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“There’s legitimate questions people can ask if they worry about getting vaccinated, but the question should be asked, answered and people should get vaccinated,” Biden said. “But this is not a pandemic.”
“It’s frustrating,” he went on, seeking to downplay the current surge as a pandemic only of those who have refused to get shots.
Amid the spike in cases, Biden’s aides have sought to underscore the real progress they’ve made on the pandemic, mindful his ability to contain the crisis will be how voters overwhelming judge him. They have been resistant of returning to earlier levels of crisis messaging, understanding the effect it might have on national impressions of progress.
Still, Biden acknowledged some pandemic-era restrictions would have to persist, even as he hails the progress he’s made since taking office in January. He predicted the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is going to recommend that everyone under the age of 12 “should probably be wearing a mask in school.”
Selling the plan
Biden entered Wednesday’s town hall just as a test vote failed on his much-touted bipartisan infrastructure plan, an early blow that Biden declared “irrelevant.”
Still, he and his aides have signaled the coming weeks will be essential for enacting his sweeping agenda before midterm election season heats up. So, too, is the clock ticking on fulfilling his campaign promise to work with Republicans to prove that democracy is still functional.
Biden acknowledged it was a question he’s receiving from foreign leaders, who asked him whether the US will “ever get it together.” And he said a proliferation of conspiracy theories was making working together more difficult, citing one that “Biden is hiding people and sucking the blood of children.”
Still, the President insisted working together remained his north star, including when he was questioned by a member of the audience about the “utopian need to gain bipartisan support.”
“I may be the wrong guy to talk to,” Biden warned, an acknowledgment he wasn’t planning to give up any time soon on his insistence that Republicans and Democrats can work together.
He said he was haggling with Republicans and Democrats alike, saying the compromises are “real” and noting there have to be compromises within his own party “between the far left and the center and some of the folks who are more conservative.” And without prompting, Biden name-checked Ohio’s Republican senator, Rob Portman, 25 minutes into the event. Portman is among the senators negotiating the bipartisan infrastructure plan, and Biden’s flattering message was laced with his expectations.
“I come from a tradition in the Senate, you shake your hand, and that’s it, you keep your word,” he said. “And I found Rob Portman does that.”
Tough economic love
Politicians are ordinarily wary of bearing bad news. Biden has insisted he won’t sugarcoat the facts. And on Wednesday he delivered somewhat unwelcome economic news in two separate answers.
He acknowledged current price increases were real when questioned about an overheating economy. And he frankly told a restaurant chain owner that he’ll continue to struggle hiring workers for the foreseeable future — and suggested the restaurant owner raise wages.
It was some tough economic love. But Biden was trying to make a point about the major changes he is trying to affect on American workers’ lives in his first year in office, convinced whatever side effects being felt right now pale in comparison to the larger benefits down the road.
“There will be near-term inflation because everything is now trying to be picked back up,” he said, detailing how his economic team has advised him current price increases won’t last as demand returns to normal levels.
Biden has come under fire from Republicans for injecting trillions of dollars into the economy at a moment when inflation fears are percolating. But he pointed to economists who say the two plans he is pushing in Congress would actually drive prices down.
When the restaurant owner stood up to ask how to incentivize workers coming back to work amid a nationwide struggle to retain employees, Biden acknowledged it may take some time.
“I think it really is a matter of people deciding now that they have opportunities to do other things. And there is a shortage of employees, people are looking to make more money and and to bargain. And so I think your business and the tourist business is really going to be in a bind for a little while,” Biden said.
Asked if expanded unemployment benefits enacted during the pandemic are playing a role in worker shortages, Biden acknowledged they could be: “Let’s assume it did, but it’s coming to an end.”
But he said raising worker pay would prove a more sure thing, suggesting a $15 per hour rate could attract a more reliable workforce.
“But you may pay that already,” he said.
This is a breaking story and will be updated.