Call for Peace USA Politics
Joseph Robinette Biden
46th President
Of
United States of America
Messages to Look for Peace
Brothers
and Sisters!
Assalam o Alleyykum
Profile
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and Sisters! As below
the data in respect of profile of Joseph R Biden, the 46th President
of USA, has been derived from Google Network:
·
Joseph Robinette Biden Jr.
(born November 20, 1942) is an American politician who has been the 46th and
current president of the United States
since 2021.
·
A member of the Democratic Party, he served as the 47th vice president from 2009 to 2017 under
President Barack Obama and represented Delaware
in the U.S. Senate from 1973 to 2009.
·
He
graduated from the University
of Delaware in 1965 and from Syracuse
University in 1968.
·
He was elected to the New Castle County Council
in 1970 and the U.S. Senate in 1972.
·
As a
senator, Biden drafted and
led the effort to pass the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act and the Violence
Against Women Act.
·
He also oversaw six U.S. Supreme Court confirmation hearings, including
the contentious hearings for Robert Bork
and Clarence Thomas.
·
Biden ran unsuccessfully for the 1988
and 2008 Democratic presidential
nominations.
·
In 2008,
Obama chose Biden as his running mate, and he was a close counselor to Obama
during his two terms as vice president.
·
In the 2020 presidential election,
the Democratic Party nominated Biden for president.
·
He selected
Kamala Harris as his running mate, and they
defeated Republican incumbents Donald Trump and Mike Pence.
·
He is the oldest president in U.S. history
and the first to serve with a female vice president.
·
As President, Biden signed the American Rescue Plan Act
in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent recession.
·
He signed
bipartisan bills on
infrastructure and manufacturing.
·
He proposed the Build Back Better Act,
which failed in Congress, but aspects of which were incorporated into the Inflation Reduction Act
that he signed into law in 2022.
·
Biden appointed Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court.
·
He worked with congressional Republicans to resolve
the 2023 debt-ceiling crisis
by negotiating a deal to raise the debt ceiling.
·
In foreign policy,
Biden restored America’s membership in the Paris
Agreement.
·
He oversaw
the complete withdrawal of U.S. troops
from Afghanistan that ended
the war in
Afghanistan, leading to the collapse of
the Afghan government and the Taliban seizing control.
·
He responded
to the Russian invasion of Ukraine by imposing sanctions
on Russia and authorizing civilian
and military aid to Ukraine.
·
During the Israel–Hamas
war, Biden condemned the
actions of Hamas as terrorism, announced military support for Israel and sent limited humanitarian aid
to the Gaza Strip.
·
In April 2023, Biden announced his re – election campaign
and, after the Democratic primaries,
became the party’s presumptive nominee in the 2024 presidential election.
·
But after his performance during the first presidential debate
on June 27, he withdrew
his candidacy in July 2024 amid concerns about his age and health,
becoming the first U.S. president to decline to seek re – election after
securing enough delegates to win re – nomination.
·
He endorsed
Vice President Harris to be the Democratic nominee.
Early Life
·
Though a
poor student, he was class president in his junior and senior years.
·
He graduated in 196. At the University of Delaware
in Newark.
·
Biden briefly played freshman football.
·
And, as an
unexceptional student, earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1965 with a double major in history and political science.
Marriages, Law School, and early Career (1966 – 1973)
·
Biden
married Neilia
Hunter, a student at Syracuse
University, on August 27, 1966.
·
They had three children: Joseph
R. “Beau” Biden III, Robert
Hunter Biden, and Naomi Christina “Amy” Biden.
·
Biden earned a Juris
Doctor from Syracuse University College of Law
in 1968.
·
In his
first year of law school, he failed a course because he plagiarized a law review article for a paper he
wrote, but the failing grade was later stricken.
·
His grades were relatively poor, and he graduated
76th in a class of 85 students. He was admitted
to the Delaware bar in 1969.
·
In 1969,
Biden practiced law, first as a public defender and then at a law firm headed by a
locally active Democrat.
·
Biden ran for the 4th district seat on the New Castle County Council
in 1970 on a liberal platform that included support for public housing in the
suburbs.
·
He served until January 1, 1973, and was succeeded by
Democrat Francis R. Swift.
1972 US Senate Election Campaign in Delaware
·
Biden
defeated Republican incumbent J. Caleb Boggs to become the junior U.S. senator
from Delaware in 1972.
Death of Wife and Dauighter
·
A few weeks after Biden was elected senator, his wife
Neilia and one-year-old daughter Naomi were killed in an automobile accident
while Christmas shopping in Hockessin, Delaware, on December 18, 1972.
Second Marriage
·
Biden met
teacher Jill Tracy
Jacobs in 1975 on a blind date. They married at the United
Nations chapel in New
York on June 17, 1977.
·
In 1981, the couple had a daughter, Ashley
Biden.
·
Jill helped raise her stepsons, Hunter and Beau, who
were seven and eight respectively at the time of her marriage.
Teaching
·
From 1991
to 2008, as an adjunct
professor, Biden co-taught a seminar on constitutional
law at Widener
University School of Law. He
sometimes flew back from overseas to teach the class.
US SENATE (1973 – 2009)
Senate Activities
·
Secretary of
the Senate Francis R. Valeo swore Biden in at the Delaware Division of the Wilmington
Medical Center in January
1973 Minton Medical Center in January 1973.
·
At age 30, he was the seventh-youngest
senator in U.S. history. To see his sons, Biden traveled by train
between his Delaware home and D.C.—74 minutes each way—and maintained this
habit throughout his 36 years in the Senate.
·
Elected to the U.S. Senate in 1972,
Biden was reelected in 1978,
1984,
1990,
1996,
2002,
and 2008,
regularly receiving about 60% of the vote.
·
During his
early years in the Senate, Biden focused on consumer protection and
environmental issues and called for greater government accountability.
·
Biden also worked on arms
control.
·
Biden met
with Soviet foreign minister Andrei Gromyko to communicate American concerns
and secured changes that addressed the Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s
objections.
·
He received considerable attention when he excoriated
Secretary of State George Shultz at a Senate hearing for the Reagan administration’s
support of South Africa despite its continued policy of apartheid.
·
Biden became ranking minority member
of the Senate Judiciary Committee
in 1981.
·
He was a
Democratic floor manager for the successful passage of the Comprehensive
Crime Control Act in 1984.
·
In 1994, Biden helped pass the Violent Crime Control and Law
Enforcement Act, which included a ban on assault weapons,
and the Violence Against Women Act,
which he has called his most significant legislation.
Senate Judiciary Committee
·
Biden was a
longtime member of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary.
·
He chaired it from 1987 to 1995 and was a ranking
minority member from 1981 to 1987 and again from 1995 to 1997.
·
During Clarence Thomas’s nomination hearings
in 1991, Biden’s questions on constitutional issues were often convoluted to
the point that Thomas sometimes lost track of them,
·
And Thomas
later wrote that Biden’s questions were akin to “beanballs“
·
After the
committee hearing closed, the public learned that Anita
Hill, a University of Oklahoma
law school professor, had accused Thomas of making
unwelcome sexual comments when they had worked together.
Senate Foreign Relation Committee
·
Biden was a
longtime member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
·
He became its ranking minority member in 1997 and
chaired it from June 2001 to 2003 and 2007 to 2009.
Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
·
Biden was a strong supporter of the War in Afghanistan, saying, “Whatever it
takes, we should do it.
1988 and 2008 Presidential Campaigns
·
Biden
formally declared his candidacy for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination on June 9, 1987.
2008 Campaign
·
After
exploring the possibility of a run in several previous cycles, in January 2007,
Biden declared his candidacy in the 2008 elections.
·
Despite its lack of success, Biden’s 2008 campaign
raised his stature in the political world.
·
In particular, it changed the relationship between
Biden and Obama.
·
Having gotten to know each other
during 2007, Obama appreciated Biden’s campaign style and appeal to
working-class voters, and Biden said he became convinced Obama was “the
real deal”.
2008 and 2012 Vice Presidential
Campaigns
·
On August
22, 2008, Obama announced that Biden would be his running mate.
·
On November 4, 2008, Obama and Biden were elected
with 53% of the popular vote and 365 electoral votes to McCain and Palin’s 173.
·
At the same time Biden was running for vice
president, he was also running for reelection to the Senate as permitted by
Delaware law.
·
On November 4, he was reelected to the
Senate, defeating Republican Christine
O’Donnell.
2012 Campaign
·
In October
2010, Biden said Obama had asked him to remain as his running mate for the 2012
presidential election.
·
On November 6, Obama and Biden won reelection over
Romney and Ryan with 332 of 538 Electoral College votes
and 51% of the popular vote.
·
Biden oversaw infrastructure spending from the
Obama stimulus package intended to help counteract the ongoing recession.
·
Obama
delegated Biden to lead negotiations with Congress in March 2011 to resolve
federal spending levels for the rest of the year and avoid a government
shutdown.
·
Obama named Biden to head the Gun Violence Task Force,
created to address the causes of school
shootings and consider possible gun
control to implement in the aftermath of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting,
in December 2012.
Second Term (2013 – 2017)
·
Biden was inaugurated
to a second term on January
20, 2013, at a small ceremony at Number One
Observatory Circle, his
official residence, with Justice Sonia Sotomayor presiding (a public ceremony took
place on January 21.
·
Biden never cast
a tie-breaking vote in the Senate, making him the longest-serving vice president with
this distinction.
Subsequent Activities (2017 – 2019)
·
After
leaving the vice presidency, Biden became an honorary professor at the University
of Pennsylvania,
developing the Penn Biden Center for Diplomacy and
Global Engagement.
·
Biden remained in that position into 2019, before
running for president.
·
In 2017, Biden wrote a memoir, Promise
Me, Dad, and went on a book tour.
·
By 2019, he
and his wife reported that they had earned over $15 million since the end of
his vice presidency from speaking engagements and book sales.
·
Biden remained in the public eye, endorsing
candidates while continuing to comment on politics, climate change, and the presidency of Donald Trump.
2020 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN
Speculation and Announcements
·
Between
2016 and 2019, media outlets often mentioned Biden as a likely candidate for
president in 2020.
·
He finally launched his campaign on April 25, 2019, saying he was prompted to run because he was
worried by the Trump administration and
felt a “sense of duty“.
Campaign
·
As the 2020
campaign season heated up, voluminous public polling showed Biden as one of the
best-performing Democratic candidates in a head-to-head matchup against
President Trump.
·
In September 2019, it was reported that Trump had
pressured Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy to investigate alleged wrongdoing by Biden and his son Hunter
Biden.
·
Despite the allegations, no evidence was produced of
any wrongdoing by the Bidens.
·
Trump’s
pressure to investigate the Bidens was perceived by many as an attempt to hurt
Biden’s chances of winning the presidency.
·
Trump’s alleged actions against Biden resulted in a political scandal
and Trump’s impeachment by the House of Representatives
for abuse of power and obstruction of congress.
·
When
Sanders suspended his campaign on April 8, 2020, Biden became the Democratic
Party’s presumptive
nominee for president.
·
On August 11, Biden announced U.S. senator Kamala
Harris of California as his running mate, making her the first African
American and first South Asian American
vice-presidential nominee on a major-party ticket.
Presidential Transition
·
Biden was elected the 46th president of the United
States in November 2020.
·
He defeated the incumbent, Donald
Trump, becoming the first candidate to defeat a sitting president
since Bill Clinton defeated George
H. W. Bush in 1992.
·
Trump refused to concede, insisting the election had
been “stolen” from him through “voter fraud”, challenging
the results in court and promoting numerous conspiracy theories about the voting and
vote-counting processes, in an attempt to overturn
the election results.
·
Biden’s
transition was delayed by several weeks as the White House ordered federal
agencies not to cooperate.
·
On November 23, General
Services Administrator Emily W. Murphy formally recognized Biden as the
apparent winner of the 2020 election and authorized the start of a transition
process to the Biden administration.
