Is common ground still possible? Biden determined to try with Senate.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (left) and then Vice President Joe Biden walk through Statuary Hall for a joint session of Congress to count the Electoral College votes for President Donald Trump in Washington, Jan. 6, 2017.
Zach Gibson/AP/File
It鈥檚 one of President-elect Joe Biden鈥檚 favorite anecdotes about his formative years in the Senate.
Not long into his 36-year career there, the young Senator Biden was greatly disturbed to hear conservative GOP Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina excoriate Sen. Bob Dole鈥檚 Americans with Disabilities Act.聽
鈥淚 can鈥檛 believe anyone could be so heartless, and care so little about people with disabilities,鈥 Senator Biden told Democratic majority leader Mike Mansfield at the time. 鈥淚t makes me angry.鈥
Why We Wrote This
After a mob stormed the Capitol, how does the U.S. heal? That鈥檚 a question the country and its incoming president are wrestling with. For Joe Biden, politics has always been personal 鈥 and therein may lie part of his answer.
Senator Mansfield replied with a story. Several years before, Senator Helms and his wife had seen an item in the local paper about a young man 鈥渋n braces who was handicapped at an orphanage,鈥 as Senator Mansfield put it. All the boy wanted for Christmas was to be part of a family. So the Helmses adopted him.
鈥淛oe, never question another man鈥檚 motive,鈥 Senator Mansfield cautioned. 鈥淨uestion his judgment, but never his motive.鈥
This lesson, described in Mr. Biden鈥檚 in 2009, frames his approach to politics. Over the course of his career, he became friends with some of the most unlikely senators, including segregationists Strom Thurmond and John Stennis 鈥 people with whom he deeply disagreed on many points, but with whom he could also find common ground. He eulogized both Senators Thurmond and Helms, who was known as 鈥淪enator No,鈥 at their funerals.
And that鈥檚 just it. Many of the friendships that Mr. Biden forged in the Senate were with people who have since retired or died. The same is true of the Senate he knew 鈥 one built on personal relationships and trust, even if glaringly deficient in other ways, such as gender and racial diversity. Those hallowed halls were invaded聽Jan. 6 in a shocking, violent attempt by President Donald Trump鈥檚 supporters to stop Congress from counting certified Electoral College votes confirming Mr. Biden as the winner of the presidential election. Five people were killed in what Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell described as a 鈥渇ailed insurrection鈥 by a mob that was 鈥渇ed lies鈥 and 鈥減rovoked by the president and other powerful people.鈥
Now President-elect Biden is trying to pick up the pieces and glue the country 鈥 and Washington 鈥 back together. He faces a daunting task in a divided Congress that Democrats only narrowly control, and where a significant number of House and Senate Republicans voted to object to the election results. Complicating matters is a historic post-presidential impeachment trial of Mr. Trump for 鈥渋ncitement of insurrection.鈥 Characteristically, Mr. Biden plans to start his presidency with outreach 鈥 inviting all four Democratic and Republican congressional leaders to a church service with him on the morning of his Jan. 20 inauguration.
鈥淏iden is counting on his relationships in the Senate to help him move his legislative agenda,鈥 says Jim Manley, former spokesman for then-Democratic Majority Leader Harry Reid. 鈥淥ne of the problems, of course, is that the good old days are long gone.鈥 Only 31 senators remain who served with Mr. Biden. While personal relationships still count for something in the Senate, he says, 鈥淚鈥檓 afraid that given how partisan things have become, it doesn鈥檛 mean as much as it used to.鈥
Mr. Manley says that after watching 139 GOP House members and eight senators 鈥渧ote to steal鈥 the election hours after rioters stormed the Capitol, he has a hard time believing things will change anytime soon. He describes 鈥渁 poison鈥 coursing through the Republican Party that may take years to eliminate and which will make it very tough for Mr. Biden to move legislation, such as his proposed $1.9 trillion stimulus plan to fight the pandemic.
Personal relationships may 鈥渕itigate conflict a bit,鈥 says Ross Baker, an expert on the Senate at Rutgers University. 鈥淏ut are they game changers? Probably not.鈥
Yet others are more hopeful 鈥 including, apparently, Mr. Biden and the record 81 million voters who supported him. His history of reaching across the aisle, of befriending polar opposites, of spending hours sitting with someone like Senator Helms and going over the Chemical Weapons Treaty word by word, is real, according to allies.
