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LA Times
Opinion

Opinion: Age matters. Which is why Biden's age is his superpower

Bill McKibben
5 min read
El presidente Joe Biden durante un evento de campaña, el domingo 4 de febrero de 2024, en Las Vegas. (AP Foto/Stephanie Scarbrough)
President Biden speaks at a campaign event in Las Vegas on Sunday. (Stephanie Scarbrough / Associated Press)

Joe Biden is old. Like each of us, he comes from a particular place in history, in his case the LBJ years. And that’s one big reason why his first term has been so full of accomplishment: His age, often cited as the greatest obstacle to his reelection, is actually his superpower.

There was never much question that Third Act, the progressive organizing group for people over 60 that I helped found, would end up endorsing President Biden for reelection. We campaign to protect our climate and our democracy, and so the chances we would back Donald Trump — who pulled us out of the Paris climate accords and helped mount the Jan. 6 insurrection — were nil. (Nikki Haley, another no-go, strenuously backed Trump’s Paris pullout.)

Read more: Trump's presidential bid hangs in the balance at the Supreme Court. Here's what to know

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Biden, on the other hand, is a scrupulous small-d democrat. His record on climate isn’t perfect, but he has helped jump-start renewable energy development, and just last month he showed real bravery in standing up to Big Oil and pausing new permits for LNG — liquid natural gas — export.

Still, individual policy decisions don’t explain why my organization’s members are drawn to Biden. It’s not that we reflexively like older politicians; we take seriously the need to pass the torch to a new generation. But we also don’t unthinkingly dismiss anyone just because they can collect Social Security. Obviously you lose a step physically as you age, but the presidency doesn’t require carrying sofas up the White House stairs. And science increasingly finds that aging brains make more connections, perhaps because they have more history to work with.

It’s the specifics of that history that really draw us in.

Read more: Biden wants to complete his goals on civil rights, taxes and social services if reelected

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The first presidential election in which Joe Biden was eligible to vote featured Lyndon Johnson beating Barry Goldwater. History remembers LBJ’s presidency as chaotic because of his tragic adventuring in Vietnam, but in other respects it was remarkable. His Great Society echoed Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal (FDR was Biden’s childhood president). Under Johnson, the federal government took ambitious steps to advance civil rights, to rein in poverty, attack disease, beautify human landscapes and conserve wild ones, and to further science — these were the Apollo space program years. Not every project worked, but lots have lasted: Medicare, Medicaid and food stamps, for instance.

So Biden was socialized in an era when government took on big causes, and you can see it reflected in his first-term commitment to rebuilding infrastructure on a grand scale, boosting a new sustainable energy economy with billions of dollars for solar panels and battery factories, dramatically increasing the number of people with healthcare, and standing up for gun control, voting rights and reproductive rights.

This propensity to go big is different from his immediate predecessors.

Barack Obama first got to vote in the Carter-Reagan election of 1980, a landslide for Reagan that repudiated an active role for Washington in domestic policy, replacing it with the idea that government was the problem, and that the free market solves all problems. Reagan’s triumph was so complete that it altered for a long while the boundaries of our political life: When Obama, at the end of his time in office, was asked why even with 60 Democratic senators at his inauguration his policy achievements — Obamacare excepted — had been relatively modest, he cited a “residual willingness to accept the political constraints that we’d inherited from the post-Reagan era. ... Probably there was an embrace of market solutions to a whole host of problems that wasn’t entirely justified.”

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Read more: Goldberg: President Biden's job approval rating is abysmal. Here's why he might beat Trump anyway

Biden simply doesn’t have that residual Reaganism; his political makeup was formed before the Reagan revolution. He watched a booming economy in the Johnson years that narrowed the gap between poor and rich. Reagan’s economic boom benefited the rich. Now Biden is back in LBJ mode, and the gap has — for the first time in decades — begun to narrow again.

What are Trump’s political influences? What presidency might be his model? He first got to vote in 1968’s tilt between Hubert Humphrey and Richard Nixon. He didn't inherit any of Nixon's few good qualities (he founded the Environmental Protection Agency, for instance). Trump mainly seems to have adopted Nixon's endless sense of victimization, not to mention his willingness to break the law on his own behalf.