·
January 6, 2021, during Congress’ electoral vote count,
Trump told supporters gathered in front of the White
House to march to the Capitol, saying, “We will never give up. We
will never concede.
·
It doesn’t
happen. You don’t concede when there’s theft involved.”[317] Soon
after, they attacked
the Capitol.
·
During the insurrection at the Capitol, Biden
addressed the nation, calling the events “an unprecedented assault unlike
anything we’ve seen in modern times”.
·
After the
Capitol was cleared, Congress resumed its joint session and officially
certified the election results with Vice President Mike
Pence, in his capacity as President of the Senate, declaring Biden
and Harris the winners.
PRESIDENCY (2021 till Present)
Inauguration
·
Biden was
inaugurated as the 46th president of the United States on January 20, 2021.
·
At 78, he was the oldest person to have assumed the
office.
·
Biden’s inauguration was “a muted affair unlike
any previous inauguration” due to COVID-19 precautions as well as
massively increased security measures because of the January 6 United States Capitol attack.
·
Trump did not attend, becoming the first outgoing
president since 1869 to
not attend his successor’s inauguration.
First 100 Days
·
In his
first two days as president, Biden signed 17 executive orders.
·
By his third day, orders had included rejoining the Paris Climate Agreement,
·
ending the state of national emergency at the border with Mexico, directing the government to
rejoin the World Health Organization,
·
face mask
requirements on federal property, measures to combat hunger in
the United States, and
revoking permits for the construction of the Keystone XL
pipeline.
·
On March 11, the first anniversary of COVID-19 having
been declared a global pandemic by the World Health Organization,
·
Biden
signed into law the American
Rescue Plan Act of 2021, a
$1.9 trillion economic
stimulus and relief package
that he had proposed to support the United States’ recovery from the economic and health effects of the COVID-19
pandemic.
·
The package included direct payments to most
Americans, an extension of increased unemployment benefits, funds for vaccine
distribution and school re – openings, and expansions of health insurance
subsidies and the child tax credit.
·
Biden’s initial proposal included an increase of the federal minimum wage
to $15 per hour, but after the Senate parliamentarian
determined that including the increase in a budget reconciliation
bill would violate Senate rules,
·
Democrats
declined to pursue overruling her and removed the increase from the package.
·
Also in March, amid a rise in migrants entering the U.S. from Mexico,
Biden told migrants, “Don’t come over.”
·
In the
meantime, migrant adults “are being sent back”, Biden said, in
reference to the continuation of the Trump administration’s Title 42 policy for
quick deportations.
·
Biden earlier
announced that his administration would not deport unaccompanied migrant
children; the rise in arrivals of such children exceeded the capacity of
facilities meant to shelter them (before they were sent to sponsors), leading
the Biden administration in March to direct the Federal Emergency Management Agency
to help.
Domestic Policy
·
The Honoring
our PACT Act of 2022 was
introduced in 2021 and signed into law by Biden on August 10, 2022.
·
The act intends to significantly improve healthcare
access and funding for veterans who were exposed to toxic substances, including
burn
pits, during military service.
·
In June 2024, Biden issued an executive action
offering amnesty to unauthorized immigrants married to American citizens.
·
The program
includes a pathway to U.S. residency and citizenship and is expected to
initially affect about 500,000 people.
Economy
·
Biden
entered office nine months into a recovery from the COVID-19
recession and his first year in
office was characterized by robust growth in real GDP, employment, wages, and
stock market returns, amid significantly
elevated inflation.
·
Real GDP grew 5.9%, the fastest rate in 37 years.
·
Amid record job creation, the unemployment rate fell
at the fastest pace on record during the year.
·
By the end
of 2021, inflation reached a nearly 40-year high of 7.1%, which was partially
offset by the highest nominal wage and salary growth in at least 20 years.
·
In his third
month in office, Biden signed an executive order to increase the minimum wage
for federal contractors to $15 per hour, an increase of nearly 37%. The order
went into effect for 390,000 workers in January 2022.
·
Amid a
surge in inflation and high gas
prices, Biden’s approval
ratings declined, reaching net negative in early 2022.
