This may be the earliest Presidential endorsement ever by a major newspaper. The Houston Chronicle endorsed Joe Biden. Come to think of it, why should any newspaper hesiatate when the choice is between Biden, a lifelong centrist and accomplished President, and the unhinged Trump, who is facing multiple criminal indictments and attempted a coup when he lost in 2020?
The editorial says:
Now that the Kansas City Chiefs have triumphed over the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl LVIII — and without the help of Taylor Swift and the CIA, as far as we know— this nation can turn its attention to another winning team. We have in mind the Biden administration. Under the leadership of the oldest and arguably the most experienced president in American history, the team in the White House for the past three years has performed remarkably well, despite the rancor and divisiveness that have afflicted this nation for nearly a decade.
The accomplishments of an administration dedicated to governing, one that believes in the power of government to make life better for the American people, is a key reason we heartily endorse the reelection of President Joe Biden. The other reason, equally important, is to fend off the chaos, corruption and danger to the nation that would accompany the return of Donald Trump to the White House.
The president has his shortcomings, to be sure, but what his administration has managed to get done during the past three years is a potent reminder to his fellow Democrats, to independents and to those Republicans who have somehow resisted Trump’s cultish appeal that the nation has a viable alternative. Here is a sampling:
If it’s really “the economy, stupid,” that determines success in presidential elections, then Biden can probably rest easy at neutral. No, Bidenomics alone didn’t save us but neither did they damn us. One of the clear advantages of a president as experienced as Biden is wisdom: in this case, the wisdom to get the heck out of the Fed’s way as it masterfully applied the breaks to what could have been runaway inflation.
The economy has recovered from the perils of the pandemic and is now healthier than that of any other advanced nation. With unemployment approaching a 50-year low, companies large and small need workers. (Notice the “help wanted” signs in shop windows, the “We’re Hiring” signs outside huge warehouses and distribution centers just off I-10 east of Brookshire.)
Inflation is trending downward, somehow, despite all dire prophecies of economists, without the bitter medicine of a recession or a period of high unemployment. Food prices are still high, and hard-working Americans are still wincing at grocery store receipts, but gas prices have fallen, as the U.S. produces more oil than any country in history, including Saudi Arabia. In an ongoing effort to wean ourselves off fossil fuels, the administration is investing $7 billion in an ambitious solar-power projectand is promoting other alternative energy projects, as well.
The stock market is percolating along and hitting record highs.
“Infrastructure week” became a punch line during the inept Trump administration, but the Biden administration in its first year managed to pass a bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that’s expected to add an estimated 1.5 million jobs per year for the next 10 years. This administration’s “infrastructure week” is investing in clean water and high-speed internet. It’s repairing roads and bridges, upgrading air- and seaports, modernizing our power infrastructure, investing in public transit and pahssenger rail and cleaning up Superfund and brownfield sites.
A little heralded initiative related to infrastructure involves “strategic sector” investments in employment-distressed counties around the nation. In 2021, according to a study conducted by Brookings Metro (a think tank) and MIT’s Center for Energy and Environmental Policy, these 1,071 counties have received about $82 billion in private-sector investment from industries the Biden administration has targeted. Industries that will locate in these areas include manufacturers of semiconductors (in this country instead of China) and equipment to generate solar and wind power.
One of the distressed areas to benefit is Wilbarger County, Texas, along the Red River northwest of Wichita Falls. A $4 billion private-sector venture is constructing a mega-scale green hydrogen plant that’s expected to create 115 permanent jobs and more than 1,300 construction jobs in a county where population has declined almost every decade since 1940. It’s worth noting that Wilbarger County in 2020 cast 21 percent of its votes for Biden, nearly 78 percent for Trump.
Steadily growing reliance on the Affordable Care Act during this administration has made coverage more affordable and more accessible for millions of Americans. More than 21 million Americans are now enrolled, up from 12 million shortly before the pandemic.
