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It's time to give President Joe Biden credit for achieving something no one predicted: bipartisanship in foreign policy.
The Senate on Wednesday delivered a victory for Biden's foreign policy agenda, voting almost unanimously to admit Finland and Sweden into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Previously, Biden was able to get the Ukraine aid he has asked for. That Senate vote in May also was truly bipartisan, with all the Democrats joined by 39 of the 50 Republicans; that was after House Republicans voted nearly 3-to-1 in favor of the bill.
Overall, choices by a group of Republican senators are the top reason that the all-out obstruction many of us expected in the face of Democratic unified government hasn't come to pass. From an infrastructure bill to a gun safety law to legislation promoting domestic computer-chip production, some Republicans have chosen to buck their own party and negotiate rather than resorting to knee-jerk opposition. It also helps a lot that Democrats have been open to compromise and that Biden has a legislator's get-things-done mindset. That has allowed everyone to wind up with deals that they could live with.
But it's on foreign policy that we're seeing true bipartisan consensus. Much of the credit for that belongs with Biden.
It would be easy to argue that Russian President Vladimir Putin is more responsible for U.S. unity when it comes to Europe than Biden, and to some extent that's true. It's also true that Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukraine's president, has done a terrific job of making his cause popular around the world, and that Ukrainian troops prevented the quick collapse that many expected.
But Biden made the risky choice to respond forcefully to Putin's aggression, even at considerable political cost in the form of higher gas prices and overall inflation. Ukraine could have proved to be a less appealing or less competent ally. The costs to U.S. consumers could have been even more damaging to Biden (and still could be; gas prices are plummeting now, but they're still a lot higher than a year ago and could easily reverse course as the war in Europe drags on). Biden's decisions have turned the war into a broader rally around NATO and international cooperation — which is exactly the larger purpose that Biden and most Democratic (and many Republican) foreign policy professionals thought was needed after Donald Trump's presidency.