Friday, March 26, 2021

Biden's first Presidential press conference

Joe Biden gave his first Presidential press conference yesterday, Joe Biden's first press conference as US President DW News 03/25/. (Biden enters the video just after.6:50.)



One "boring" improvement from the new Administration is making the official White House website a useful information source again. So the transcript of the press conference is available there, Remarks by President Biden in Press Conference 03/25/2021.

In the Bush-Cheney and Obama-Biden Administrations, the White House website regularly provided transcripts of Presidential speeches and press conferences. Obama had a weekly video message that was posted there. Under Trump-Pence, it deteriorated fast. It had spotty information, and that crowd were such dishonest clowns, I wouldn't have even taken official transcripts as accurate. So this little bit of "normalcy" under the current administration is a welcome bit of boring but useful improvement. Although I haven't seen any videos popping up there yet, which strikes me as a bit odd.

Biden's press conference itself was "normal," rather than the theatrical Rumpelstilzchen shows that Trump put on in his press conferences and Nuremburg rallies. But he provided useful information and I would say good framing for his policies. I'm on a trust-but-verify basis with Biden's Presidency. And on some issues like immigration, it's more like don't -really-trust-but-demnad-they-do-the-right-thing-anyway basis.

Left-leaning media critics let out a collective sigh about how the press is also more-or-less back to pre-Trump "normal", i.e., they still obsess over horserace question (Are you going to run for re-elction in 2024?, Do you have the votes to do away with the filibuster?) and they still take their cues from Republican framing (Are more refugees coming because they think you're weak on immigration?)

Dan Froomkin analyses the press' performance in At Biden’s first news conference, it wasn’t the president who was out of touch Press Watch 03/258/2021:
There were no questions about any element of the Covid crisis – not the vaccine, the prognosis, the economy, nothing! – although it’s by far the most important issue on any normal person’s mind right now. There were no questions about the substance of Biden’s ambitious plans related to infrastructure and climate change, immigration and voting rights.
And he also notes, "after four years of the media desperately needing to fact-check the president (and often failing), now the president has to fact-check the media."

I won't add any theater-criticism type comments on the press conference. That's why we have our Pod Pundits on TV ...

Immigration was a mjor topic in the debate, not least because the Republicans have been beating their drums over it. They claim there is a "crisis" on the border because there's a new flood of refugees due to Biden being President. There is a real humantarian crisis on the border, and Biden emphasized that in his press conference. But as he also explained, the "crisis" the Republicans are yammering about is bogus, for reasons he explained well.

Mehdi Hasan addresses the immigration issue in this segment, Myth-Busting What's Behind the Situation at the Border The Mehdi Hasan Show 03/26/2021



It features Erika Andiola Advocacy Chief for RAICES (Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services). Good discussion on how the press is still using Republican/xenophobic framing of the border issue.

Despite the somewhat ditsy questioning, Biden also talked about the necessity of getting important legislation passed, changing the filibuster rule if necessary. And he made it sound necessary.

And he did talk about the COVID relief bill and some about his plans for a new stimulus/infrastructure bill. Very importantly, he strssed the benefits that ordinary Americans are going to get from the relief bill.

I do think that Biden needs to move faster on cleaning up the mess in the immigration system that was left immediately by the Trump-Pence Administration. But the legacy from the Obama-Biden Administration in that regard was bad in many ways.

I've followed immigration policy to some extent my whole adult life. So it's unsurprising that the US has lurched alone with such a bad system with Latin American immigration for so long. But it's still terrible that it has, because it's heavily based on shameless exploitation of immigrant workers.

