When President Joe Biden took the podium Thursday at his first presidential news conference, it was clear that this was a different kind of event than what we’d been conditioned to expect when “the last guy” — as Biden frequently used to refer to former President Donald Trump — was in office.
Biden is thinking about the arc of the next four years. The only problem is that the press hasn’t yet shifted in response.
As Biden took his time shuffling between his notecards filled with facts and figures prepared by his staff, I was reminded how the Trump news cycle was charted in seconds, as the mercurial president changed his mind on a dime, tossing out wild lies like a boxer throws haymakers. He only saw the next 30 seconds ahead of him, and his answers often reflected that.
Biden is thinking about the arc of the next four years. The only problem is the press hasn’t yet shifted in response.
That was clear on both sides of the East Room podium where Biden took questions from the attending members of the White House press corps. On question after question, the journalists in the room tried to make news, most hammering away at the story leading the current news cycle, the situation on the southern border. But unlike Trump, Biden wouldn’t bite. He responded to each frantic inquiry by giving thoughtful, substantive answers in place of drama.
That’s not to say Biden was boring; he joked about having been elected to the Senate over 120 years ago. He also kiddingly said he missed Trump, ribbing him on just how soon his predecessor began to run for re-election. But when confronted with, well, malarkey, he decided to focus on the big picture.
Case in point: Biden opened the presser with news that his administration would now aim for 200 million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine administered within his first 100 days in office. Still, the vast majority of the questions focused on the border.
On some levels that makes sense: The situation down in Texas is the biggest piece of negative news that the administration is handling, making it an easy topic for the sort of adversarial questioning that many critics said was lacking when dealing with Trump.
Biden showed in Thursday’s press conference that he’s not going to be hyper-focused on the crisis of the hour, or even day.
Immigration is also the most apparent point of contention between Democrats and Republicans at the moment, which provides the opportunity to draw out GOP responses to whatever Biden might say, to keep the story’s momentum going. And the unaccompanied minors who have been crowded into U.S. Customs and Border Protection facilities add a human element to the story that is lacking on, say, infrastructure.
But there were also questions on whether Biden is moving closer to supporting abolishing the filibuster (sort of); whether Biden will run again in 2024 (he expects to); and if Vice President Kamala Harris will still be his running mate if he does (uh, yes?). Biden seemed to deal with those gamely, though his frustration was clear at times.
But the president saved his best answers for the questions that weren’t really asked. When confronted with whether he intended to keep any of Trump’s tariffs and how to best confront China, he emphasized that the competition between Washington and Beijing would come down to who wins out as the two countries put forward their values on human rights and freedom.
“I imagine your children and grandchildren will be doing their thesis on who succeeded: autocracy or democracy,” Biden said. “Because that’s what’s at stake.”