The Biden White House also has given Medicare the power to directly negotiate with Big Pharma, thereby lowering drug prices and placing a $35-per-month cap on the cost of insulin for Medicare beneficiaries.
After decades of “thoughts and prayers” and little else in response to mass killings, the Biden White House managed to shepherd a bipartisan Safer Communities Act through a balky Congress. With the support of 15 Republican senators and 14 Republican House members, the act represents at least a modest effort to address gun safety in this country.
The Biden administration has managed to organize and lead an allied response to a brutish dictator’s invasion of a neighboring democracy. As Ukraine desperately tries to hold off Russia’s invasion, Biden, in the words of former Republican Party operative Stuart Stevens, is “standing on the side of freedom versus tyranny in the largest land war in Europe since WWII.”
Under the leadership of a president with decades of experience in the Middle East, the administration is seeking a path to peace and stability in the post-October 7 conflagration involving Gaza, Iran and Israel and the desperate Palestinian people. The administration also is trying to tamp down the potential danger of a region-wide war. It’s hard to imagine Biden’s predecessor having either the patience or the prowess to play a significant role in resolving a devilishly complex crisis.
Another attribute of the Biden administration is its normality. Stevens, the former GOP operative, put it this way in a recent article in The New Republic: “One of the greatest gifts of a democratic civil society is the freedom not to think about government, to wake up and not worry about the mood of a leader. Joe Biden has made governing boring and predictable, both fundamental rights of the people in a healthy democracy.”
We are well aware that the Biden administration has not been successful on every front. The calamitous withdrawal from Afghanistan was the most obvious failure. The administration’s inability to quell chaos at the border is another, although blame primarily belongs to caviling and cynical MAGA Republicans in the House. In servility to Trump, they torpedoed a bipartisan border-security plan painstakingly crafted in the Senate. Biden can’t solve the crisis by executive order; he needs Congress to act.
We are well aware of Biden’s age, 81, (and Trump’s, 77), as well as memory lapses that have prompted near-panic among many of the president’s fellow Democrats. Those of us who remember the energetic, garrulous, occasionally even eloquent Joe Biden of years past can see the difference a few years have made, even if he was always prone to gaffes. Accounts other than the report of Special Counsel Robert Hur suggest, however, that Biden remains focused, engaged and in command on the vital issues that occupy a president. Experience counts.
We are reassured in large part because Biden has restored the tradition of a capable team running the White House, a tradition trampled by Trump’s deeply flawed scheme to run a one-man show. Like Ronald Reagan, Lyndon Johnson and Franklin Roosevelt, Biden’s deft management of his team has made him, arguably, the most productive president since LBJ in the early months of his administration.
He has, as they say, forgotten more than his presumed Republican rival will ever know. That’s not saying much, and at the same time, it says it all.

Okay, folks, we unequivocally and without compunction or reluctance must definitely re-canonize and rank Ronald Reagan as one of the worst presidents this country has ever elected. To include him with the likes of FDR is an insult as Reagan did everything he could to dismantle everything FDR did for Everyday Americans. Reagan’s presidency reconfigured the national consciousness and discourse to set in motion the current governing conventional wisdom called Neoliberalism, a.k.a. The War on Everyday Americans. He opened a two-pronged front within two weeks of each other in August 1981: 1. Firing the Eastern Airlines air traffic controllers as the opening salvo in his war against unions and working class people, and 2. Initiating the largest transfer of wealth upward to the ruling class with another one of his opening salvos against the middle class with the Economic Tax Recovery Act, effectively beginning the long crush of the middle class, selling it as “supply side exonomics” so Everyday Americans can root against their own interests and where “the wealthy” were renamed “job creators.” What Reagan accomplished was done through pure propaganda—no more.
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Yossarian,
Remember that the Houston Chronicle is published in Texas.
My guess is that the editorial board is writing to Republicans and independents who revere Reagan. Trump is no Reagan.
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Have you seen the recent Vote Vets Ads comparing the difference between Trump and Reagan?
