So what if Biden trips up? On the political stage his footwork is the fanciest seen in decades | Will Hutton
He stumbles when coming down the stairs of Air Force One; he trips over a sandbag on stage to fall flat on his face when handing out diplomas at the US air force academy; he muddles his words with alarming regularity. It is easy to write off President Joe Biden as a senile, 80-year-old duffer. Yet he is already being regarded by many Democrats, and some Republicans, as significant a Democratic president as Franklin Roosevelt or Lyndon Johnson. He is dramatically changing the face of the US around Democratic priorities - reindustrialisation to support blue-collar jobs and wages, wholeheartedly fighting climate change, investing massively in science and education, doing more for the poorest and, not least, rejuvenating the US's decaying public infrastructure.
But, unlike his famous predecessors, he has never had their big majorities in Congress, and after November's midterm elections he does not even control the House of Representatives. He has had to rely on guile, sheer political craft and reading the Washington runes better than any alive. For the last few months we were being warned of financial Armageddon, as an implacable Republican party forced the US to default on its debts, only to be avoided if the administration agreed to its demands for swingeing public spending cuts to avoid going through an artificial debt ceiling limit. Tomorrow was to be the witching day when default occurred and a financial crisis engulfed the world. Instead, last week the wily Biden again outfoxed his opponents, and struck a deal massively weighted in his favour that was voted for by overwhelming majorities. It was an extraordinary victory and, when invited to claim it as such, he replied: You think that's going to help me get it passed?" First rule in Washington politics, from which the affable Biden has never deviated: always allow the defeated to save face because you're soon going to have to cut another deal with them.
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