Trump Issues New Weapons Systems for Ukraine
We Know Who Controlled the Biden Autopen...and This Scandal Just Got Worse
Gavin Newsom Had a Total Meltdown Over JD Vance's Disney Visit. The VP's...
The Boston Red Sox Are Feeling the Trump Effect
Trump's About Had it With Putin
This Republican Thinks We Should 'Move on' From Jeffrey Epstein
Explosive Report Reveals Secret Service Knew About Threat Against Trump's Life—Why Didn’t...
Newsom Unveils His Newest Plan to Fix California's Housing Crisis
Obama Tells Dems to Get Out of Their 'Fetal Positions'
Noem Destroys Liberal Narrative on Alligator Alcatraz
Watch Homan Tear Into Heckler During Student Summit Speech
Will This Tweet From AOC About Trump Land Her in Legal Hot Water?
How New York Managed to Waste $100 Million on a Single Dead-End Project
Did You Catch What Mamdani Said About the NYPD Responding to Domestic Violence...
Florida Lawmakers Denied Access to Alligator Alcatraz Sue DeSantis
Tipsheet

WaPo Includes Curious Admission from Jen Psaki While Celebrating Biden's 'Hot Streak'

AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

The U.S. Senate on Sunday afternoon passed the misnamed Inflation Reduction Act, which came with a price tag of $750 billion. The mainstream media was quick to celebrate such a victory, which included this lengthy piece at The Washington Post, "Inside Biden’s hot streak, from the poolside to the Capitol." The piece by Yasmeen Abutaleb and Tyler Pager speaks glowingly of President Joe Biden throughout, early on writing that he's had a "remarkable three-week stretch." What's really getting attention is an admission from former White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki, buried in the eighth paragraph. 

Advertisement

Psaki is quoted as saying that "Sometimes the best things happen in the dark, away from the public." She was speaking in the context of Senate negotiations. "One of the lessons learned — a big lesson learned — was that letting the negotiations with senators dominate the public conversation was a mistake, because it made it so that disagreements about minutiae became what the public consumed, instead of how pieces of legislation were going to impact people’s lives," she had also said. 

Such a quote not only speaks to the Biden administration's lack of transparency, but, as many pointed out on Twitter, also to the slogan from The Washington Post, "Democracy Dies in Darkness."

As Lindsay Kornick for Fox News highlighted, that slogan showed up online on February 22, 2017, during the Trump administration. The slogan appeared on print copies a week later. 

The piece also closed with pointing out that the president is being kept out of such negotiations, which is framed as being about Biden owning up to "mistakes" made:

Advertisement

In some sense, the groundwork was laid several months ago. When Biden held a news conference last January to mark his first year in office, his final answer to a reporter’s question signaled a recognition that he’d made mistakes and was determined to take a different approach.

“The public doesn’t want me to be the ‘President Senator.’ They want me to be the president, and let senators be senators,” Biden said. “If I’ve made a mistake, I’m used to negotiating to get things done, and I’ve been in the past relatively successful at it in the United States Senate, even as vice president. But I think that the role of president is a different role.”

It's worth reminding that Biden last year had tried to involve himself in negotiations for the the so-called Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act in the Senate--which ultimately passed without him having a role--and in trying to convincing the U.S. House of Representatives to pass Build Back Better. 

The so-called Inflation Reduction Act, which even Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) acknowledged won't reduce inflation, still has to pass the House. It is expected to do so on Friday, as this piece mentioned. 

Advertisement

Just about anything would be considered an improvement for Biden in the polls, considering he was at around an average of 36-38 percent in recent weeks, according to RealClearPolitics (RCP) averages. RCP still has him at just below 40 percent, though, at 39.8 percent

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement