Biden's Final Flip-Flop
The president's decision to drop out after insisting he never would continued a pattern established by a long career of politically convenient reversals.

"The president has said it several times," Quentin Fulks, Biden's principal deputy campaign manager, told reporters last Thursday. "He's staying in this race….He is and will be the Democratic nominee."
Sunday morning on Face the Nation, campaign co-chair Cedric Richmond reiterated that Biden had no intention of dropping out. "I want to be crystal clear," Richmond said. "He's made a decision, and that decision is to accept the nomination and run for reelection, win reelection."
Hours later, Biden announced that he is not running for reelection after all. Although he had said it would require divine intervention to stop him from running, intervention by leading Democrats who argued that he could not hope to overcome voters' doubts about his cognitive condition proved sufficient.
That dramatic reversal continued a pattern established by Biden's long career in politics. Again and again, Biden has changed his mind about momentous matters, abandoning positions he had confidently and sometimes passionately defended without satisfactorily explaining the reasons for the turnaround. Often he has downplayed the extent of the shift or even pretended it never happened.
Reason's Matt Welch has aptly described Biden as a "rusty weather vane" who eventually "creak[s] in the direction of the prevailing political winds." But unlike a weather vane, Biden is a human being with the capacity for rational reflection and introspection—qualities he has rarely displayed when contradicting his prior opinions.
During his 2020 presidential campaign, Biden presented himself as a drug policy reformer. But for most of his 36 years as a Delaware senator, he was one of the most vociferous drug warriors in Congress, eager to show that Democrats could be even tougher than Republicans. He played a leading role in the top anti-drug hits of the 1980s and '90s, demanding punishment of the drug users he blamed for the black market created by prohibition, bragging about his efforts to subsidize prisons and put more cops on the street, and backing mandatory minimum sentences that sent drug offenders to prison for years or decades based on nothing more than the weight of the substances they possessed, sold, or helped distribute.
Biden's enthusiasm for punishment included a federal sentencing scheme that treated smoked cocaine as if it were 100 times worse than the snorted kind and prescribed a minimum five-year sentence for possessing as little as five grams of crack—less than the weight of two sugar packets. "If you have a piece of crack cocaine no bigger than this quarter that I am holding in my hand," he said in 1991, "you go to jail for five years. You get no probation. You get nothing other than five years in jail. The judge does not have a choice." Far from recognizing the insanity of that penalty, Biden complained that the Justice Department under Richard Thornburgh, George H.W. Bush's attorney general, was not pursuing it often enough.
Running for president in 2020, Biden implied that he had seen the error of his old punitive instincts. He went from insisting that the government "hold every drug user accountable" to promising that he would "decriminalize the use of cannabis and automatically expunge all prior cannabis use convictions" (neither of which actually happened). He went from pushing ever-harsher drug penalties to promising that he would "eliminate mandatory minimums" (which likewise did not happen). He also promised to "end, once and for all, the federal crack and powder cocaine disparity" (ditto).
Even if Biden had a problem with follow-through, these were all positive changes. But Biden—who as late as 2015 was still publicly proud of the incarceration-expanding Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act (or, as he preferred to call it, "the 1994 Biden Crime Bill")—never really explained his conversion, leaving the impression that he was simply responding to changes in public opinion, especially within the Democratic Party.
"I haven't always been right on criminal justice," Biden conceded in a 2019 speech. In particular, he said, the penal distinction between smoked and snorted cocaine, which had a glaringly disproportionate impact on black defendants that critics were noting by the late 1980s, "was a big mistake when it was made." Although "we thought we were told by the experts that crack…was somehow fundamentally different," he explained, "it's not different." That misconception, he added, "trapped an entire generation." Even while admitting error, Biden sought to blame bad advice from "the experts," or at least his own possibly mistaken impression of what they were saying.
Biden's views on gun control evolved in the opposite direction. In 1986, he supported the Firearm Owners' Protection Act, which was backed by the National Rifle Association. That law, which passed both houses of Congress by overwhelming margins, included several provisions that were welcomed by gun rights supporters, along with new firearm restrictions.
"I believe the compromises that are now a part of this bill have resulted in a balanced piece of legislation that protects the rights of private gun owners while not infringing on law enforcement's ability to deal with those who misuse guns or violate laws," Biden said in July 1985. "During my twelve and a half years as a member of this body, I have never believed that additional gun control or federal registration of guns would reduce crime. I am convinced that a criminal who wants a firearm can get one through illegal, nontraceable, unregistered sources, with or without gun control."
Nowadays, Biden is an enthusiastic advocate of "additional gun control," including "universal" background checks for gun buyers, a crackdown on homemade firearms, "red flag" laws, and a federal ban on so-called assault weapons. Biden favors that last policy even while conceding that such legislation leaves murderers with alternatives that are "just as deadly." In other words, the distinction he perceives between "assault weapons" and other guns is just as illusory as the distinction he once perceived between crack and cocaine powder.
In 2019, when asked about the contradiction between such positions and Biden's stance circa 1986, Biden campaign spokesman Bill Russo pretended there was nothing to reconcile. "Cherry-picking an out-of-context quote from 1986 doesn't even begin to address Joe Biden's unparalleled record on gun safety," Russo insisted.
Biden was similarly shifty in discussing his stance on the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq. When President George W. Bush reacted to Al Qaeda's 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon by targeting a country that had nothing to do with them, Biden did not just vote to authorize the use of military force against Iraq. He steadfastly defended the administration's strategy, warning his colleagues that "failure to overwhelmingly support" the resolution was "likely to enhance the prospects that war will occur."
Biden later claimed he never thought Bush actually would go to war, seeing the authorization as a way to pressure Saddam Hussein into cooperating with international arms inspectors. "Immediately, the moment it started, I came out against the war at that moment," he told NPR in 2019. But that was not true. Although he occasionally criticized Bush for acting too hastily and with insufficient international backing, Biden repeatedly voiced support for the war. He did not publicly acknowledge that his vote to authorize it was a mistake until November 2005, more than two years after the U.S. invasion.
On abortion, Biden in recent years has steadfastly defended Roe v. Wade, castigated the Supreme Court for overturning it, and supported federal legislation that would guarantee access to the procedure. At the same time, he has said he personally opposes abortion, consistent with his Catholic faith. And while he said it would be wrong to impose his religious beliefs on others, he has not always felt that way.
"I don't think that a woman has the sole right to say what should happen to her body," Biden said the year after Roe was decided, during his first term as a senator. "When it comes to issues like abortion, amnesty, and acid, I'm about as liberal as your grandmother. I don't like the Supreme Court decision on abortion. I think it went too far."
In 1977, Biden opposed legislation that would have allowed Medicaid coverage of abortions for pregnancies arising from rape or incest. Five years later, he supported a bill declaring that "the Constitution does not secure the right to an abortion." In 1994, he assured a constituent that he continued to oppose public subsidies for abortion. "I do not view abortion as a choice and a right," he told the Texas Monthly in 2006, during his last term as a senator. He added that abortion is "always a tragedy," that it "should be rare and safe," and that "we should be focusing on how to limit the number of abortions."
In a Meet the Press interview the following year, Biden said he supported a ban on late-term abortions, which Roe precluded in situations where an abortion was deemed "necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother." He said he had changed his mind on the merits of Roe, concluding that it is "the only means by which, in this heterogeneous society of ours, we can reach some general accommodation on what is a religiously charged and a publicly charged debate."
During a vice presidential debate in 2012, Biden agreed that "life begins at conception" but said he refused to impose that view on others. In June 2019, Biden abandoned his opposition to public funding of abortions, saying "circumstances have changed." He was referring to state abortion bans and the possibility that Roe would be overturned. But circumstances also had changed within the Democratic Party, making even mild objections to abortion politically untenable. The following year, Biden said he was "proud to stand" with abortion rights groups, vowing to "protect women's constitutional right to choose."
The death penalty is another area where you might expect Biden would be influenced by religiously inspired pro-life sentiments. Yet back in 1994, he touted his crime bill's dramatic expansion of the circumstances in which defendants could be executed. He proudly declared that "the liberal wing of the Democratic Party is now for 60 new death penalties."
According to Gallup, support for the death penalty among Democrats has fallen substantially since then, dipping below 40 percent by 2017. Biden's views changed accordingly. During his 2020 campaign, he promised to "eliminate the death penalty" because "we cannot ensure we get death penalty cases right every time." He said he would support "legislation to eliminate the death penalty at the federal level" and "incentivize states to follow the federal government's example." As with many of his criminal justice promises, nothing came of that. But Biden, who thought promising more executions made political sense in 1994, around the time that the violent crime rate began a steep decline, clearly recognized that "circumstances have changed."
