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As communities across the Southeast reel from Hurricane Helene, America faces an unsettling question: Who, exactly, is in charge at the White House?
At least 100 people are confirmed dead across the Southeast, a number likely to rise as some 600 remain missing.
Some 2 million homes and businesses still had no power as of Monday.
Florida was able to give evacuation notices in advance, but towns in Appalachia were completely blindsided by flooding and landslides that decimated whole communities and washed out roads, leaving residents stranded and cut off from emergency crews.
Who’s making the decisions back in Washington? Who can Americans look to for leadership after a record-breaking natural disaster?
Certainly not President Biden: He gave lethargic, scripted remarks Monday, during which (again!) he claimed to “have a cold,” and then snapped at a reporter who asked why he was holed up in his vacation home in Delaware and not in Washington during the worst of the storm.
“It’s called a telephone,” Biden barked.
And of course his mental decline plainly continues, even if he’s rarely ever in the public eye.
Last Wednesday, he welcomed world leaders “to Washington” while in Midtown Manhattan; Thursday, he called Kamala Harris his “boss” and GOP veep candidate Sen. JD Vance “Secretary Vance of Ohio.”
Asked Sunday about Israel’s “strikes in Yemen,” he told reporters that he’s a strong supporter of “the collective bargaining effort” to avert a longshoreman’s strike of East Coast ports.
Biden is not all there, so who is calling the shots?
Full op-ed over at The New York Post:
Hurricane Helene prompts the question: Who’s running the White House? https://t.co/qAsRdVrTUc pic.twitter.com/gpDcPUIsVa
— NY Post Opinion (@NYPostOpinion) September 30, 2024