·
After 5.9% growth in 2021, real GDP growth cooled in
2022 to 2.1%, after slightly negative growth in the first half spurred
recession concerns.
·
Job creation and consumer spending remained strong
through the year, as the unemployment rate fell to match a 53-year low of 3.5%
in December.
·
Inflation
peaked at 9.1% in June before easing to 3.2% by October 2023.
·
Stocks had had their worst year since 2008 before
recovering.
·
Widespread
predictions of an imminent recession did not materialize in 2022 or 2023, and
by late 2023 indicators showed sharply lower inflation with economic
acceleration.
·
GDP growth hit 4.9% in the third quarter of 2023 and
the year ended with stocks near record highs, with robust holiday spending.
·
Biden signed numerous major pieces of economic
legislation in the 117th Congress,
·
including
the American
Rescue Plan,
·
Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act,
·
CHIPS and
Science Act, and the Inflation
Reduction Act.
·
He signed the CHIPS and Science Act into law on
August 9, 2022.
·
It provides
billions of dollars in new funding to boost domestic research on and
manufacture of semiconductors, to compete economically with China.
·
Over the
course of five days in March 2023, three
small- to mid-size U.S. banks failed,
·
triggering a sharp decline in global bank stock
prices and swift response by regulators to prevent potential global contagion.
·
After Silicon
Valley Bank collapsed, the first
to do so, Biden expressed opposition to a bailout by taxpayers.]
·
He claimed that the partial
rollback of Dodd-Frank
regulations contributed to the bank’s failure.
·
At the beginning of the 118th Congress, Biden and congressional
Republicans engaged in a standoff after the U.S. hit its debt limit, which raised the risk that the U.S. would default on its
debt.
·
Biden and
House speaker Kevin McCarthy struck a deal to raise the debt
limit, the Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 2023, which
suspended the debt limit until January 2025.
·
Biden signed it on June 3, averting a default.
·
The deal
was generally seen as favorable to Biden.
·
During the September 2023 United Auto Workers strike,
Biden expressed support for the workers in negotiations.
·
He assigned White House senior adviser Gene
Sperling and acting Labor Secretary Julie
Su to aid in negotiation efforts.
·
On September 26, Biden joined striking UAW workers’ picket
line in Michigan, becoming the first president to join a picket line.
Judiciary
·
By the end
of 2021, 40 of Biden’s nominees to the federal judiciary had been confirmed,
more than any president in his first year in office since Ronald Reagan.
·
Biden has prioritized diversity in his judicial
appointments more than any president in U.S. history, with most of his
appointees being women and people of color.
·
In January 2022, Supreme Court justice Stephen
Breyer, a moderate liberal nominated by Bill Clinton, announced his
intention to retire from the Supreme Court.
·
During his
2020 campaign, Biden vowed to nominate the first Black woman to the Supreme
Court if a vacancy occurred a promise he reiterated after Breyer announced his
retirement.
·
On February 25, Biden nominated
federal judge Ketanji Brown Jackson
to the Supreme Court.
·
She was
confirmed by the U.S. Senate on April 7 and sworn in on June 30.
·
By May 2024, Biden had confirmed more than 200
federal judges, about two-thirds of them women.
Infrastructure and Climate
·
As part of
Biden’s Build Back Better agenda, in late March 2021, he proposed the American
Jobs Plan, a $2 trillion
package addressing issues including:
·
o
transport infrastructure,
o
utilities infrastructure,
o
broadband
infrastructure,
o
housing, schools,
o
manufacturing, research and workforce development.
·
After
months of negotiations among Biden and lawmakers, in August 2021 the Senate
passed a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill called the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act,
·
while the House, also in a bipartisan manner, approved
that bill in early November 2021, covering infrastructure related to transport,
utilities, and broadband.
·
Biden signed the bill into law in mid-November 2021.
·
In April
2024, Biden unveiled a plan to protect and restore natural water sources (3.2
million hectares of wetlands and 161,000 km of rivers and streams).