Likewise with gay marriage, an issue on which public opinion also has changed dramatically during the last few decades. As a senator in 1996, Biden supported the Defense of Marriage Act, which said no state would be required to recognize same-sex unions recorded in another state. By 2012, when he was vice president, Biden had come around on the issue. "I am absolutely comfortable with the fact that men marrying men, women marrying women, and heterosexual men and women marrying another are entitled to the same exact rights, all the civil rights, all the civil liberties," he said on Meet the Press in May 2012. "And quite frankly, I don't see much of a distinction beyond that."
At that point, half of Americans agreed, but they did not yet clearly include President Barack Obama. Within days of Biden's comments, Obama finally took the plunge. This is one case where Biden was, if not exactly ahead of public opinion, more courageous than other leading Democrats.
On immigration, by contrast, Biden has gone back and forth. In the 1990s, he supported a crackdown on illegal immigration, including a border fence and expedited removals, that resembled tactics he later deplored. As of 2006, he was still advocating more border barriers, saying employers who hire unauthorized residents should go to prison, opposing driver's licenses for people who can't prove their citizenship, and condemning "sanctuary cities" that refuse to cooperate with immigration enforcement.
During his 2020 campaign, Biden promised a change from Donald Trump's immigration policies that would "restore our moral leadership." Among other things, he said he would "immediately end the horrific practice of separating families at our border," "terminate the travel ban against people from Muslim-majority countries," "raise our target for refugee admissions," and "reverse Trump's detrimental asylum policies." But as president, The Hill noted last month, Biden adopted "hard-line policies that borrow elements from those used by his predecessor."
Those policies included an executive order imposing broad, prohibitive restrictions on asylum applicants. "The policies announced today are near replicas of Trump-era asylum bans," the National Immigrant Justice Center complained. "Only now, they come from an administration that vowed to protect the right to seek protection and support immigrant communities." It is probably not coincidental that Biden's reversion to Trump-style policies coincided with a surge in public support for immigration restrictions.
Biden also took a zig-zag path on the issue of mask mandates during the COVID-19 pandemic. As president, he said in June 2020, "I would insist that everybody out in public be wearing that mask." Biden reiterated that promise at the Democratic National Convention two months later. "If I'm your president," he said, "on day one we'll have a national mask mandate." But he changed his mind the following month, conceding that "I cannot mandate people wearing masks."
In the end, Biden settled for an executive order requiring masks on federal property and in interstate travel, including airlines. The latter policy, which was implemented by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, provoked legal challenges that were ultimately rendered moot after the mandate was lifted.
A charitable view of Biden's reversals is that he changed his mind in light of new evidence. But that explanation is hard to buy in many of these cases, especially when his old and new positions hinged on matters of principle or when he tried to rewrite history by minimizing or denying the change in his views. Biden's shifts were always politically convenient, which made him reliably unreliable.
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Was this posted reluctantly or strategically?
He really wanted the Battle Box.
The outdoor gear subscription box company called "BattlBox" is getting a ton of mileage out of that particular moment.
Even smarter, they're keeping it apolitical by giving the same discount for coupon codes of three candidate names (including RFK).
I'm not paid by them, but I am a past customer (finally quit because I just didn't need any more gear and was running out of places to put it all), and for anyone looking at one of those kinds of subscription boxes (other brands include Steel to Reel, and CrateClub), they're a solid operation with attentive customer service and their boxes are a good value overall and I'd recommend them.
What you really mean is this is Biden's final flop.
That might be more true than we think……
https://x.com/LauraLoomer/status/1815464436582244580
BREAKING:
There is an FAA flight restriction that just went up in Wilmington, Delaware where
@JoeBiden
lives. The flight restriction is for “VIP” movement. This coincides with presidential movement.
Joe Biden’s health is declining rapidly, and as I reported today, he is now in the terminal stage of his illness. Today, Joe Biden’s Chief of Staff held an emergency meeting with all White House staff.
Someone needs to ask Pelosi whether Biden has really made his decision this time.
You know, I'm only paying attention to the news of the news of the news, but I'm listening to a podcast right now that's discussing how Biden has made no appearance on his resignation, this is only a letter, and yes, it's a little conspiracy-theorishy, but there are questions whether he even agreed to step down, or even knows he's stepped down.
Biden thought Putin was president of Ukraine (Zely isn’t because his term expired) and that Trump was VP. He may still think the Battle Box is on.
Uhh... this may not be a conspiracy theory after all. When Politico is confrused.
