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NOVEMBER 11, 2021 | The Jewish Home OCTOBER 29, 2015 | The Jewish Home
Political Crossfire
Youngkinās Win in Virginia Started with Bidenās Debacle in Afghanistan By Marc A. Thiessen
W
ho says foreign policy doesnāt matter at the polls? When we look back at the issues that powered Glenn Youngkinās upset victory in the Virginia governorās race, education will be front and center. But the turning point was Afghanistan. Letās be clear: Virginia voters did not cast their ballots on Afghanistan. Exit polls show the top issues on their minds were the economy, education, taxes, and the coronavirus pandemic. Foreign policy did not make the list ā which is not surprising in a governorās race. But nearly half of Virginia voters reported that one reason for their vote was to send a message for or against President Joe Biden, and 28% said they were casting their ballot to express opposition to the president. The intensity of Virginiansā disapproval of Biden is stunning: 54% said they disapprove of Bidenās performance in oļ¬ce, with 46% saying they āstronglyā disapprove (only 8% āsomewhatā disapprove). In an election decided by just two points, that disapproval proved decisive. The collapse in Bidenās approval began with his disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan. On Aug. 14 ā the day before Kabul fell ā Biden enjoyed a solid 50% national approval in the RealClearPolitics average. A few days earlier, a Hill-HarrisX Poll found Bidenās approval at 55%, with strong majorities supporting him on the issues: 55% approved of his handling of the economy; 54% approved
of the job he was doing ļ¬ghting terrorism; and 58% said he would doing a good job running the government. But after his Afghanistan debacle, the ļ¬oor fell out from under the president. On Election Day, his approval in the RealClearPolitics average was underwater, at 43% to 51%. A pre-election Quinnipiac poll showed majorities disapproved of his performance not just on foreign policy but also on every single issue tested: the economy, taxes, immigration, his job as commander-in-chief, even his handling of the pandemic, which had been his strong suit. Worst of all, an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll a week before Election Day found that just 37% of Americans believe Biden is competent and eļ¬ective, while 50% say he is not. And only 37% believe he is able to handle a crisis while 47% say he cannot. Handling crises is pretty much a presidentās job description. Approval ratings rise and fall, but once voters decide you are in-
competent, itās extremely diļ¬cult to reverse that impression. And Bidenās perception of incompetence began in Afghanistan. His shameful decision to leave hundreds of American citizens and thousands of Afghan allies behind; his catastrophic choice to put the security of U.S. troops in the hands of the Taliban which led to the deaths of 13 U.S. service members; and his insistence that it was all an āextraordinary successā has done lasting, perhaps irreversible damage to Americansā impression of him. And that impression has only been conļ¬rmed by the serial displays of incompetence that followed: The images of thousands of illegal migrants camped under a bridge in Del Rio, Tex., which brought his self-inļ¬icted crisis along the southern border into focus; his begging OPEC ā a foreign oil cartel ā to produce more oil because gas prices had risen $1.25 on his watch; his inability to address the supply chain crisis; and his failure to pass his bipartisan infrastruc-
ture bill or reach agreement with fellow Democrats on his signature social spending bill ā even though his party controls the White House and both houses in Congress. A Fox News Voter analysis found that 76% of Virginia voters said the negotiations in Washington over his governing agenda were an important factor in their vote ā and Youngkin won those voters by 54% to 46% margin. And on the issue that drove Youngkinās victory ā education ā voters saw the Biden administrationās incompetence on display as well. First, they watched Bidenās education secretary, Miguel Cardona, echo Terry McAuliļ¬eās gaļ¬e and refuse to acknowledge that parents are the āprimary stakeholdersā in their childrenās education. Exit polls showed Virginia voters disagreed by a margin of 84% to 13%. And then they watched as Bidenās Justice Department ā in an incredible display of political incompetence and federal overreach ā tried to weaponize the FBI to intimidate parents exercising their constitutional right to express concerns about their childrenās education at school board meetings. Glenn Youngkin is the governor-elect of Virginia because of Joe Bidenās incompetence. The 2022 midterms will likely be a referendum on the presidentās ineptitude, as well. And the moment Americans decided that Biden was incompetent was when they watched his calamitous, shameful withdrawal from Afghanistan. (c) 2021, Washington Post Writers Group