Southern Border
·
illegal
border crossings at the Mexico–United
States border began to surge in
2021 when Biden assumed office,
·
Throughout 2024, crossings began to significantly
decline from the December record,
·
In January 2024, Biden expressed support for a
proposed bipartisan immigration deal led by Senators Kyrsten
Sinema and James
Lankford.
·
The
proposed bill would allow DHS to close the border when encounters
reach a seven-day average of 5,000 or exceed 8,500 in a single day.
·
In addition, the bill mandates the detention of
migrants seeking asylum and undergoing asylum interviews, with those failing
the process repatriated to their home countries.
·
While not
addressing the status of “Dreamers“, it would change immigration
law to allow the children of those with H-1B visas to get work authorizations and
freeze their legal ages while waiting for green cards, rather than face
deportation once they hit age 21, and would provide additional funding for
immigration judges.
·
Former president Donald Trump announced his opposition to
the legislation, calling on Congressional Republicans to oppose it;
·
subsequently, leaders such as Speaker
of the House Mike Johnson announced their opposition, halting further
legislative action.
·
As a result of continued high immigration levels
throughout his tenure, some lawmakers and pundits have criticized Biden’s
handling of the southern border.
·
Criticism
of the bill and broader immigration policy continued to be expressed by both
sides, with some liberals considering his policies too harsh while some
conservatives considered them too lax.
2022 Election
·
A predicted
Republican wave
election did not materialize
and the race for U.S. Congress control was much closer than
expected,
·
with Republicans securing a slim majority of 222
seats in the House of Representatives,
·
and the Democratic caucus keeping control of the U.S. Senate, with 51 seats, a gain of one seat from the last
Congress.
Foreign Policy
·
In June
2021, Biden took his first trip abroad as president.
·
In eight days he visited Belgium, Switzerland, and
the United Kingdom.
·
He attended a
G7 summit, a NATO summit, and an EU summit,
·
and held one-on-one
talks with Russian
president Vladimir Putin.
·
In September 2021, Biden announced AUKUS,
a security pact between Australia, the United Kingdom and the United
States, to ensure “peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific
over the long term”;
·
the deal included nuclear-powered submarines built
for Australia’s use.
Investigations
·
On November
2, 2022, while packing files at the Penn Biden Center, Biden’s attorneys found classified
documents dating from his vice presidency in a “locked closet”
·
According to the White House, the documents were
reported that day to the U.S. National Archives,
which recovered them the next day.
·
On November 14, Attorney General Merrick
Garland appointed U.S. attorney John R. Lausch Jr. to conduct an investigation.
·
On December
20, a second batch of classified documents was discovered in the garage of
Biden’s Wilmington,
Delaware residence.
·
The findings broke news on January 9, 2023, after CBS
News published an article on the Lausch investigation.
·
On January
12, Garland appointed Robert K. Hur as special counsel to investigate
“possible unauthorized removal and retention of classified documents or
other records”.
·
On January 20, after a 13-hour consensual
search by FBI investigators, six more items with classified markings
were recovered from Biden’s Wilmington residence.
·
FBI agents
searched Biden’s home in Rehoboth Beach on February 1 and collected
papers and notes from his time as vice president, but did not find any
classified information.
·
On February
8, 2024, Hur concluded the special counsel investigation and announced that no
charges would be brought against Biden.
2024 Presidential Campaign
·
Ending
months of speculation, on April 25, 2023, Biden confirmed he would run for re –
election as president in the 2024
election,
·
with Harris again as his running mate.
·
During his campaign, Biden promoted higher economic growth and
recovery following the COVID-19 pandemic.
·
He
frequently stated his intention to “finish the job” as a political
rallying cry.
·
The first presidential debate
was held on June 27, 2024, between Biden and Trump.
·
Biden’s
performance was widely criticized, with commentators saying he frequently lost
his train of thought and gave meandering answers
·
After the debate raised questions about his health and age, Biden faced calls to withdraw
from the race, including from fellow
Democrats and the editorial
boards of several major news outlets.
·
Biden initially insisted that he would remain a
candidate,] but
on July 21, he withdrew his candidacy, writing that this was “in the best
interest of my party and the country”.
·
He endorsed
Harris as his successor.
