“I actually don't necessarily think that he has to reach out to the people that didn't vote for him,” said CNN chief political correspondent Dana Bash in December 2016. “It would be nice if he did. It would be, you know, part of the tradition of presidents-elect and new presidents to do that. But he's not that person, and he's never going to be that person, and he's the guy who America elected.”
Bash was, of course, referring to Donald Trump, who was fresh off his upset victory in that year’s presidential election. Trump would take office with Republican majorities in both the House and Senate, just as President Barack Obama had with Democrats as he took office in 2009. Unlike with Obama, there was little expectation that Trump would try to work with Democrats to advance a legislative agenda. Bash’s December comment was emblematic of how the press would cover Trump for the years that followed.
Upon taking office, Trump would pursue two legislative goals: repealing the 2010 Affordable Care Act and enacting a comprehensive tax reform bill. In both instances, Trump and Republicans aimed to sidestep Democrats entirely by making minimal outreach efforts and utilizing the filibuster-proof budget reconciliation process for passage. His health care gambit failed as Republicans couldn’t muster a simple majority in the Senate, but in December 2017, he did sign a $1.5 tax bill into law without a single Democratic vote.
The press, for the most part, was fine with this approach. Democrats were typically framed as obstructionists whenever they countered Trump policies with their own, and Trump’s attempts to stop congressional Democrats from fulfilling their obligation to provide oversight of the executive branch was reported in a surprisingly matter-of-fact sort of way. When Trump was able to enact one of his agenda items, news organizations like the Associated Press tended to cover it in terms of being a “win” for Trump, as it did when reporting on the passage of Trump’s tax bill.
It shouldn’t surprise anyone that now that we have a Democratic president once again, the press has shifted its expectations in a few concerning ways.
Since Biden’s election, some mainstream media have amplified a line of argument pulled straight from the right wing: Biden ran on unity, so it’s up to him to try to bring the country together. Additionally, they’ve used the “unity” line to justify holding Biden to higher standards than Trump ever was. That’s why the unilateral policy implementations of the Trump era were given a pass while Biden has been hounded to get Republican support for his COVID-19 relief package rather than utilizing the reconciliation process.
During Biden White House press secretary Jen Psaki’s second official press briefing, she was asked by New York Times reporter Michael Shear why Biden hadn’t done more outreach. He said that “there has so far been almost no fig leaf even to the Republican Party” and noted that Biden doesn’t have any Republicans in his cabinet.
It’s true that Obama had Republicans in his cabinet. In fact, he nominated three Republicans, though one of them withdrew. And though Biden doesn’t have any Republicans in his cabinet, Trump didn’t have any Democrats in his.
And like Biden, Trump also made a pledge of unity, back in 2016. Specifically, Trump touched on that theme during his victory speech: