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May 8th, 2024

Insight

Biden's 2024 presidential campaign harks back to past Dem triumphs

Doyle McManus

By Doyle McManus Los Angeles Times/(TNS)

Published February 21, 2023

 Biden's 2024 presidential campaign harks back to past Dem triumphs
WASHINGTON — When the 1996 presidential campaign approached, Bill Clinton faced an uphill struggle to win a second term. His biggest legislative proposal, a sweeping health care bill, had failed. His party had lost the House of Representatives to Republicans led by a fiery conservative, Newt Gingrich. Clinton's poll ratings were sagging.

So he tacked toward the center. He battled Gingrich to a standstill over GOP plans to cut spending on Medicare. He championed modest but popular proposals such as the V-chip, a device to help parents control what their children watch on television. And on Election Day, he defeated Republican candidate Bob Dole by a whopping 8% margin.

In 2012, Barack Obama's campaign for a second term started out in deep trouble too. Voters were unhappy about the economy's way-too-slow recovery from the Great Recession. The president's health care law, derisively called "Obamacare," was deeply unpopular. The House was back in Republican hands, with radical tea party members demanding big budget cuts.

Obama tried for a bipartisan deal on taxes and spending. But when that effort collapsed, he went on the offensive, attacking the GOP for demanding cuts in Medicare spending. On Election Day, he defeated Mitt Romney by 4%.

Now, at the dawn of the 2024 presidential campaign, history isn't repeating itself precisely, but it's rhyming.

Joe Biden is presiding over an economic recovery, but voters are too squeezed by rising costs to give him credit.

His approval rating, 43% in one recent average of polls, is even lower than Clinton's or Obama's when their reelection drives began.

Biden faces a pugnacious Republican House majority that wants to undo the legislative achievements of his first two years by forcing a crisis over the debt ceiling.

Not surprisingly, he's borrowing strategies that worked for Clinton and Obama, a gambit that combines nostalgia and practical politics.

He has attacked Republicans for proposing to "sunset" Social Security and Medicare by requiring Congress to renew the programs every few years.

"If anyone tries to get rid of Social Security or Medicare, I will veto it," he said at a union hall in Maryland last week.

That was old-fashioned scaremongering. Republicans aren't proposing the abolition of those popular programs.

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But Biden was right on one count: Several GOP legislators, including the chairman of the Senate Republican campaign committee, had argued strenuously for a sunset rule. After Biden's attacks hit home, they dropped the idea.

Meanwhile, Biden imitated another Clinton move by proposing a list of modest, consumer-friendly measures, including a law to crack down on "junk fees" such as Ticketmaster service charges and hotel resort fees.

Critics deride ideas like that as small ball — minor measures beneath the dignity of a president. But they often turn out to be wildly popular.

When Clinton ran in 1996, two of his most popular actions were the Family and Medical Leave Act, which guaranteed workers up to 12 days of unpaid leave, and the V-chip.

Biden won two such consumer-friendly measures for Medicare users in the blizzard of legislation Congress passed last year: a $35 cap on the price of insulin and a $2,000 cap on drug expenses. Republicans will mess with those at their peril.

If the president stops cable and internet providers from tacking junk fees on to consumers' bills, he might just cruise to reelection. And if Republicans oppose the idea, that will just give Biden another issue to campaign on.

With a bellicose Republican majority in command of the House, the chances for ambitious bipartisan legislation have pretty much evaporated.

"While resort fees might be small-ball, this is a time that calls for small-ball," economic columnist Josh Barro wrote earlier this month.

One more dip into nostalgia: Biden is asking voters to let him "finish the job," a phrase Obama used in 2012. It's another sign that he plans to run.

Then again, nostalgia was one of Biden's main themes when he ran for president four years ago. He promised voters a return to normalcy — to the quieter, less disruptive politics of the pre-Trump era.

It shouldn't be surprising that an 80-year-old president is drawing on the lessons of a lifetime in politics. He had a front-row seat to both the Clinton reelection campaign of 1996, when he ran for his fifth term in the Senate, and the Obama campaign of 2012, when Biden was vice president.

This may be one case in which Biden's age is not a handicap; he comes by his nostalgia honestly.

Besides, those tactics worked for Clinton in 1996 and Obama in 2012. Who's to say they can't work again?

(COMMENT, BELOW)

Previously:
02/14/23: Chinese balloon is gone, but it's still making US-China relations harder to manage
01/24/23: Biden said the pandemic is over. But, aw shucks!, the pandemic just won't cooperate
01/17/23: The war in Ukraine could become a long, frozen conflict. Are we ready for that?
01/10/23: The real winner from the House fight?
12/28/22: Why Trump will never go to jail over Jan. 6
12/20/22: Democracy around the world is looking a little healthier, at least next to the alternative
12/13/22: Biden's policy makes Ukraine fight by rules Russia doesn't follow
12/09/22: Iran protests have shoved the nuclear issue off center stage. It will be back
09/20/22: Biden sent the wrong message on COVID. He can still fix it
09/20/22: Putin's brutality in Ukraine can get worse. Get ready for a chilly winter
09/13/22: China's economy is slowing, its population aging. That could make it dangerous
06/28/22: To deter China on Taiwan, Biden needs to reassure
05/24/22: India has become a US partner in countering China --- a limited partner, that is
05/11/22: Slow Joe's premature self-congratulation won't help the US in Ukraine
05/03/22: Can the US deter Putin from using his arsenal of battlefield nuclear weapons in Ukraine?
04/08/22:Biden's budget is big. Dems will vote to make it bigger
03/22/22: Ukraine's resistance offers a useful lesson to Taiwan
03/15/22: China wanted to appear neutral between Russia and Ukraine. It isn't
02/22/21: Who needs an invasion? Putin's offensive against Ukraine has been underway for a long time
02/09/21: If Putin wants an exit from the Ukraine crisis, the offramps are open
11/30/21: Biden wants to focus on China. Putin has another idea
11/23/21: Our oldest president just turned 79. He might have something to learn from the second-oldest
11/16/21: Can Biden and Xi talk their way out of a slide into conflict?
10/13/21: Congress has a chance to take bipartisan action on Facebook. Don't let it slip away
09/24/21: Can Dems win on crime issues with murders rising? Biden thinks so
06/29/21: Can Dems win on crime issues with murders rising? Biden thinks so
04/20/21:Afghanistan's war -- and America's stakes in it -- won't end when the troops leave
03/31/21: Here's why our new cold war with China could be a good thing
02/25/21: Sen. Joe Manchin drives Dems crazy. Here's why they need more senators like him
08/11/20: Goodbye to traditional political conventions --- and good riddance

05/19/20: We won't end COVID-19 with 'test and trace'
04/07/20: Joe Biden is stuck in his basement. It just might help him win
03/10/20: Where did Bernie's revolution go wrong?
03/05/20: Dems give Trump good reason to smile
02/18/20: Who will be the Un-Bernie?
02/11/20: Buttigieg wants to be the Goldilocks candidate. It just might work
01/21/20: The world according to Bernie
09/04/19: Trump's draft deal with the Taliban looks ugly, but it may be the best we can get
04/22/19: Something is missing from media-fawning Buttigieg campaign --- his stance on major issues
03/14/19: Biden, If He Runs, Will Face A Cruel Irony

Doyle McManus
Los Angeles Times
(TNS)

Doyle McManus is an American journalist, columnist, who appears often on Public Broadcasting Service's Washington Week.