US President Joe Biden returned from his sojourn to Europe and the UK to face a growing list of domestic headaches as his big-spending policies stalled and were also blamed for rising inflation.
Mr Biden’s initial ‘American Jobs Plan’ called for a record $2.3trn in infrastructure spending. Republicans fought hard to stop that and it is now bogged down in Congress.
While Mr Biden was meeting Vladimir Putin in Geneva, a bipartisan group of 21 senators — 11 Republicans and 10 Democrats — came up with a compromise that would almost halve the amount to $1.2trn over eight years. The resulting gridlock explains why a Monmouth University poll this week made worrying reading for Mr Biden after Air Force One landed back in the United States.
His approval rating was 48pc — down six points from April and below 50pc for the first time in a Monmouth poll.
The number of Democrats who think the country is “moving in the right direction” has plummeted from 83pc in April to 59pc now.
Mr Biden’s agenda has also stagnated in other areas. Joe Manchin, the most conservative Democrat senator, blocked a sweeping voting-rights bill championed by the president, and a police reform law named after George Floyd has still not materialised.
It is unclear when Mr Biden’s proposal for a $2trn American Families Plan, centred on education, child care and paid family leave, will move forward.
Mr Biden also faces a growing controversy after he assigned Kamala Harris, the vice-president, to handle the Mexico border crisis nearly three months ago.
Border agents encountered more than 180,000 migrants crossing in May, the highest monthly number in two decades, and up 76pc since February.
Dozens of Republican members of Congress have written to the president asking him to remove the responsibility from Ms Harris because she has still not been to the border.
Meanwhile, Ronny Jackson, the former White House physician under Donald Trump, who is now a congressman representing Texas, called on Mr Biden to take a cognitive test.
He described Mr Biden’s performance in Europe as “embarrassing” and, in a letter to the president, said the American people “deserve full transparency on the mental capabilities of their highest-elected leader”.
Warnings that profligate government spending is already overheating the economy will make it even harder for Mr Biden to achieve his primary legislative goal of massive investment in infrastructure.
In his absence, petrol prices rose above $3 a gallon across much of the US, and consumer prices are up 5pc over the past year, the biggest jump since 2008.
The president’s ambitions to lead the world in climate change policy are also under threat. Republicans’ compromise budget includes $110bn on roads and bridges, $65bn on expanding broadband internet, and $48bn on improving public transport. However, it would not cover Democrat ambitions on promoting clean energy.
Mr Biden has also faced criticism after it emerged that at least five children of his top aides and other relatives have secured coveted jobs in the administration.
Walter Shaub, an Obama-era government ethics director, said: “I’m disgusted. A lot of us worked hard to tee him up to restore ethics to government and believed the promises.”
© Telegraph Media Group Ltd (2021)
Telegraph Media Group Limited [2021]