鈥淭his is the way he鈥檚 conducted himself. He鈥檚 not coming up with some newfound toy,鈥 says Bobby Juliano, a longtime friend of Mr. Biden鈥檚 who is now an independent consultant with strong ties to organized labor. The lesson of congressional politics, he says, is less about making permanent friends than being sure not to make permanent enemies.
鈥淧eople may disagree with Joe on one or two or even 10 issues, but nobody finds him disagreeable,鈥 noted Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, in a Senate tribute to him in December 2016. She recalled the time she brought her younger brother to a White House holiday party. They ran into the vice president just as he was leaving. But instead of heading home after a long day, he gave them a 45-minute private tour of the West Wing. 鈥淚 still remember the shocked look on the face of the Marine at the situation room when we arrived there.鈥
One of the most important Biden relationships on the Hill will be with Democratic Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware 鈥 his 鈥渆yes and ears鈥 with both parties, as Mr. Juliano puts it. The two are close, and Senator Coons now holds Biden鈥檚 seat, serving on the Judiciary and Foreign Affairs committees, the same ones his mentor once chaired.
In Biden fashion, Senator Coons makes a point of getting to know Republicans, and is viewed as Mr. Biden鈥檚 emissary to GOP senators. In an interview last month, he told the Monitor that media commentators are underestimating the hunger for civility and normalcy in the Senate 鈥 not to mention the country.
After the storming of the Capitol, Senator Coons called for GOP Sens. Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley to resign for leading the charge to overturn the election. In a statement, he said that he believes in reconciliation, citing the example of the late civil rights icon John Lewis. But 鈥渢rue reconciliation only comes after repentance. I鈥檓 looking to see whether my colleagues reflect on the violence of January 6th and take any responsibility that can lay the groundwork for reconciliation.鈥
He also said that reporters are mistaken in believing that Mr. Biden鈥檚 relationships in the Senate ended when he left. He points to his friend鈥檚 eight years as vice president working with members of Congress, plus all the campaigning he has done with Democratic Senate candidates over the years 鈥 driving to events, working rope lines with them, flying to the next stop. 鈥淭hat means he鈥檚 got real relationships,鈥 he said last month.
A key one will be with Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, who will become the majority leader of a 50-50 Senate where former Sen. Kamala Harris 鈥 as vice president 鈥 will be the tie breaker.
Senator Schumer, who is in discussion with Senator McConnell about a potential power-sharing agreement, is 鈥渃ut from the same cloth鈥 as Mr. Biden, says Matt House, a former Schumer spokesman. They are both 鈥減ragmatists and progressives鈥 and have a 鈥渧ery good鈥 relationship, says Mr. House, in an interview last fall. Their legislative careers overlapped, and when the New Yorker was a freshman senator, he discovered he was claiming an issue 鈥 college affordability 鈥 that Senator Biden had already staked out as his own. In no uncertain terms, Senator Biden鈥檚 office told Senator Schumer to back off, until one day on the Senate floor, the senior lawmaker placed his arm on his junior colleague鈥檚 shoulder and said, 鈥淕o ahead, take the issue. I know what it鈥檚 like for new senators to carve their own path.鈥
Still, as Senator Coons reminds, 鈥淲hether he鈥檚 the majority leader or the minority leader, you can鈥檛 move anything through this body without Mitch McConnell.鈥 The relationship between Mr. Biden and Senator McConnell 鈥渉as been strained by what happened during the Obama administration,鈥 when the Kentucky Republican took up his position as chief Obama blocker, including denying even a hearing for Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland 鈥 now Mr. Biden鈥檚 nominee for attorney general.
Still, Mr. Biden and Senator McConnell were able to work through the very serious fiscal crises during the Obama administration.