Political Positions
·
As a
senator, Biden was regarded as a moderate Democrat.
·
As a presidential nominee, Biden’s platform had been
called the most progressive of any major party platform in history, although
not within his party’s ideological vanguard.
·
As a senator, Biden forged deep relationships with
police groups and was a chief proponent of a Police Officer’s Bill of Rights
measure that police unions supported but police chiefs opposed.
·
In 2020,
Biden also ran on decriminalizing cannabis, after advocating harsher penalties
for drug use as a U.S. senator.
·
Biden has supported abortion rights throughout his presidency,
though he personally opposes abortion because of his Catholic faith.
·
In 2019, he
said he supported Roe v. Wade and repealing the Hyde Amendment.
·
After Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health
Organization, he criticized near-total bans on abortion
access passed in a majority of Republican-controlled states, and took measures to protect abortion rights in the United States.
·
He has vowed to sign a bill codifying the protections
of Roe into federal law; such a bill passed the House in 2022, but was
unable to clear the Senate filibuster.
Public Image
·
Biden was
consistently ranked one of the least wealthy members of
the Senate, which he attributed
to having been elected young.
·
Feeling that
less-wealthy public officials may be tempted to accept contributions in
exchange for political favors, he proposed campaign finance reform
measures during his first term.
·
As of November 2009, Biden’s net worth was
$27,012. By November 2020, the Bidens were worth $9 million, largely due
to sales of Biden’s books and speaking fees after his vice presidency.
·
Political
columnist David S. Broder wrote that Biden has grown over
time:
He responds to real people—that’s been consistent throughout.
And his ability to understand himself and deal with other politicians has
gotten much, much better.
**********************
Journalist James
Traub has written that “Biden is the kind of fundamentally happy
person who can be as generous toward others as he is to himself”.
In recent years,
especially after the 2015 death of his elder son Beau, Biden has been noted for
his empathetic nature and ability to communicate about grief.
In 2020, CNN wrote that his presidential campaign aimed to make
him “healer-in-chief”, while The New York Times
described his extensive history of being called upon to give eulogies.
********************************
Journalist and TV
anchor Wolf Blitzer has called Biden loquacious;
journalist Mark Bowden has said that he is famous for
“talking too much”, leaning in close “like an old pal with
something urgent to tell you”.
He often deviates from prepared remarks and sometimes “puts
his foot in his mouth”.
Biden has a reputation
for being prone to gaffes and in 2018 called himself “a
gaffe machine”.
The New York Times wrote that Biden’s “weak filters make
him capable of blurting out pretty much anything”.
***************************
According to The New
York Times, Biden often embellishes elements of his life or exaggerates, a
trait also noted by The New Yorker in 2014.
For instance, he has claimed to have been more active in the civil rights movement
than he actually was, and has falsely recalled being an excellent student who
earned three college degrees.
The Times wrote, “Mr. Biden’s folksiness can veer into
folklore, with dates that don’t quite add up and details that are exaggerated
or wrong, the factual edges shaved off to make them more powerful for
audiences.”
****************************
Health and Age
·
Biden is
the oldest sitting president in U.S. history. During his presidency,
Republicans and media pundits have raised questions about his cognitive health
in reaction to his public speaking.
·
These narratives were amplified and widely covered by
the media after his weak performance in a June 2024 presidential debate. Biden
has repeatedly said he is fit for the presidency.
Covit – 19 Diagnoses
·
On July 21,
2022, Biden tested positive for COVID-19 with reportedly mild symptoms.
According to the White House, he was treated with Paxlovid.
·
He worked in isolation in the White House for five
days
and
·
returned to isolation when he tested positive again
on July 30, 2022.
·
On July 17,
2024, Biden again tested positive for COVID-19
Wass’a’lam
Call for Peace
Messages to Look for Peace
PS:
Sponsorship
Brothers and Sisters! Please
read the Post: Sponsorship in the Navigation Bar as
to why it is need to keep conveying the Messages to Look for Peace until
the Day of Resurrection and how it will be expended until
the Day of Resurrection.
Wass’a’lam
[May
Allah Bless You]
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