President Biden's relations with House Democrats have hit rough patches before, but lawmakers tell Axios that they are at a particularly low ebb as he prepares to leave office.
Why it matters: Tensions had already been simmering after the 2024 election â but Biden's pardon of his son Hunter last week, in the words of one senior House Democrat, sent many "over the edge."
- "People are really angry," said the lawmaker, who, like others quoted in this story, talked on the condition of anonymity to speak candidly about the president.
- Rep. Greg Landsman (D-Ohio), asked about the relationship between Biden and House Democrats, told Axios, "I don't think great."
What we're hearing: Vice President Harris' loss raised a feeling among Democrats that Biden's refusal to leave the race until July cost the party dearly â even as they got caught up in a global anti-incumbency wave.
- "I think there's a widespread sense that he took too long to get out and that it made it very difficult for Vice President Harris to run the most impactful campaign," said Rep. JesĂșs "Chuy" GarcĂa (D-Ill.).
- Landsman praised Biden for getting "a ton done" but said there are "legitimate questions as to whether or not he should have served one term and been done."
- A second senior House Democrat said "some of the frustrations about Harris' loss have to do with Biden ... geez, you know, he stuck around longer than he probably should have."
Zoom in: The Hunter pardon, for many members, was the straw that broke the camel's back â especially after Biden said he wouldn't do it. The first senior House Democrat estimated that "more than 50%" of House Democrats are frustrated about it.
- Many Democrats publicly slammed the move, including Landsman, who told Axios that Biden should have "talked through ... this pardon decision with others outside of his family."
- "There's definitely some tension" about the pardon, a third senior House Democrat told Axios.
- "There is a lot of frustration with Biden's about-face," said a fourth House Democrat, citing both the president's promise not to pardon Hunter and his 2020 pledge to be a "bridge" to the next generation of Democrats.
The other side: Biden's allies argue that one bad stretch shouldn't negate his decades-long career in public office.
- Rep. Dan Goldman (D-N.Y.) acknowledged "legitimate concerns about his decision to run again," but said Biden will "go down as a fantastic president."
- "Even though people get a little resentful at some of these decisions, it's going to be soft complaining," said Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.).
- "President Biden and House Democrats built the strongest legislative record in modern history," said White House spokesperson Andrew Bates, adding that Biden "continues to partner with House Democrats to deliver more unprecedented results for Americans families."
The intrigue: While Democrats have criticized the pardon, there is a spectrum of opinions ranging from defenders like former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to even some lawmakers who view it as praiseworthy.
- "Quite frankly, I think he should pardon himself because I think Trump will, until Joe dies, go after him," said Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.).
- A sixth House Democrat who spoke anonymously told Axios: "I'd be mad if he didn't pardon [Hunter]."
- Said Goldman: "I don't have a problem with the pardon because Hunter Biden became a Republican boogie man."
Between the lines: One overarching feeling expressed by many lawmakers is exasperation and a readiness to wash their hands of Biden.
- The second senior House Democrats said of the Hunter pardon: "He shouldn't have done it, but ... people, I think generally, are like, 'It's time to move on.'"
- A fifth House Democrat, asked a question about Biden this week, told Axios: "I am unplugging from Biden right now."
The bottom line: "There's certainly frustration with the Biden administration, and in some ways the most frustrating part is some of us really love Joe Biden," said a seventh House Democrat.
- "And the feeling is: Why do you have to go out like this?"
https://www.axios.com/2024/12/08/biden-house-democrats-hunter-pardon-2024-election
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