Presidential addresses before joint sessions of Congress tend to have two parts: incumbent chief executives boast about what they’ve done, while presenting a vision of what they want to do next. As President Joe Biden made clear last night, he had plenty to say on both fronts, though it was the Democrat’s broader message of the future that proved especially significant.
Before assessing the forest, consider the trees. Plenty of observers characterized Biden’s remarks as a “laundry list” of progressive priorities, and it’s easy to understand why: the president’s policy to-do list isn’t short, and he implored Congress to follow his lead on a wide range of issues. From climate to health care, voting rights to immigration, child care to gun violence, education to tax policy, elder care to criminal justice issues, Biden intends to overhaul the public sector’s role in American public life.
The president presented these ideas, not as a bold transformation, but as common-sense measures that are obviously necessary to make a material difference in American families’ lives. Such rhetoric appears to infuriate Republicans, though there’s evidence that voters think Biden’s right.
But last night’s address, with varying degrees of subtlety, included a principled, overarching concern that took on a greater significance than any one policy priority: Biden doesn’t just want to champion the needs of the middle class, he also feels the need to champion democracy itself.
After four years of an American president whose overt hostility toward democracy tested the nation’s foundations, and against a backdrop in which authoritarian powers seek to undermine the appeal of self-governance around the globe, Biden repeatedly used his address to defend our system of government — and urging members of Congress to help him prove democracy’s merits.
Plenty of politicians talk about “getting tough” with China, but the president last night framed the international competition in a unique way:
“When [Chinese President Xi Jinping] called congratulate, we had a two-hour discussion. He’s deadly earnest on becoming the most significant, consequential nation in the world. He and others, autocrats, think that democracy can’t compete in the 21st century with autocracies, because it takes too long to get consensus.”
To that end, Biden spent a surprising amount of his speech championing democracy — a word he used 17 times over the course of his address — because he clearly sees the system of government as facing unique threats, both abroad and in the United States.
Describing the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, for example, the president described the riot as “desecrating our democracy,” before adding, “The insurrection was an existential crisis, a test of whether our democracy could survive.”