鈥淥bviously, I don鈥檛 always agree with him, but I do trust him implicitly,鈥 the Kentuckian said during his 2016 tribute to the vice president. 鈥淗e doesn鈥檛 break his word. He doesn鈥檛 waste time telling me why I am wrong. He gets down to brass tacks, and he keeps in sight the stakes. There is a reason 鈥楪et Joe on the phone鈥 is shorthand for 鈥楾ime to get serious鈥 in my office.鈥
Indeed, in the Obama White House, Mr. Biden was known as 鈥渢he McConnell Whisperer.鈥
鈥淭rust begets trust,鈥 says Patrick Griffin, former congressional liaison for President Bill Clinton. If the White House 鈥 be it the president, a Vice President Kamala Harris, or any other key figure 鈥 can talk with congressional leadership off the record and in confidence, parameters of a deal can be set and embarrassments can be avoided, he says. 鈥淵ou can be candid about what you can and can鈥檛 do.鈥澛
President Clinton, being an outsider, had a couple of buddies on the Hill, says Mr. Griffin, but 鈥渘obody who would die on the cross for him.鈥 President Obama 鈥 still a freshman senator when he was elected to the highest office in the land 鈥 went on golf outings with former House Speaker John Boehner, the Republican from Ohio. But 鈥渉e was doing this more as a grim exercise, rather than a real effort to have recreational time with a congressional leader,鈥 notes Professor Baker at Rutgers.
President Trump may have phoned plenty of lawmakers, but these were transactional relationships, often based on fear. The 鈥済old standard,鈥 says Professor Baker, was Democratic President Lyndon Johnson. As former Senate majority leader, he interacted daily with the Republican minority leader, Everett Dirksen. As president, he phoned Senator Dirksen multiple times a day, and the two often ended their days together over bourbon 鈥 either at the White House or in Senator Dirksen鈥檚 office. President Johnson could not have passed civil rights legislation without Senator Dirksen鈥檚 help.
But Senator McConnell is not going to be influenced by cocktails at the White House, says a former Republican leadership aide. For him, 鈥淚t鈥檚 about the policy. It鈥檚 not the personality.鈥 If Mr. Biden wants to work in the middle, Senator McConnell will work there, too, the former aide says.
He points to a major transportation bill that Senator McConnell negotiated with former Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer in 2015 鈥 one of the more productive years in recent Senate history, when Senator McConnell became majority leader at a time of divided government. 鈥淭he two couldn鈥檛 be more different, but they had a common interest in getting a deal done, and neither one could say their party won.鈥 He added: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think those two ever spent five minutes together in a room before that deal.鈥
The former GOP aide suggests the new president鈥檚 relationship with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi will be the one to watch, because of the historically narrow margin she has with her caucus. Indeed, Mr. Biden will have to keep an eye on his left flank, which is going to require a delicate balancing act, says Mr. Juliano.
鈥淭he Bernie Sanders crowd and the 鈥榤od squad鈥 will be pushing for the sun, the moon, and the stars, and the Republicans will be pushing him for nothing, nothing, nothing,鈥 he says.
Mr. Juliano believes Mr. Biden can restore Washington to a more civil, cooperative period, something that Mr. Biden appears to believe in his core. He talked about just such transformation in that same Senate exit speech, when he related an unexpected encounter with retiring Mississippi Sen. John Stennis, whose office Senator Biden was going to take over.
Senator Biden had entered his future office to check it out. Unknown to anyone, the retiring senator was there in his wheelchair. Despite their stark differences over segregation, the two men had become friends, deepened by a time when they had shared a hospital suite at Walter Reed.
Talking to his younger colleague, Senator Stennis touched an enormous mahogany table which he used as his desk, telling him it was 鈥渢he flagship of the Confederacy,鈥 where the Southern segregationist senators had gathered every Tuesday in the 1950s and 1960s 鈥渢o plan the demise of the civil rights movement.鈥 He said it was time for the table to pass from a man who was against civil rights to one who was for them.
As Senator Biden left to go, Senator Stennis said that the civil rights movement did more to free the white man than the Black man. 鈥淗ow鈥檚 that?鈥 Senator Biden asked. 鈥淚t freed my soul; it freed my soul,鈥 Senator Stennis answered.
鈥淚 can tell you that by his own account, John Stennis was personally enlarged by his service in the Senate. That鈥檚 the power of this institution,鈥 Mr. Biden told his fellow senators. 鈥淚t opens a door for change. I think it opens a door for personal growth, and in that comes the political progress this nation has made.鈥