As the United Auto Workers’ strike comes to a successful end, The New York Times noted that the developments “could also prove to be a significant political victory” for President Joe Biden, who made no effort to hide his support for striking workers.
The article quoted Steve Smith, an AFL-CIO spokesperson, who said, “The impact of Biden’s public support can’t be overstated.” He added that there’s “a lot of upside here” for the Democratic incumbent.
A variety of observers have drawn similar conclusions. David Axelrod, a veteran of Barack Obama’s White House, noted that Biden “took a gamble when he joined striking UAW workers in Detroit, a historical departure from traditional presidential practice. The risk was that the strike would drag on, jeopardizing the economy, and the workers would end up on the short end. But they won — and so did he.”
I can appreciate why some might be skeptical of this. After all, the president wasn’t directly involved in the talks themselves — there were no White House representatives at the negotiating table — so it’s not as if Biden can claim too much credit for the outcome.
But as The New Republic’s Michael Tomasky explained well, the president helped create the political conditions that made the final deal possible.