Things like this happen when the guy you think you're working for isn't really the guy calling the shots.
^THIS^
It has always been this.
In the Great War, when Italy formally entered its commanders began mobilizing to attack France (part of the triple entente) only to be instructed to instead proceed to move against Austro-Hungary (a central powers member).
He's not the only elderly presidential candidate who confuses peoples' names, as you may (or may not) know. But he will never top Trump's WTAF reference to "Revolutionary airports". I doubt even Trump can top that one (but, it's early).
Perhaps he suffered a sudden worsening of his condition and his handlers pounced on the opportunity to take a deal. We'll see if he resurfaces in the next few days, and if so, in what condition.
JFC!! You guys at Reason have been telling us for months now that Biden was on his last brain cell and now that he’s dropping out you run this attack article saying that he has different opinions on gay marriage now than he did in the 1970s. I would hope so!!
Fuck it! I hope he tells you fuckers that he’s back. April Fools asshole.
FOAD, asshole; your tears are going to be amusing.
Tears? For Joe Biden? Joe Biden was the best opponent Trump could have had in November. That's over now.
Kamala Harris is asking you to hold her beer.
If it was just a different opinion in the 1970s that would be one thing, but he held on to his 1970s opinion well into the 2010s
“he has different opinions on gay marriage now than he did in the 1970s. I would hope so!!”
You mean you can’t take what someone say fifty years ago and use it against them, either claiming it’s what they really meant or that they’re a liar for changing their mind depending on if you disagree or not?
You’re so not a Jesse. So uncool.
It's kind of like a card trick. Ask them to pick a card. If they pick the right card, then that's the card they picked. If not then that's the card they wanted to get rid of, leaving the right card in play. Head I win, tails you lose. Same general idea, but applied to rhetoric.
When did you ever admit you were wrong buddy? Instead you keep claiming those of us who were right are conspiracy theorists dumdum.
Your minds changed doesn't mean much when you continue to pretend you were always rights and others who were were wrong.
Youre too dumb to understand this though.
Here is a hint. Everyone you hate on this site is much smarter than you. That's why you keep finding yourself here. Then you brag about not reading links you were given proving you were wrong.
Maybe change your behaviors?
Why the divil would sarspasstic ever admit he was wrong? He's no liar. He's got integrIty with a Capital Eye.
Except his words and actions didn’t change until the mid 10’s…..
"Fuck it! I hope he tells you fuckers that he’s back. April Fools asshole."
Tears rolled down (Jeff/DOL/Mike/whoever this sock is) fat cheeks as he pounded this out.
Lol. Sounds like your adjustment is not well today, biden guy.
Try drinking more. Haha.
So much for 'the will of the voter'; the Democrat Party will tell the voters for whom to cast their ballots.
ROFLMAO.
A soft coup d’etat. Kind of how Gorbachev was ousted though without tanks in the streets of Washington.
Didn't Andropov have a cold first too?
Yes, ‘a cold’.
I like how you go the entire article pretending it was his decision.
Long TDS.
That's how normal people write articles. They don't start with the premise that the conspiracy theory is true.
I know, I know....the only holdup was fixing the terms of payment for Crooked Joe...did he want 8 figures or 9 figures to leave.
I am going with 9 figures.
Sometimes it’s a good thing when people change their minds.
Keep making excuses for constantly being wrong.
Indeed. However, in order to change your mind, you need to actually have an opinion in the first place. It sounds like Biden, like most politicians, had a habit of just sticking his finger in the air to see which way the wind was blowing.
I wonder who cut the deal with Jill to get her to fuck off, and what they offered her.
-jcr
The offer may have involved a commitment to retain diaper changers so she won’t have to do that doody.
It is a shitty job, changing diapers.
She told them to cut the crap and get to the point.
Biden is a human being with the capacity for rational reflection and introspection
Not once in his life has he shown himself to be anything other than a craven, amoral grifter. Human being, sure. But none of those other three words: rational, reflective and introspective, could ever be said of Biden with a straight face and honest intent.
My comment on that was going to be, "Assumes facts not in evidence."
Goddamn shrinkflation! I paid for a full campaign!
OK, you win. Now make it into a meme and get it on Not-The-Bee.
Yup. That was a good one!
So it was all lies.
Who knew and when did they know?
Oh sure, pile on when he's on the way out.
How about listing his greatest accomplishments for human liberty?
