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                                                                    past is prologue | Oct. 16, 2021
Joe Biden Is Not Jimmy Carter, and This Is Not the 1970s
By 
Ed Kilgore                        
       
There’s  a long-standing tradition among conservative pols and gabbers to  compare every Democratic president to Jimmy Carter. It’s hardly  surprising: Carter was the first and last sitting Democratic president  since the 19th century to lose a general election. His presidency,  moreover, led to a sort of Republican golden age with the landslide  election (and 49-state reelection) of Ronald Reagan and the first  Republican-controlled Senate since the early 1950s. It was natural for  many pundits to compare the southern governor Bill Clinton and the  foreign-policy novice Barack Obama to the 39th president, and  Republicans, of course, loved to point to signs (falsely) indicating  that both these men would be one-term presidents.
The  Jimmy Carter Redux game has returned with a vengeance in negative  assessments of Joe Biden. For one thing, Biden was something of a  contemporary (and supporter) of Carter’s; he was already in the Senate  when the idea of a Carter presidency seemed like a preposterous long  shot. For another, there is a rapidly emerging narrative on the right  that some of the problems that sank Carter in 1980 are returning on  Biden’s watch: inflation (combined with lagging economic growth), rising  crime rates, feckless foreign-policy management, and a divided  Democratic Party. So you are now routinely getting the kind of take 
Forbes reported back in May:
Trump, in a statement, joked that  comparisons between Biden and Carter were “very unfair to Jimmy  Carter,” claiming Carter “mishandled crisis after crisis” while “Biden  has created crisis after crisis.”
“Joe Biden is the new Jimmy Carter,” Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) tweeted last  week, blasting Biden for “rising gas prices,” while Donald Trump Jr.  called Biden “Jimmy Carter 2.0,” pointing to the lackluster April jobs report and inflation spikes.
Actually,  such comparisons are unfair both to Carter and to Biden, for different  reasons. Let us count the ways in which their presidencies are  strikingly dissimilar.
    
Today’s economic turbulence is nothing like the “stagflation” of the late 1970s   
    Yes, inflation has returned  as an economic concern for the first time in decades. And it’s true  that the U.S. economy has not entirely recovered from the devastating  effects of a pandemic that Biden inherited. But c’mon: In 1979, the  inflation rate was 13.3 percent, and the unemployment rate was 6  percent; in 1980, inflation was at 12.5 percent while unemployment  spiked to 7.2 percent. The Federal Reserve Board’s estimate for inflation in 2021 is just over 4 percent, dropping to somewhere between 2 and 3 percent in 2022; the expected average unemployment rate is 4.5 percent, dropping to 3.8 percent in 2022. Meanwhile, the federal funds rate  (the best comparable measure of interest rates) was at 11 percent in  1979 and leaped to an incredible 20 percent in 1980 as the Fed tried to  kill inflation. Today’s federal funds rate is expected to stay under one percent until 2023.
    Anyone  who lived through the economic conditions of the late 1970s should  laugh at the suggestion that we’re in the same spot today.
    
Democrats are way more united now than they were 40 years ago
    Those  who think there is some yawning ideological gap between Democratic  moderates like Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema on the one hand and  progressives like Bernie Sanders and Pramila Jayapal on the other really  should look at the Democratic congressional caucuses of the Carter  years. Hell, they could just look at the congressional delegation from Carter’s home state of Georgia.  The two Democratic senators representing the state at the time were the  ex-segregationist fiscal hawk Herman Talmadge and the self-described  conservative Sam Nunn. Democratic House members from Georgia included  the president of the John Birch Society, Larry McDonald, and solid  right-of-center members Doug Barnard, Jack Brinkley, Billy Lee Evans,  Charles Hatcher, and Ed Jenkins, all of whom were part of the coalition  that enacted Reagan’s landmark budget in 1981. There were so many conservative Democrats in Congress then that Reagan didn’t need his party to have a majority in the House to enact his agenda.
    The idea that today’s Democrats are anywhere near as disunited as the party was in the ’70s is ridiculous. The main problem  they face today is simply razor-thin margins of control in both houses  of Congress, which tempt individual members to make demands and take  hostages.
    
Biden is more in command of his party than Carter ever was
    Carter  was a one-term governor who caught lightning in a bottle in 1976,  winning the Democratic presidential nomination in a year when the Nixon  scandals had created a national craving for an outsider president. He  had the enormous benefit of combining support from southern Democrats  wanting a president of their own and northern Democrats wanting someone  to take down the very dangerous right-wing demagogue George Wallace (who  had shown alarming strength in and beyond the South in the 1972  Democratic primaries).
    By  the time Carter took office, his outsider persona had become a serious  handicap for him in Washington, a situation his prickly character and  inexperienced staff did not help. And of course, when he ran for  reelection in 1980, he had to overcome a primary challenge from the  party’s great liberal icon Ted Kennedy.
    The  tensions between Biden’s White House and the progressive and centrist  “wings” of his party (even that label greatly overstates any intraparty  differences) are a walk in the park compared to what Carter had to deal  with every day of his presidency.
    Even  these differences don’t completely capture why mocking Joe Biden for  being “another Jimmy Carter” is misguided. Carter wasn’t “Jimmy Carter”  either, in terms of the recent stereotype of him as the cause of his  party’s many years of misery.
    
Carter was holding back a Republican avalanche   
    To  understand Reagan’s two landslide presidential wins, you need to look  further back than the Carter administration. The event that really  exhibited the regional and ideological realignment behind Republicans’  success in the 1980s was the 1972 presidential election, in which Nixon  won 49 states against Democrat George McGovern. The Watergate scandal  and Nixon’s subsequent disgrace and resignation gave Democrats a brief  respite, but Nixon’s successor, Gerald Ford, would very likely have been  reelected against any Democrat other than Carter, whose regional appeal  gave his party a host of electoral votes from states they had been  losing regularly and wouldn’t carry again until the 1990s (or ever, in  some cases). Carter won 67 percent of the vote in Georgia and 56 percent  in Alabama and South Carolina, states that had not gone for the Donkey  Party since 1960. All told, he carried every state of the former  Confederacy save Virginia; the southern-inflected border states of  Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, and West Virginia; and Ohio, almost  certainly because of his strength in the Appalachian portions of that  state.
    It’s  hard to grasp this now, but Carter’s coalition combined  ex-segregationist white conservatives and Black voters in almost equal  measure. He was endorsed in 1976 by both Martin Luther King Sr. and  George Wallace. And he was the favorite of the white Evangelicals who  would soon become a formidable constituency for the most conservative  Republicans.
    Carter  retained some of this regional support in 1980 (he carried Georgia  again and narrowly lost Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, North Carolina,  South Carolina, and Tennessee), but the southern excitement over his  landmark candidacy had ebbed. So when a non-southerner — Carter’s veep,  Fritz Mondale — became the Democratic nominee in 1984, the bottom fell  out of the regional Democratic vote, and Reagan got his 
real landslide.
    This  GOP triumph might have happened earlier had Carter not run for  president in 1976. He didn’t cause it. And in any event, the rapidly  shifting tectonic plates of politics in the Carter era bear little  resemblance to the stable and polarized two-party system we have right  now.
    
Enough about the 1970s already 
    Obviously,  a lot has changed in the 41 years since Carter left the White House,  and facile comparisons of then to now miss most of these important  differences. Critics of Biden should stick to today’s circumstances. And  critics of Carter should pay less attention to the “failures” they  don’t seem to understand and perhaps more attention to Carter’s  distinguished post-presidency.