The last substantive US immigration reform was during the Bush I Administration. In a short book I think is terribly underrated, The Culture of Contentment (1992), John Kenneth Galbraith included a chapter called "The Functional Underclass," in which he discussed the US economy's dependene on what he called a low-paid underclass, which he described this way:
What is not accepted, and indeed is little mentioned, is that the underclass is integrally a part of a larger economic process and, more importantly, that it serves the living standard and the comfort of the more favored community. Economic progress would be far more uncertain and certainly far less rapid without it. The economically fortunate, not excluding those who speak with greatest regret of the existence of this class, are heavily dependent on its presence.
Even in 1992, this was not a "respectable" way to talk about the economy. But Galbraith was usually more focused on getting it right than in pandering to fashionable respectable opinion at any given moment.

And he described how Latin America was providing a considerable part of that "underclass" at the time:

In more recent times, migration from Mexico, Latin America and the West Indies has become a general source of such labor. For many years now, legal provision has been made for the importation of workers for the harvesting of fruit and vegetables, there being very specific acknowledgment that this is something native-born Americans cannot be persuaded in the necessary numbers to do. There is here, somewhat exceptionally, a clear legal perception of the role of the underclass.

In the immigration legislation of 1990, there was at last some official recognition of the more general and continuing need for immigrant labor. Although much of the discussion of this measure turned on the opening of the door to needed skilled workers (and compassionately to relatives of earlier migrants), the larger purpose was not in doubt. There would be a new and necessary recruitment of men and women to do the tasks of the underclass. Avoided only was mention of such seemingly brutal truth. It is not thought appropriate to say that the modern economy - the market system - requires such an underclass, and certainly not that it must reach out to other countries to sustain and refresh it. [my emphasis]
The dependence on undocumented immigrant labor in the US economy has increased greatly since then. But the refugee issue is a distinct one, although it is a closely related issue. Refugees are fleeing intolerable conditions, though if they are coming to the US, they normally hope to be able to make a living there.

One of the things that American and European xenophobes like to claim is that a decent policy on refugees - and only policies that meet the minimal standards of internal law should even be considered as fitting into that category - will encourage even more immigration. In both the US and Europe, this is meant to convey images of hordes of dark-skinned foreigners from poor countries coming in to take advantage of institutions created by respectable, hard-working white folks. But it's at least 99% a bogus argument. and Biden did a good job of explaining that in the context of the moment in his press conference.

Cecilia Vega of ABC News posed this question:
Q I’d like to circle back to immigration, please. You just listed the reasons that people are coming, talking about in-country problems, saying that it happens every year; you blamed the last administration. Sir, I just got back last night from a reporting trip to the border where I met nine-year-old, Yossell, who walked here from Honduras by himself, along with anoth

er little boy. He had that phone number on him — THE PRESIDENT: Astounding.

Q — and we were able to call his family. His mother says that she sent her son to this country because she believes that you are not deporting unaccompanied minors like her son. That’s why she sent him alone from Honduras.

So, sir, you blamed the last administration, but is your messaging — in saying that these children are and will be allowed to stay in this country and work their way through this process — encouraging families like Yossell says to come?
And Biden addressed the propaganda claim the Republicans are making in his reply:
THE PRESIDENT: Well, look, the idea that I’m going to say — which I would never do — “if an unaccompanied child ends up at the border, we’re just going to let him starve to death and stay on the other side” — no previous administration did that either, except Trump. I’m not going to do it. I’m not going to do it.

That’s why I’ve asked the Vice President of the United States, yesterday, to be the lead person on dealing with focusing on the fundamental reasons why people leave Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador in the first place. It’s because of earthquakes, floods. It’s because of lack of food. It’s because of gang violence. It’s because of a whole range of things. ...

That mother did not sit around with — on the kitchen table and say, “You know, I got a great idea: The way I’m going to make sure my son get taken care of is I’m going to put a…” — how old was he, or she?

Q He’s — he’s nine. I also met a 10-year-old.

THE PRESIDENT: A nine-year-old. “I’m going to send him on a thousand-mile journey across the desert and up to the United States because I know Joe Biden is a nice guy and he’ll take care of him.”

What a desperate act to have to take. The circumstances must be horrible. So we can do something about that.
It's good to have a President making that straightforward argument.

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