Read more: Opinion: Republicans blocking Ukraine aid should consider this hero — and hang their heads in shame

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The commitment to the principles of the New Deal and the Great Society — to the idea of America as a group project, not a series of isolated and individual efforts at personal advancement — are what we desperately need. Turning over all important decisions to “the market” has left us on a planet with melting poles and cartoonish levels of inequality.

Johnson, of course, wasn’t reelected; with the war in Vietnam raging, he didn’t even run. Biden appears to have remembered that too, with his forthright decision to finally get us out of Afghanistan. Now Gaza may be the kind of inhuman quagmire that could still bring him down.

That would be a shame, because given another four years Biden might well be able to restore confidence in an America that has so destructively turned on itself.

Age matters. My cohort agrees. Why did Biden believe he could do what he did in his first term? Because he’d seen it done. Let’s hope the politicians of the future are watching his successes closely.

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Bill McKibben is Schumann Distinguished Scholar in Environmental Policy at Middlebury College and founder of Third Act.

If it’s in the news right now, the L.A. Times’ Opinion section covers it. Sign up for our weekly opinion newsletter.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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The Hill
Opinion

Opinion - President Biden is leaving Trump a shocking mess to clean up

Liz Peek, opinion contributor
5 min read

What an incredible mess Joe Biden will be leaving for Donald Trump on Jan. 20.

It isn’t just the $36 trillion in federal debt (up $13 trillion since 2020), which has increasingly (and foolishly) been financed by short-term borrowings; it is also inflation that refuses to die despite slumping energy prices, a Strategic Petroleum Reserve that has been drained to perilous levels, a weapons stockpile that is dangerously low, a Department of Justice that has lost the confidence of Americans, billions upon billions of taxpayer dollars that have been invested in losing enterprises (here’s looking at you, Intel), an educational curriculum that teaches kids to hate their country but fails to deliver youngsters able to read and write, a housing crisis, a manufacturing slump and so much more.

Biden also leaves Trump the nightmarish task of extricating the U.S. from Ukraine’s war with Russia and — once again — having to restore a sustainable balance of power in the Middle East.

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No wonder Trump is preparing to hit the ground running.

If Joe Biden were a decent fellow and a patriot, he would be using his remaining weeks as president to fix some of the disasters he has created. Instead, he is doing just the opposite.

Biden and his apparatchiks are trying to spend every last dollar authorized by the misnamed Inflation Reduction Act so that the Trump administration cannot recapture those funds. The IRA gave the White House some $375 billion in taxpayer funds to be strewn about the country as they see fit, under the total control of former Hillary Clinton campaign chair John Podesta.

Because the Biden White House has almost no one with private-sector experience — no one with a history of building successful businesses — the hapless crew proved unable to spend the many billions available. Pete Buttigieg’s laughable effort to build charging stations for electronic vehicles, in which the Transportation secretary spent $7.5 billion on eight such facilities after promising 500,000, or Kamala Harris’s total failure to roll out internet access to rural areas despite the $42 billion at her disposal, are emblematic of this administration’s capabilities. 

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Anyone who knows anything about Washington will understand that leftover money is about as popular as the fourth turkey sandwich served up after Thanksgiving. The money must be spent! And so, rather than help the Trump team (and the U.S.) by recycling unspent IRA money, they are putting it to work — at least, in theory.

A recently released video from investigators at Project Veritas catches an adviser to the EPA saying via hidden camera, “Now we’re just trying to get the money out as fast as possible before they come in and stop it all. … It truly feels like we’re on the Titanic and we’re throwing gold bars off the edge.”

The adviser, Brent Efron, admits that while typically his department had been making “sure the proper processes are in place to prevent fraud and prevent abuse,” now they are shoveling money to tribes, nonprofits and states at warp speed. Efron explains to the undercover reporter, “We gave them the money because it was harder if it was a government-run program, they could take the money away, if Trump won.”

Elon Musk commented that the video suggests “The U.S. government is actively working to undermine the American people.” Or at least the newly elected president.

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In yet another example, Biden has just agreed with the American Federation of Government Employees to protect some 42,000 workers at the Social Security Administration from having to return to the office, a key issue for the Trump team as it reforms the federal workforce.

Elsewhere, if Biden wanted to help the country, he would authorize the rapid refilling of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. He drained that store of crude oil in 2022 in the midst of roaring inflation, trying to lower gasoline prices and help Democrats in the midterm elections. When Biden took office, the reserve held 638 million barrels of oil; today the country has only 392 million barrels of emergency reserves, the lowest in 40 years. Although the reserve is up 12 percent over the past year, we are not protected against a serious price shock.  

Biden is also leaving behind a portfolio of Treasury debt that is dangerously weighted toward short-term instruments. Instead of financing our recent $1.8 trillion federal budget deficit by issuing 10- and 30-year bonds, Janet Yellen has instead loaded up on two-year Treasury bills in a nakedly political effort to avoid a massive jump in mortgage rates. Writing in the New York Post, Charles Gasparino quotes Robbert van Batenburg of the well-known Bear Traps Report, who estimates that around 30 percent of all debt is now in short-term notes, compared to 15 percent in 2023. Given the enormity of the government’s borrowings, that is an almost unimaginably sharp move.

Since we have had an inverted yield curve for most of the past two years, it would have made sense to borrow long. Yellen did not, leaving her successor to navigate higher costs going forward. As Bratenburg writes, “The Treasury now faces a substantial volume of short-term debt maturing annually, which must be refinanced at significantly higher interest rates … [which] is driving a substantial increase in the government’s interest expense.”

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There are so many problems facing this country. Detroit auto makers are losing billions and laying off workers thanks to Biden’s harmful electric vehicle mandates; we have millions of undocumented migrants busting blue city budgets; violent crime is higher because Democrats have undermined law enforcement; and military leaders are warning that we are running low on weapons. The Biden years have planted land mines on many fronts for the incoming Trump team.

Shamefully, rather than trying to repair the damage they’ve caused, they are racing to do more.

Liz Peek is a former partner of major bracket Wall Street firm Wertheim and Company.

Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

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HuffPost

Barron Trump Introduces Himself In Video With Donald Trump And People Have Same Reaction

Ron Dicker
2 min read
Donald’s Deportation Dilemma
Donald’s Deportation Dilemma
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Barron Trump speaks!

That was the reaction of many on social media who viewed President-elect Donald Trump’s youngest son introducing himself in a video shared Wednesday by the “Art of the Surge” documentary series. (Watch the clip below.)

Viewers said it was the first time they had heard the 18-year-old NYU freshman talk after he was mostly being shielded from public life growing up.

In the clip, the younger Trump greets someone who is off-camera. “Hello, how are you? It’s very nice to see you. It’s very nice.”

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Barron Trump’s quick repeat of “it’s very nice” is also reminiscent of his dad’s speech pattern, with some noting the son’s similar “mannerisms” and “voice.”

The very tall scion then offered a “good to see you” to UFC boss Dana White. The president-elect expressed surprise the two had never met and jokingly asked White, “Can we make him a fighter?”

The teenage Trump, who is credited with helping his dad court the young man, or “bro,” vote, will likely not be a regular at the White House the second time around.

He’s living at home in Manhattan’s Trump Tower while attending NYU in the Stern School of Business a few miles south, according to his mother, Melania Trump.

“I could not say I’m an empty nester. I don’t feel that way,” the former and future first lady told “Fox & Friends” in late September. “It was his decision to come here, that he wants to be in New York and study in New York and live in his home, and I respect that.”

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“He’s enjoying his college days,” she added. “I hope he will have a great experience because his life is very different than any other 18, 19-year-old child.”

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E! News

Meghan Markle Attends Gala Amid Prince Harry’s Divorce Comments

Hayley Santaflorentina
10 min read
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Originally appeared on E! Online

Meghan Markle is royally unbothered.

In fact, the 43-year-old was glowing as she stepped onto the carpet of The Paley Center for Media’s Dec. 4 Fall Gala honoring Tyler Perry—who just so happens to be a good friend of the family and the godfather to Meghan and Prince Harry’s 3-year-old daughter Princess Lilibet Diana.

For the occasion, Meghan donned a strapless black dress with a sweetheart neckline and slitted skirt. She kept the rest of her look simple, foregoing earrings for a diamond choker and gold Cartier bangle, styling her hair in a chic updo.

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While on the red carpet, Meghan was all smiles as she posed for pictures alongside Tyler and the Paley Center’s Maureen Reidy.

The Suits alum’s outing comes the same day that Harry—with whom Meghan also shares Prince Archie Harrison, 5—addressed the rumors that often surround the couple and their two children. Namely, that the couple are headed towards divorce after they attended several recent engagements separately.

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“Apparently we've bought or moved house 10, 12 times,” Harry said at the New York Times' 2024 DealBook Summit in New York City Dec. 4. “We've apparently divorced maybe 10, 12 times as well. So it's just like, what?”

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He continued, “It's hard to keep up with, but that's why you just sort of ignore it.”

Meghan Markle
Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images

After all, the 40-year-old is accustomed to his fair share of public scrutiny, having grown up alongside British tabloids. And he has his own thoughts about those who decide to share unfounded information about his personal life.

“The people I feel most sorry about are the trolls,” Harry continued. “Their hopes are just built and built, and it's like, ‘Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes,’ and then it doesn't happen. So I feel sorry for them. Genuinely, I do.”

Instead, the couple are focused on building memories as a family of four in their Montecito, California, home. And with the holiday season just around the corner, Meghan in particular is looking forward to some quality time with her children.

Prince Harry, Meghan Markle, 2024 ESPYS, ESPY Awards
Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for W+P

"I love the holidays," the Duchess of Sussex told Marie Claire in an interview published Nov. 22. "At first, I think as a mom with children you’re just enjoying having them there, but they’re not understanding everything that’s happening yet."

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"But now we’re at the age where I just can’t wait to see it through their lens every year," she continued, noting that as her and Harry’s kids get older, "Every year it gets better.”

And between traditions such as making the same recipes year after year and leaving carrots for the reindeer, as Meghan shared, every holiday becomes “a new adventure.”

“We’re always making sure we have something fun to do,” she added. “Like any other family you spend time having a great meal and then what do you do? Play games, all the same stuff, someone brings a guitar—fun.”

Read on for more of Harry and Meghan’s sweetest parent quotes.

Uncle Harry

"I don't think you can force these things. It will happen when it's gonna happen," he told Sky News back in 2015 when asked if the birth of his niece Princess Charlotte made him think about settling down. "Of course, I would love to have kids right now, but there's a process that one has to go through.
Years ago, Meghan even made a purchase with her future daughter in mind. "I've always coveted the Cartier French Tank watch. When I found out Suits had been picked up for our third season—which, at the time, felt like such a milestone—I totally splurged and bought the two-tone version," she recalled to Hello! in 2015. "I had it engraved on the back, 'To M.M. From M.M.' and I plan to give it to my daughter one day.
Fatherhood is a subject that—along with marriage—has long trailed Prince Charles and the late Princess Diana's younger son. "There have been moments through life, especially when we do a tour abroad, when I think, 'I'd love to have kids now'... And then there are other times when I bury my head in the sand going, 'All right, don't need kids!' There's no rush. I tell you what: There's been times I've been put off having children," he admitted to People back in May 2016, shortly before meeting his future wife.
In 2017, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex revealed their engagement and sat for their first joint interview. Naturally, the topic of future kids came up. "Of course. You know, I think you know one step at a time, and hopefully, we'll start a family in the near future," Prince Harry said at the time with Meghan smiling beside him
"It's magic," Meghan said about becoming a mum following Archie's birth. "It's pretty amazing and, I mean, I have the two best guys in the world, so I'm really happy.
Following Archie's birth in May 2019, Harry gushed, "It's been the most amazing experience I can ever possibly imagine. How any woman does what they do is beyond comprehension but we're both absolutely thrilled and so grateful for all the love and support from everybody out there. It's been amazing so we just wanted to share this with everybody.
Harry reflected on the lessons he's learned since becoming a parent during a speech at the National Youth Mentoring Summit in 2019. He shared, "I'm struck by a few things today, most of which is the power of the invisible role model. The person who may be sitting here today that doesn't realize that someone looks up to them that—for that person—you inspire them to be kinder, better, greater, more successful, more impactful. Perhaps it's the newfound clarity I have as a father knowing that my son will always be watching what I do, mimicking my behavior, one day maybe even following in my footsteps.
"Our little man is our No. 1 priority but then our work after that is the second priority," Prince Harry shared during a speaking engagement in 2020, "and we're just doing everything we can to try and play our part in trying to make the world a better place.
Harry and Meghan found a silver lining amid the coronavirus pandemic through baby Archie. "In so many ways we are fortunate to be able to have this time to watch him grow, and in the absence of COVID, we would be traveling and working more externally," Meghan shared in October 2020. "We'd miss a lot of those moments. So I think it's been a lot of really good family time."

Harry added, "We were both there for Archie's first steps, his first run, his first fall, everything.

In May 2021, Meghan made a rare TV appearance during Global Citizen's VAX Live: The Concert to Reunite the World special. The former actress opened up about her pregnancy and shared her excitement about raising a daughter. "My husband and I are thrilled to soon be welcoming a daughter. It's a feeling of joy we share with millions of other families around the world," she said at the time. "When we think of her, we think of all the young women and girls around the globe who must be given the ability and the support to lead us forward."

She added, "Their future leadership depends on the decisions we make and the actions we take now to set them up, and set all of us up, for a successful, equitable and compassionate tomorrow.

Meghan makes a brief cameo in her husband's Apple TV+ series with Oprah, The Me You Can't See. During her appearance, the California native seemingly pays tribute to her growing family with a shirt that reads, "Raising the Future.
The couple welcomed their baby girl. In a statement shared on their Archewell Foundation page, they gushed, "On June 4th, we were blessed with the arrival of our daughter, Lili. She is more than we could have ever imagined, and we remain grateful for the love and prayers we've felt from across the globe. Thank you for your continued kindness and support during this very special time for our family.
On June 8, 2021, Meghan will release her first children's book, The Bench, which is a celebration of fatherhood from a mother's perspective. Of her new project, she said in a press release in May, "The Bench started as a poem I wrote for my husband on Father's Day, the month after Archie was born. That poem became this story.
In an October 2021 letter to then-House Speaker Rep. Nancy Pelosi and Sen. Chuck Schumer explaining her support for mandatory paid parental leave in the U.S., Meghan wrote of being "overjoyed" but "overwhelmed" when her daughter was born when the pandemic was still preventing business as usual in hospitals, schools, etc.

"Like fewer parents, we weren't confronted with the harsh reality of either spending those first few critical months with our baby or going back to work," she wrote. "We knew we could take her home, and in that vital (and sacred) stage, devote any and everything to our kids and to our family. We knew that by doing so we wouldn't have to make impossible choices about childcare, work, and medical care that so many have to make every single day."

Meghan continued, "No family should be faced with these decisions. No family should have to choose between earning a living and having the freedom to take care of their child (or a loved one, or themselves, as we would see with a comprehensive paid leave plan).

On TODAY in April 2022, Harry shared that separating parenting from his work-at-home routine was pretty much a nonstarter.

"Archie spends more time interrupting our Zoom calls than anybody else," he said. "He also gets them often as well, so that's a nice thing."

Harry noted that he could already see his own sly sense of humor in his son. "I always try and keep that," he added. "I think that the cheekiness is something that keeps you alive.

Meghan admitted she was concerned for her—and everybody else's—kids in the age of social media.

"Being a mom is the most important thing in my entire life—outside, of course, being a wife to this one," she said, gesturing to Harry, during an October 2023 talk at the Archewell Foundation Parents' Summit: Mental Wellness in the Digital Age, part of Project Healthy Minds' World Mental Health Day

"But I will say," she added, "I feel fortunate that our children are at an age, again quite young, so this isn't in our immediate future, but I also feel frightened at how it's continuing to change and this will be in front of us."

Noting that "the days are long but the years are short" as a parent, Meghan continued, "Everyone is affected by the online world and social media. We all just want to feel safe.

"Our daughter, Lili, she's much, much tinier than you guys," Meghan told a class of kindergarteners during a May 2024 visit to Lightway Academy in Abuja, Nigeria. "She's about to turn 3. And a few weeks ago, she looked at me and she would just see the reflection in my eyes. And she [goes], 'Mama, I see me in you.'"

"Now, she was talking really literally," Meghan added. "But I hung onto those words in a very different way. And I thought, 'Yes, I do see me in you, and you see me in you.'"

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