, only Donald Trump had a lower average approval rating in his first year, according to Gallup.
Build Back Better
Biden was dealt a punishing blow when Senator Joe Manchin, a moderate West Virginia Democrat, said he would not support the president's nearly $1.8 trillion plan to fight climate change, extend an expanded child tax credit and create new social programs.
The White House hopes to revive talks on a slimmed-down package, but so far Manchin hasn't appeared willing to re-engage. And any new legislation could struggle to pass the House, where some Democrats insist on provisions that could make a final deal difficult to strike.
Without an agreement, Biden risks unenthusiastic Democratic voters sitting out the midterm elections.
Infrastructure
Biden won a $550 billion infrastructure plan with bipartisan support, which -- paired with the coronavirus recovery program -- will help state and local governments rebuild roads and bridges, improve schools, extend high-speed internet access, and remove lead pipes from water systems.
Money should start flowing to states soon, and Democrats plan to aggressively highlight shovel-ready projects in swing districts before the midterms. Yet the legislation hasn't yet shown up in Biden's polling numbers, and it's unclear whether enough projects can get underway by November to make an impression on voters.
Voting Rights
Biden had hoped to parlay the anniversary of the 5 January attack on the US Capitol and the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday to rally Senate Democrats to pass voting rights legislation by weakening the chamber's filibuster rules. But Senator Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, another moderate Democrat, publicly rejected the appeal, while Republican leaders accused the president of fear-mongering.
Some voting rights activists refused to appear alongside Biden at a speech in Atlanta promoting the effort, criticizing him for prioritizing his economic agenda over voting rights.
The failure could resonate poorly in November for a president who relied on Black voters to carry him to the White House.
Russia and Afghanistan
Biden has stumbled on the international stage, and never fully recovered from his hasty and bloody withdrawal from Afghanistan. Rather than garnering praise for ending America's longest war, the disorderly departure infuriated US allies and raised questions about his administration's planning and intelligence-gathering.
Meanwhile, the Kremlin's buildup of troops on the border with Ukraine has heightened fears of an imminent invasion that could throw Europe into chaos. Another major setback overseas would provide Republicans a fresh cudgel as they seek to portray Biden as weak and ineffectual in confrontations with adversaries.
China
The Afghanistan withdrawal, rapidly escalating tensions with Russia and domestic troubles have drawn White House attention away from China, which Biden's repeatedly described as the US's top competitor in the world. The relationship between the world's two largest economies has deteriorated since Biden took office, and a November virtual summit between the American president and China's Xi Jingping produced no breakthroughs.
The US subsequently announced a diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Olympics next month while Biden's handling of the crisis in Ukraine risks emboldening the Chinese government and military as they confront Taiwan, regarded in Beijing as a breakaway province