The Washington Post
July 26, 2024
by Jennifer Rubin
Distinguished person of the week |
We are so unaccustomed to politicians doing the right thing that when one does (e.g., Liz Cheney) we are left slack-jawed. Biden will be remembered for a long, illustrious career as well as a willingness to put his own ambitions aside for the good of the country. Having declined reelection in the tradition of George Washington, he has earned a unique place in history. Biden may be among the most consequential modern presidents. He defeated Trump in 2020, leading the country through the horror of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection. He rolled out a comprehensive, complex vaccination plan that freed the country from the covid-19 stranglehold. His American Rescue Plan saved thousands of businesses, spared hundreds of thousands of people from eviction, offered the single most effective anti-poverty measure for children (the child tax credit) and kept first responders on the payroll. Crime plunged, employment soared, the manufacturing sector revived and now border crossings are way down. Biden’s legislative accomplishments include the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the Chips and Science Act, the Pact Act and the Inflation Reduction Act (with a historic investment in green energy and a cap on prescription drugs). Despite MAGA antics, he kept the government open and his agenda intact. He appointed about 200 diverse, extremely qualified lower-court judges and nominated the first Black woman to be a Supreme Court justice (who has exhibited her brilliance in one dissent after another). He ended the grifting, nonstop dissembling, cronyism and misuse of the Justice Department that characterized Trump’s first term. On the world stage, Biden reentered the Paris climate accord, rejuvenated and expanded NATO, rallied the West to Ukraine’s side, constructed new alliances (e.g., AUKUS) and stood with Israel in its greatest time of peril while insisting on providing aid for Gaza and pushing for a cease-fire. He ended a fruitless 20-year war in Afghanistan. To be sure, he had his stumbles — the process of withdraw from Afghanistan was painful, he may have indulged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu too long, and Biden was at times too parsimonious with weaponry for Ukraine. But on balance, he restored America as the indispensable nation, earning the widespread praise of our allies. And finally, despite sniping from the media, he focused the country on democracy and the preservation of the rule of law. He defined the stakes for the election and presented the question for voters: Authoritarianism or democracy? (That, in large part, explains how Democrats did historically well in the midterms, defeating election deniers and forced-birth zealots across the country.) For all that, Biden has earned his place among the ranks of the very best presidents. |