How about a retrospective analysis on how Reason's reluctant but strategic support for Biden in the 2020 election paid off?
Ok, I can answer your first question...How about listing his greatest accomplishments for human liberty? I have listed them below.
Now, that second question....
That would be a very revealing article.
Wait, what?
The article finally gets to covid flip flops at the end and the mandate focused on is……….. masks? Wow.
Didn’t sleepy joe say shortly after inauguration that he did not support a vax mandate? (If not, I withdraw my criticism, but I think he did.) Was it considered inconsequential because it didn’t happen? Still seems like a major flip flop. For a while a lotta people didn’t know if they were gonna have jobs after 1/4/22.
I hope he keeps his commitment to the boosters and keeps getting jabbed.
Likewise with gay marriage,
…
more courageous than other leading Democrats.
Courageous enough to march in nationwide marches, to pick it up as a political weapon, force public servants to serve in support outside their designated roles, to oust CEOs for their dissent, and to join federal district courts in striking down duly-passed State legislation based on popular referendum?
So brave.
That’s some real “The US has always been at war with gays, women, and Eastasia.” bullshit.
Resigned WITH Covid
Joe Biden flip flopped a lot during his long career is really the Reason headline story here?
There is some value in getting those deck chairs properly aligned before it's too late, I suppose...
Questions and observations:
1. White House Staffers and Biden's campaign found out after the post on Twitter. One would think they'd be the first to know.
2. The letter is not on any official White House letterhead. The signature for Biden lacks the "Jr" he usually uses, and there's no seal.
3. Apparently the letter was written by a third party. Why? I know Joe's basically a vegetable, but one would think he might have had some kind of say in it.
4. No one has seen Joe Biden since Saturday. Is the man even alive?
5. If Joe Biden passed away over the weekend, are the Democrats going to try for a Weekend at Bernie's until January 20, 2025? Or are they waiting to announce it later, more like in Dave?
6. If Biden cannot run for another term, then why does anyone think he can make it to January 20, 2025? Why not use 25A?
""Why not use 25A?""
They don't what the first female president of color to have a 25 amendment asterisk next to their name. Especially when they are not polling well for the election.
Biden has been a mean, backstabber with no political core or morality for 50yrs. He is one of the least liked politicians in DC. This is no secret. That his final act was to force everyone to vote for him to get the nomination then drop out when the polls show him sinking is just the latest chapter in serving no one but himself. Now instead of losing in November he can bask in the accolades and pardon Hunter and his brother.
He did lead the Dems to abandon "My Body, My Choice".
I'm not sure that Biden actually decided to bow out of the race versus the decision being made for him by the Democracy-less Democrat party by the authoritarian ruling elites.
Somewhere I read that "We need proof of life" (could be difficult for Biden regardless). However, it does seem odd. Knowing what the DNC did to Bernie and to RFK Jr it seems like dirty tricks.
But circumstances also had changed within the Democratic Party, making even mild objections to abortion politically untenable. The following year, Biden said he was "proud to stand" with abortion rights groups, vowing to "protect women's constitutional right to choose."
Let us not pretend that FJB believes in "My Body, My Choice".
https://archive.md/3UaxV
What a cheap take. Going after flip-flops is fair game. But the whole final flip flop is just stupid. Every old person must do a final flip flop. That's how aging works. You are good to go until you can't. Why politicize that? I am glad he came around to that decisions. Will Trump be capable of stepping down when he needs to?
He likely won’t. Your attempt at deflection is very weak. This is unsurprising.
Now c'mon -- calling this an unprincipled flip-flop is a cheap shot.
"Although he had said it would require divine intervention to stop him from running,"
And then he got COVID and, unlike Pharaoh, got the message with the First Plague. (Or maybe Crowdstrike was the second.)
Do we have proof of life yet? Let's see on non standard stationary, PDF, and no press conference. Yeah doesn't seem like a coup at all
Think he even remembered,bers that he withdrew from the race?
You say true things but maybe miss the basics. This is the man who has been in DC for 50 years !!! He is not showing any new behavior at all. I first got intereted when my Delaware manager told me his friends and neighbors thought Joe had his first wife killed !! Now, I don't think he did, but what kind of person must he be that many could think that!!
So his character is not good.
And he is not smart by any count. Bottom 10 of his Syracuse law class and yet President !!!
NO, basically people are lazy and don't see what was there for half a century. One thing about Joe: HE HAS ALWAYS BEEN THAT WAY