(Washington, DC) — President Biden thinks Russia will likely invade Ukraine. During a roughly two-hour, unfocused, low energy White House news conference, the second of his year in office, Biden again warned Moscow about severe economic consequences if there is an invasion, but pundits feel it was not a strong message to Putin not to invade. Biden defended his historically bad poll numbers –and answered questions about his strong shift to the left and did not affirm that the upcoming election results will be legitimate, on the eve of his first anniversary as President. He said it has been a year of challenges and great progress. Biden cited steady economic gains and expressed confidence that the Federal Reserve will get a handle on rising inflation in coming months. He also noted that Vice President Harris will be on the ticket if he decides to seek re-election, which he is expected to do.
(Washington, DC) — President Biden is blaming a communication problem when it comes to federal voting bills. While at the White House, Biden was pressed about some of his loyal Black voters thinking his last-minute voting rights push was a publicity stunt. Biden denied the claim, and admitted he didn’t communicate his goals as well as he should. He then went on to blame Republicans for being obstructionists- rather than acknowledging his proposals are wildly unpopular with the American people. Biden added he believes –without evidence and despite polling to the contrary–the country is more united than when he took office.
(Washington, DC) — President Biden says he’s concerned the situation in Ukraine could get out of hand. During a press conference at the White House, Biden said he hopes that Russian President Putin understands he’s short of a “full blown nuclear war.” He said tepidly, the United States will need to be very careful about how it moves forward, making it clear that there would be prices to pay that would cost Russia immensely if decided to invade Ukraine.
President Biden Asked About Government Competence At Briefing
(Washington, DC) — President Biden is being pressed hard about the government’s competence. During a press conference at the White House, a reporter questioned Biden on the messy 5G rollout, Afghanistan withdrawal, and Covid surge. The President said unapologetically there was no way to get out of Afghanistan easily after 20 years, although he feels “badly” about it. He feels “badly” about it. He also mentioned he’s pushed as hard as possible for private 5G enterprises to abide by what airlines were asking for, but that at the end of the day, it was two private enterprises — airlines and cell carriers.