The Church of Talarico
Wisconsin's DPI Continues to Stonewall the Public About Taxpayer-Funded Standards Workshop
Harrowing Video Shows PA Woman Escape Attempted Kidnapping With Help of Store Employees
Alaska Democrat Says Her Native Language Is 'Ahead of the Curve' on Pronouns
Are Democrats Working With the Media to Derail Jasmine Crockett's Senate Run?
Pro-Gun Bipartisanship in Anti-Gun Washington? Kinda
Iranian Women’s Rights Activist Tears Into the UN As They Pursue Virtue Signaling...
Harry Enten Issues a Brutal Warning to Democrats for the Upcoming Midterm Elections
Rubio's Case for a Stronger West
DC Mayor Bowser Asks Trump Administration: Help Clean Waste from Potomac River
Former NY Sales Director Sentenced to Prison in $70M Medicare Brain Scan Scheme
Florida, Texas Executives Get 20 Years for $233M Affordable Care Act Fraud Scheme
Socialist Math: Zohran Mamdani Sees Only One Solution — Higher Taxes
Final Member of Alleged Colombian Crime Crew Pleads Guilty to $5M Miami Robbery...
Compton Man Pleads Guilty to Hurling Concrete at Federal Officers During Paramount Riot
Tipsheet

Biden Says Spending Spree Opponents Are 'Complicit in America's Decline'

Biden Says Spending Spree Opponents Are 'Complicit in America's Decline'
AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

Speaking in Howell, Michigan on Tuesday, President Joe Biden hoped to build some public support for his domestic legislative agenda by getting outside of D.C. where members of his own party — not to mention Republicans — have been unable to come to an agreement over how to proceed with Biden's $1.2 trillion infrastructure and $3.5 trillion budget bills.

Advertisement

Biden, having been unable to close the deal among members of his own party despite hours of meetings at the White House in recent weeks and a visit to Capitol Hill, decried the "hyperbole" in Washington, D.C. before launching into a whole lot of hyperbole with a heaping side of gaslighting.

"These bills are not about left versus right or moderate versus progressive," Biden claimed. "To oppose these investments," Biden continued, "is to be complicit in America's decline." 

How subtle.

On his first point, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Progressive Caucus Chairwoman Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) — or Senators Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) — might beg to differ on the president's claim that his legislative agenda is not about about "moderate versus progressive."

Either he's entirely checked out of reality on Capitol Hill or Biden thinks no one noticed that Democrat senators are being harassed by kayakers or chased into bathrooms and recorded. And does he really think Pelosi's 11th-hour failure to secure support for an infrastructure vote last week wasn't due to progressive caucus members holding out for a more palatable deal? If the Capitol Hill battle over Biden's infrastructure and budget bills aren't a case of moderate versus progressive, such a match doesn't exist. 

Advertisement

As Townhall's own Guy Benson points out, the notion of Joe Biden passing blame for American decline is... galling. 

Unilaterally withdrawing from Afghanistan — angering American allies who'd fought alongside the U.S. for two decades and resulting in thousands of Americans and Afghan allies left behind to face terrorists after relying on the Taliban for security — sounds a bit like American decline. After all, when was the last time an American president was censured by British Parliament? 

With five decades spent in Washington — as a senator, vice president, and now president — America's relative position is something he's had a hand in for nearly half a century. The country's standing in the world is something he's had more of an impact on than those members such as Sinema or Jayapal whose combined time in DC is barely more than a decade. 

Biden also repeated the now-stale and repeatedly debunked claims that his spending bills come at zero cost, won't increase the national debt, and will reduce the tax burden for many Americans. The president can say these things as many times in as many places as he wishes, but it won't change the fact that they're false.

Advertisement

Despite Biden's all-in-this-together talk about his domestic legislative agenda, it's clear that those in his own party on Capitol Hill don't feel the same way. His hyperbolic accusation that those opposing his trillion dollar bills are contributing to the decline of America likely won't help and is another line that runs opposite his campaign pledge to be a uniting force for the country.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement