The Facts: In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success.

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Objectively going by the data, It's undeniable. President Joe Biden's policies have been a success. For all Americans. Republican districts did as well or better under Biden, than Democratic districts have.

The Facts: In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success.

Biden failed to win the working class. Democrats might want to stop trying.​

Fareed Zakaria

In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success. Entering office as the pandemic still raged, he presided over the creation of almost 17 million jobs with inflation nearing the Fed’s 2 percent target. Productivity is up, wage inequality is down, small business formation is at record levels and wage growth is outpacing inflation.
And yet, in political terms, Biden has failed. He leaves office with among the lowest presidential approval ratings in history and his party having lost the presidency, the House and the Senate in the 2024 elections.
Biden’s presidency has been an important test of a powerful theory that has animated Democratic Party elites for almost two decade...
...Take the Inflation Reduction Act, which is the largest climate-related investment program in American history. Of the $346-billion-worth of clean energy investment that had been announced between the law’s passage and last March, almost 78 percent had gone to Republican congressional districts, according to a CNN study of data from the nonpartisan Rhodium Group and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The infrastructure bill has been less lopsided, but much of that spending funds jobs in fields typically seen as working class, such as construction. And the Chips and Science Act has resulted in a huge spike in manufacturing investment in the country.
...
Ever since Bill Clinton’s presidency, Democrats have moved left on economic policy. As Ezra Klein has noted, Barack Obama was to the left of Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton campaigned to the left of Obama, and Biden was to the left of Hillary Clinton. And yet, during that period, Democrats’ working class support has cratered.
This is not simply a Trump phenomenon. In the 2022 midterm elections, when MAGA candidates did badly and Democrats did surprisingly well overall, Democrats lost White noncollege educated voters by 34 points nationally in House elections — 10 points worse than in 2018...
Democrats have many electoral advantages. They have a solid base of college-educated professionals, women and minorities. Many of the swing voters who have helped them win the popular vote in seven of the past nine presidential elections are registered independents and suburbanites. Perhaps they should lean into their new base and shape a policy agenda around them, rather than pining for the working class Whites whom they lost decades ago.

A few snippets tell the story.
 
Objectively going by the data, It's undeniable. President Joe Biden's policies have been a success. For all Americans. Republican districts did as well or better under Biden, than Democratic districts have.

The Facts: In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success.

Biden failed to win the working class. Democrats might want to stop trying.​

Fareed Zakaria

In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success. Entering office as the pandemic still raged, he presided over the creation of almost 17 million jobs with inflation nearing the Fed’s 2 percent target. Productivity is up, wage inequality is down, small business formation is at record levels and wage growth is outpacing inflation.
And yet, in political terms, Biden has failed. He leaves office with among the lowest presidential approval ratings in history and his party having lost the presidency, the House and the Senate in the 2024 elections.
Biden’s presidency has been an important test of a powerful theory that has animated Democratic Party elites for almost two decade...
...Take the Inflation Reduction Act, which is the largest climate-related investment program in American history. Of the $346-billion-worth of clean energy investment that had been announced between the law’s passage and last March, almost 78 percent had gone to Republican congressional districts, according to a CNN study of data from the nonpartisan Rhodium Group and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The infrastructure bill has been less lopsided, but much of that spending funds jobs in fields typically seen as working class, such as construction. And the Chips and Science Act has resulted in a huge spike in manufacturing investment in the country.
...
Ever since Bill Clinton’s presidency, Democrats have moved left on economic policy. As Ezra Klein has noted, Barack Obama was to the left of Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton campaigned to the left of Obama, and Biden was to the left of Hillary Clinton. And yet, during that period, Democrats’ working class support has cratered.
This is not simply a Trump phenomenon. In the 2022 midterm elections, when MAGA candidates did badly and Democrats did surprisingly well overall, Democrats lost White noncollege educated voters by 34 points nationally in House elections — 10 points worse than in 2018...
Democrats have many electoral advantages. They have a solid base of college-educated professionals, women and minorities. Many of the swing voters who have helped them win the popular vote in seven of the past nine presidential elections are registered independents and suburbanites. Perhaps they should lean into their new base and shape a policy agenda around them, rather than pining for the working class Whites whom they lost decades ago.

A few snippets tell the story.
lol-laughing.gif
 
Objectively going by the data, It's undeniable. President Joe Biden's policies have been a success. For all Americans. Republican districts did as well or better under Biden, than Democratic districts have.

The Facts: In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success.

Biden failed to win the working class. Democrats might want to stop trying.​

Fareed Zakaria

In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success. Entering office as the pandemic still raged, he presided over the creation of almost 17 million jobs with inflation nearing the Fed’s 2 percent target. Productivity is up, wage inequality is down, small business formation is at record levels and wage growth is outpacing inflation.
And yet, in political terms, Biden has failed. He leaves office with among the lowest presidential approval ratings in history and his party having lost the presidency, the House and the Senate in the 2024 elections.
Biden’s presidency has been an important test of a powerful theory that has animated Democratic Party elites for almost two decade...
...Take the Inflation Reduction Act, which is the largest climate-related investment program in American history. Of the $346-billion-worth of clean energy investment that had been announced between the law’s passage and last March, almost 78 percent had gone to Republican congressional districts, according to a CNN study of data from the nonpartisan Rhodium Group and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The infrastructure bill has been less lopsided, but much of that spending funds jobs in fields typically seen as working class, such as construction. And the Chips and Science Act has resulted in a huge spike in manufacturing investment in the country.
...
Ever since Bill Clinton’s presidency, Democrats have moved left on economic policy. As Ezra Klein has noted, Barack Obama was to the left of Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton campaigned to the left of Obama, and Biden was to the left of Hillary Clinton. And yet, during that period, Democrats’ working class support has cratered.
This is not simply a Trump phenomenon. In the 2022 midterm elections, when MAGA candidates did badly and Democrats did surprisingly well overall, Democrats lost White noncollege educated voters by 34 points nationally in House elections — 10 points worse than in 2018...
Democrats have many electoral advantages. They have a solid base of college-educated professionals, women and minorities. Many of the swing voters who have helped them win the popular vote in seven of the past nine presidential elections are registered independents and suburbanites. Perhaps they should lean into their new base and shape a policy agenda around them, rather than pining for the working class Whites whom they lost decades ago.

A few snippets tell the story.
Joe Biden was EXTREMELY SUCCESSFUL in demonstrating what DOES NOT WORK.
 
Yeah man, it's so awesome his own party knifed him in the back and kicked him to the curb and told him he was washed up. :auiqs.jpg:Nice try at re-writing history, fail!
That's how you people see it.

Democrats supported Biden. Loyalty vs Fealty.

Your spin and narrative shows much about how your mind actually works. It's sick
 
Objectively going by the data, It's undeniable. President Joe Biden's policies have been a success. For all Americans. Republican districts did as well or better under Biden, than Democratic districts have.

The Facts: In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success.

Biden failed to win the working class. Democrats might want to stop trying.​

Fareed Zakaria

In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success. Entering office as the pandemic still raged, he presided over the creation of almost 17 million jobs with inflation nearing the Fed’s 2 percent target. Productivity is up, wage inequality is down, small business formation is at record levels and wage growth is outpacing inflation.
And yet, in political terms, Biden has failed. He leaves office with among the lowest presidential approval ratings in history and his party having lost the presidency, the House and the Senate in the 2024 elections.
Biden’s presidency has been an important test of a powerful theory that has animated Democratic Party elites for almost two decade...
...Take the Inflation Reduction Act, which is the largest climate-related investment program in American history. Of the $346-billion-worth of clean energy investment that had been announced between the law’s passage and last March, almost 78 percent had gone to Republican congressional districts, according to a CNN study of data from the nonpartisan Rhodium Group and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The infrastructure bill has been less lopsided, but much of that spending funds jobs in fields typically seen as working class, such as construction. And the Chips and Science Act has resulted in a huge spike in manufacturing investment in the country.
...
Ever since Bill Clinton’s presidency, Democrats have moved left on economic policy. As Ezra Klein has noted, Barack Obama was to the left of Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton campaigned to the left of Obama, and Biden was to the left of Hillary Clinton. And yet, during that period, Democrats’ working class support has cratered.
This is not simply a Trump phenomenon. In the 2022 midterm elections, when MAGA candidates did badly and Democrats did surprisingly well overall, Democrats lost White noncollege educated voters by 34 points nationally in House elections — 10 points worse than in 2018...
Democrats have many electoral advantages. They have a solid base of college-educated professionals, women and minorities. Many of the swing voters who have helped them win the popular vote in seven of the past nine presidential elections are registered independents and suburbanites. Perhaps they should lean into their new base and shape a policy agenda around them, rather than pining for the working class Whites whom they lost decades ago.

A few snippets tell the story.
Now...

:th_Back_2_Topic_2:

In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success. Entering office as the pandemic still raged, he presided over the creation of almost 17 million jobs with inflation nearing the Fed’s 2 percent target. Productivity is up, wage inequality is down, small business formation is at record levels and wage growth is outpacing inflation.

You people-of-the-cult struggle with facts. Try and refute one. Try.
 
One more troll who can not refute a single fact.
Just a few mentions of Biden's successes. Record high fuel prices. Highest inflation in decades. More homeless than ever before in America. Non-existent borders. Rampant illegal immigration. Polarized nation. Afghanistan withdrawal fiasco. Lawfare. These are FACTS that YOU CANNOT REFUTE. LMAO, next.
 
Just a few mentions of Biden's successes. Record high fuel prices. Highest inflation in decades. More homeless than ever before in America. Non-existent borders. Rampant illegal immigration. Polarized nation. Afghanistan withdrawal fiasco. Lawfare. These are FACTS that YOU CANNOT REFUTE. LMAO, next.

Facts vs Campaign slogans , memes, messaging:

In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success. Entering office as the pandemic still raged, he presided over the creation of almost 17 million jobs with inflation nearing the Fed’s 2 percent target. Productivity is up, wage inequality is down, small business formation is at record levels and wage growth is outpacing inflation.
 
Objectively going by the data, It's undeniable. President Joe Biden's policies have been a success. For all Americans. Republican districts did as well or better under Biden, than Democratic districts have.

The Facts: In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success.

Biden failed to win the working class. Democrats might want to stop trying.​

Fareed Zakaria

In policy terms, Joe Biden’s presidency has been a resounding success. Entering office as the pandemic still raged, he presided over the creation of almost 17 million jobs with inflation nearing the Fed’s 2 percent target. Productivity is up, wage inequality is down, small business formation is at record levels and wage growth is outpacing inflation.
And yet, in political terms, Biden has failed. He leaves office with among the lowest presidential approval ratings in history and his party having lost the presidency, the House and the Senate in the 2024 elections.
Biden’s presidency has been an important test of a powerful theory that has animated Democratic Party elites for almost two decade...
...Take the Inflation Reduction Act, which is the largest climate-related investment program in American history. Of the $346-billion-worth of clean energy investment that had been announced between the law’s passage and last March, almost 78 percent had gone to Republican congressional districts, according to a CNN study of data from the nonpartisan Rhodium Group and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The infrastructure bill has been less lopsided, but much of that spending funds jobs in fields typically seen as working class, such as construction. And the Chips and Science Act has resulted in a huge spike in manufacturing investment in the country.
...
Ever since Bill Clinton’s presidency, Democrats have moved left on economic policy. As Ezra Klein has noted, Barack Obama was to the left of Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton campaigned to the left of Obama, and Biden was to the left of Hillary Clinton. And yet, during that period, Democrats’ working class support has cratered.
This is not simply a Trump phenomenon. In the 2022 midterm elections, when MAGA candidates did badly and Democrats did surprisingly well overall, Democrats lost White noncollege educated voters by 34 points nationally in House elections — 10 points worse than in 2018...
Democrats have many electoral advantages. They have a solid base of college-educated professionals, women and minorities. Many of the swing voters who have helped them win the popular vote in seven of the past nine presidential elections are registered independents and suburbanites. Perhaps they should lean into their new base and shape a policy agenda around them, rather than pining for the working class Whites whom they lost decades ago.

A few snippets tell the story.
Don't forget the billions republicans have spent on propaganda.
 

And yet, in political terms, Biden has failed. He leaves office with among the lowest presidential approval ratings in history and his party having lost the presidency, the House and the Senate in the 2024 elections.
So what you are telling us is that the general public is wrong but you are not .
Almost as cunning as President Piss Pot pretending to be an ill puppet for the last few years .
What a brilliant deception --- one that fooled the world and astonished the Pope ye and Queen Camilla when he farted all over her .

BTW, if you actually study the likely true data, his final approval figures were almost certainly single digit .

As if that would ever be admitted.
 

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