The president of the United States is often referred to as the most powerful person in the world. That description must come as some consolation to Joe Biden, who in moments of despair can reflect that the second most powerful person in the world, whoever that may be, must have it worse.
Biden is in the position of someone who wins a lottery only to find out that half of the payout comes in Confederate dollars. His term so far illustrates how little control the president has over the things that matter most to him, his party and the American people.
He came into office amid a virulent pandemic and a battered economy, crises that would be his to solve. But despite his largely successful push for COVID-19 vaccinations and economic stimulus, the headlines lately consist almost entirely of bad news.
Eight hundred thousand Americans have died from the coronavirus, and each day brings another 1,300 deaths. A new variant of the virus is now on the rampage. The economic downturn that Biden inherited has turned into a boom — but one accompanied by the highest rate of inflation in nearly 40 years.
The president is blamed by most people for these unwanted developments, judging from his 52% disapproval rating. But he has only a puny capacity to address them. His predicament is a classic source of job stress: responsibility without authority. There are no obvious policy changes he could make that would swiftly curtail either infections or inflation.
Not that Biden has much power to make policy changes, as Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., has reminded him. Manchin was potentially the decisive vote to pass the president's huge Build Back Better package. But on Sunday, he said he would oppose it, at least in its current form.
With that, a large chunk of Biden's domestic agenda appears to be sitting on a pile of tinder that is soaked in gasoline, ready to go up in smoke. His promises on climate change, family support, health care and affordable housing may amount to a litany of inaction.
President Harry Truman could empathize. "I sit here all day trying to persuade people to do the things they ought to have sense enough to do without my persuading them," he lamented. "That's all the powers of the president amount to."