Is President Biden a socialist? Do socialists control him?
Republicans will try to convince voters the answer to both questions is yes, according to Biden’s political archenemy. In a recent interview with Yahoo Finance, former President Donald Trump hinted at the script Republicans will use against Biden and his fellow Democrats in the 2022 midterm elections. When voters elected Biden president last year, it “was not a mandate to change the norms of our society," Trump said. "This was not a mandate to become a socialist country, or worse.”
During the 2020 campaign, Trump argued that Biden, if he won, would be a puppet of left-wing, big-government tax-and-spenders. Now, Trump is pointing to Biden’s “build back better” plan as proof that he was right. Biden backs a $1 trillion infrastructure bill that has some Republicans support, along with another $3.5 trillion in spending on social-welfare and green energy programs—which has zero GOP backing. Put it all together, and that’s the “socialism” Trump warned about last year.
[Read more: Trump, after adding trillions to the government’s IOUs, comments on debt ceiling fight]
“The Republicans have a very strong card to play,” Trump told Yahoo Finance anchor Adam Shapiro during the Oct. 1 phone interview. “That’s a very powerful card. It’s a very strong card. You're talking about historic numbers and I just don't know if this economy can take it.”
Some Democrats aren’t sure, either. Democratic leaders in Congress have struggled to pass either of the big bills Biden wants, because Dems are warring among themselves about how much to spend (and tax). Liberal “progressives” such as Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington want as much spending as possible. But moderate Dems including Senators Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona say $3.5 trillion is way too much. Manchin indicated recently he might only sign off on $1.5 trillion in new spending, plus the infrastructure bill.
The problem for Dems is their tiny majorities in both the House and the Senate, which means they need nearly unanimous Democratic support for anything that Republicans oppose. In that regard, Trump is right about the lack of a voter mandate. While Biden beat Trump by a comfortable 7 million votes last year, Democrats lost 11 seats in the House—not a landslide by any measure. Dems gained 3 seats in the Senate, giving them a one-vote majority, but that still gives any single Democrat veto power over legislation that goes too far, or not far enough, in their view.