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Yeah, I figured. Just….whenever I see Reagan’s name listed as one of the “greats” that holds a sacred distinguished spot in a line of revered presidents, I immediately recall past tax seasons as a child in the early 80s when my mom would break down and weep over getting screwed each season when we really depended upon a refund.
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Thanks for trying to set the record straight on Saint Unca Ronnie.
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I have wondered why newspapers wait until the end to declare their endorsements–especially in this case. They seem to think that there is something to be gained by the immediacy of weighing in at the last minute .
In the looming campaign, with the cowering, cowardly Republicans in Congress making false equivalents between Trump and Biden–and unwilling after years of cowardice to go against their despicable leader, it is unconscionable for our “free” press to hesitate and withhold the obvious choice.
Bravo for the Houston Chronicle for doing so in unequivocal terms. Let the truth be told!
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Go Biden.
This letter to the editor was in this morning’s Boulder Camera.
Stop whining about Biden’s age
I am SO tired of hearing people whining about President Biden’s age. Over the past three years, he has done more for the American people than any President since Lyndon Johnson! He got us through the COVID pandemic, supporting families in need to a level that reduced childhood poverty by nearly 50%. Because of his leadership, we now have a robust economy with the lowest unemployment rate in decades. He finally addressed climate change through the Inflation Reduction Act, a goal that has evaded all past administrations. He shepherded a “bipartisan” infrastructure bill to rebuild our roads, bridges and other critical infrastructure, watching many Republicans vote against it and then take credit for it. He is bringing back manufacturing from overseas, particularly manufacturing of high-tech chips, closing a significant vulnerability to America’s future. And he would take meaningful action on immigration if Congress would stop playing petty politics and do their job.
Yes, President Biden shuffles when he walks, but I’m not asking him to dance. Yes, he talks softly, but I’m not asking him to sing. I’m asking him to lead our country, and to date he’s done an incredible job of that. There is nothing that could result from Joe Biden’s age that would be worse than putting his incompetent opponent back in the White House for four more years.
Dennis Berry, Boulder
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The “Houston Chronicle” endorses Joe Biden because they understand sane leadership. The people of Houston have first hand knowledge of living under the rule of a vindictive, small-minded autocrat that imposes his irrational agenda on a diverse liberal leaning city. The editorial board knows that a second term of traitor Trump will involve retribution, bias and irrational decisions with the ultimate goal of weakening our standing in the world and our democratic rights at home. A second term of Trump would be worse than the first as Trump already has a roadmap on how to manipulate our system. He would surround himself with extremists that would work to eliminate any remaining guardrails that protect our fragile democracy.
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I wish the press would stop citing the Afghanistan withdrawal, because simply referring to it as a debacle fails to acknowledge that Trump closed 11 of 12 military air bases and allowed the release of thousands of Taliban from prison who made ups a significant proportion of those who took over. Biden was left to clean up the mess.
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Trump made a deal with the Taliban called the Doha Accords. It created the mess that Biden inherited:
“The Agreement for Bringing Peace to Afghanistan, commonly known as the United States–Taliban deal or the Doha Accord,[1] was a peace agreement signed by the United States and the Taliban on 29 February 2020 in Doha, Qatar, to bring an end to the 2001–2021 war in Afghanistan.[2][3] Negotiated by Zalmay Khalilzad, the agreement did not involve the then Afghan government.[4] The deal, which also had secret annexes, was one of the critical events that caused the collapse of the Afghan National Security Forces.[5] Adhering to the conditions of the deal, the US dramatically reduced the number of US air raids, leaving the ANSF without a key advantage in keeping the Taliban at bay. This resulted in ‘a sense of abandonment within the ANSF and the Afghan population’. ANSF was ill-prepared to sustain security following a US withdrawal, which allowed for the Taliban insurgency, ultimately leading to the Taliban takeover of Kabul on 15 August 2021.[6]”
Wikipedia
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Yes. The fourteen US soldiers killed outside of the airport were Trump’s fault.
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