The Only Positive Record Biden May Break These Midterms:

By Jacob Taylor | Tuesday, 09 August 2022 12:00 PM
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Despite record low support ratings, President Joe Biden might be on the path to obtaining a historic achievement last seen during the presidency of John F. Kennedy, White House chief of staff Ron Klain said.

Referring to a forecast from FiveThirtyEight, Klain said Democrats now hold an advantage over Republicans for control of the upper chamber in the fall.

If Democrats took seats in November to increase their Senate majority, “that will make President Biden the first Democratic president since JFK to gain Senate seats in his first midterm election,” Klain told CNN on Monday.

Democrats had been facing dismal odds ahead of November, but a strong jobs report, movement on the president’s legislative priorities, and a decision by Kansas voters to dismiss a ballot initiative to remove abortion rights from the state’s constitution in a high-turnout election suggest the party’s political struggles may be reducing.

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Still, Biden’s job approval remains underwater, with just under 40% of voters approving, compared to 56% who disapprove, according to a RealClearPolitics polling aggregate.

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Noting a recent Monmouth survey in which 82% of respondents said the country was going in the wrong direction, CNN anchor Pamela Brown asked Klain whether Biden’s recent legislative wins may be too late to help Democrats in November.

Klain responded that Democrats would “do just fine” in the midterm elections and said the option for voters lies between “one party that is taking on the special interests and winning and a party that is siding with the special interests.”

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Klain said the events of recent weeks had shown “a big difference” between Democrats and Republicans on “special interests,” wherein lawmakers allow outside interests to influence legislation.

“When voters have that choice in front of them in November, I’m confident which side they’ll choose,” he said.

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Klain’s charge of the outside pressures facing lawmakers is typically viewed as a cross-party affliction, however.

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Senate Democrats cut an offered tweak to carried interest rules from their just-passed climate bill due to the objections of Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ), whose support was essential to passing the bill. The carried interest provision is largely viewed as a loophole that benefits a small group of wealthy investors

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