Home > USA > Six things to know about US President Joe Biden’s first 100 days
opoyicentral
Opoyi Central

4 years ago .Washington D.C., DC, USA

Six things to know about US President Joe Biden’s first 100 days

  • President Joe Biden has met some buig targets in his first 100 days in office
  • The Biden administration has achieved a lot in improving COVID situation and changing foreign policies
  • However, it is still in attack for its failure to handle immigration at borders and raging gun violence

Written by:
Published: April 25, 2021 02:29:26 Washington D.C., DC, USA

President Joe Biden has hit some big targets in 100 days, starting with an epic effort to pull the United States from its COVID-19 nightmare, but headaches lie ahead.

Here are three big achievements and three areas where much remains to be done.

1. Covid vaccinations: The raging pandemic was the gravest single threat facing Biden’s administration when he took over on January 20. The solution was mass vaccinations.

On this, Biden is delivering. Last week he celebrated the 200th million vaccine shot administered and Covid deaths have fallen dramatically.

Also Read: What to know about the ‘genocide’ of Armenians that Biden recognised

2. Economic stimulus: Biden pushed through a nearly $2 trillion rescue plan for an economy that has been hobbled and hollowed by the more than year-long coronavirus shutdown.

Although Democrats control Congress, their margin is razor thin and he had to work hard to get the American Rescue Plan passed. Polls show it is popular both among Democratic and Republican voters.

3. Foreign policy rethink: Biden’s priority was to undo what he saw as the reckless damage caused by Donald Trump to traditional US alliances.

Inviting Japan’s Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga as the first foreign leader to the White House showed that Washington is serious about its ties to Asia.

Also Read | US working closely to provide India help in COVID crisis: White House

The White House says Biden’s own first foreign trip will be to Europe, where he will attend G7, NATO and EU summits in June. The transatlantic alliance, which Trump questioned, is back.

As well as returning the United States to the Paris climate accord and seeking to revive the Iranian nuclear negotiations, Biden has also set a clear date for pulling the final US soldier out of Afghanistan: September 11.

1. Working with Congress: Biden promised bipartisanship but so far he has worked on the back of a razor thin Democratic majority.

That raises growing doubts over his upcoming big projects — an infrastructure bill, greening of the economy, police brutality reforms and immigration.

Midterm congressional elections next year could erase the Democrats’ advantage in Congress.

2. Immigration: Nowhere has the smooth running Biden administration stumbled more than on handling illegal immigration at the southern border.

Biden promised a more humane approach after Trump’s hardline crackdown, which relied largely on physical barriers.

Also Read: Biden administration under pressure to dispatch AstraZeneca vaccines to India

But the new administration was unprepared for a surge in people, many from Central America. Facilities overwhelmed with unaccompanied migrant children provided Republican critics with political ammunition while angering Biden’s own supporters.

The administration’s confusing back-and-forth on promises to greatly increase the cap on refugees allowed into the United States has fueled the sense of disarray.

3. Foreign policy trouble: Although Biden moved quickly to repair ties with allies, his plans for dealing with adversaries remain very much a work in progress.

He has also yet to be tested by a genuine crisis. China, Iran, North Korea and Russia could provide one at any time.

Related Articles

ADVERTISEMENT

© Copyright 2023 Opoyi Private Limited. All rights reserved