Biden says he has “no apologies” about Putin comments : NPR

0



President Biden takes questions from the media alongside Shalanda Young, director of the Office of Management and Budget, after he introduces his budget request for fiscal year 2023.

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images


President Biden takes questions from the media alongside Shalanda Young, director of the Office of Management and Budget, after he introduces his budget request for fiscal year 2023.

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

President Biden is defending controversial remarks he made over the weekend in which he appeared to call for regime change in Russia — off-script comments that were quickly walked back by his administration.

“I am not walking anything back,” he told reporters at the White House Monday, after speaking about the release of his budget proposal. “I was expressing the moral outrage that I feel, and I make no apologies for it.”

On Saturday, Biden capped a trip to Europe, where he met with fellow NATO leaders and delivered a forceful address in Poland about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the unity of Western democracies.

But headlines from the speech focused on an ad-libbed closing line about Russian President Vladimir Putin: “For God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power.”

His administration quickly downplayed the remark, telling reporters that the president’s comments did not signal a policy change.

Biden’s “point,” a White House official stressed to NPR, “was that Putin cannot be allowed to exercise power over his neighbors or the region. He was not discussing Putin’s power in Russia, or regime change.”

Biden said Monday: “I just was expressing my outrage. He shouldn’t remain in power — just like, you know, bad people shouldn’t continue to do bad things.”

Political fallout for Biden

The closing line was chalked up to another gaffe by a politician prone to them, an ad-libbed moment, but one with the potential to cause consternation with Western powers. The speech was about NATO unity and NATO leaders had been speaking from the same script — until Biden’s remark.

The comment came as recent polls have found most U.S. voters doubting Biden’s ability to handle the Ukraine crisis.

“It was a mistake, clearly,” former Democratic Montana Sen. Max Baucus, a onetime U.S. ambassador to China, said on Fox News over the weekend. “He may think that personally — I think a lot of Americans think that personally — but he is the president of the United States, so he cannot say that publicly.

“The more the United States says things like that publicly,” Baucus added, “the more it closes our potential negotiations between all the parties who are involved here, the more it corners Putin, the more Putin might get more dangerous.”

Other Democratic strategists, however, say the criticism is overwrought. After all, majorities have also been telling pollsters that Biden needs to be stronger.

“Politically, I actually think the president is where most of the American people are,” said Joel Payne, a Democratic strategist and veteran of the Hillary Clinton 2016 presidential campaign. “And I think in a moment where the president is struggling to kind of stay above water or get above water with his popularity, I think the president may be saying something off the cuff that’s going to register well with most of the country.”

But Payne cautioned that Biden has to be careful not to cut into his appeal of competence — an attribute that took a big hit with the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan last year.

And he echoed Baucus in noting that Biden’s comment put him in a diplomatic box.

“Politically, it short term may help the president,” Payne said, “but I think long term, I think it complicates how the administration has to approach the crisis.”

Paul Begala, a veteran Democratic strategist and former senior adviser in the Clinton White House, cheered Biden’s off-the-cuff remark.

He called Biden’s Warsaw speech “historic” and believes it “will rank right up there” with other iconic Cold War moments from presidential addresses, like when John F. Kennedy in 1963 gave his Ich bin ein Berliner speech in West Berlin, and Ronald Reagan’s call to Mikhail Gorbachev to “tear down this wall” between West and East Germany in 1987.

“As for so-called gaffes,”…



Read More:Biden says he has “no apologies” about Putin comments : NPR

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Get more stuff like this
in your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.