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Home Business By the numbers: The first year of Biden’s presidency

By the numbers: The first year of Biden’s presidency

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JANUARY 20, 2022

President Biden’s first year was a busy and difficult one, in which he faced a continuing global pandemic, rising inflation, the end of the country’s longest war in Afghanistan, the passage of historic infrastructure legislation and the stalling of his broader social and voting agenda, among many other challenges.

Another way to look at the highs and lows of 2021 is by the numbers — here are some key figures from Mr. Biden’s first year as president.

6.4 million jobs added

In 2021, Mr. Biden’s first year in office, the economy added a record 6.4 million jobs — an average of 537,000 jobs a month. Former President Trump saw 2.1 million jobs added during 2017, his first year in office, with an average of 182,000 jobs per month. This was slightly lower than the two prior years, 2015 and 2016. Former President Obama took office during the most dire economic crisis since the Depression. The economy lost 5 million jobs in 2009, averaging 416,000 jobs a month as the Great Recession, which began in 2008, continued.

3.9% unemployment rate

When Mr. Biden took office in January 2021, the unemployment rate was 6.3%. By December, it had fallen to 3.9%. Under Trump, the unemployment rate fell from 4.7% in January 2017 to 4.1% by December of that year. The unemployment rate was 7.8% in January 2009, when former President Obama took office, as the Great Recession took hold. It was 9.9% in December of that year, a tick down from 10% during the fall, at the peak of the economic downturn.

7% inflation

Under Mr. Biden, consumer prices rose 7% across 2021, which was the fastest rate of inflation in 40 years, amid supply chain disruptions due to the pandemic and high demand. Consumer prices rose 2.1% in 2017 across Trump’s first year in office. Obama saw consumer prices increase 2.7% by the end of 2009.

27 states visited

Mr. Biden visited 27 states for presidential stops his first year in office, with Pennsylvania being the most-frequented state, after his home in Delaware.

Trips to nine of these states were aimed at responding to natural disasters like hurricanes, wildfires and winter storms, or other tragedies like his trip to Florida to tour the Surfside apartment collapse.

For the states the president did not travel to in his first year, First Lady Jill Biden has filled the gap, making trips to 12 states, many of them conservative.

  1. California
  2. Colorado
  3. Connecticut
  4. Delaware
  5. Florida
  6. Georgia
  7. Idaho
  8. Illinois
  9. Kentucky
  10. Louisiana
  11. Maryland
  12. Massachusetts
  13. Michigan
  14. Minnesota
  15. Missouri
  16. Nevada
  17. New Hampshire
  18. New Jersey
  19. New York
  20. North Carolina
  21. Ohio
  22. Oklahoma
  23. Pennsylvania
  24. South Carolina
  25. Texas
  26. Virginia
  27. Wisconsin

5 countries visited

  1. United Kingdom
  2. Belgium
  3. Switzerland
  4. Vatican City
  5. Italy

26 weekends and long holidays at home in Delaware

The president spent all or part of 26 weekends — half the weekends in the year — at one of his homes in Rehoboth Beach or Wilmington, Delaware, where some of his extended family lives and where his late first wife, son and daughter are buried.

National debt

$27.8 trillion — National debt when Mr. Biden took office

$29.8 trillion — National debt after one year in office

COVID deaths in the U.S. (according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) 

2021: 451,475

2020: 385,453

COVID vaccination rate

Early in his administration, Mr. Biden aimed to get 70% of adult Americans at least one COVID shot by July 4. The nation was a little behind but finally reached that milestone about a month later, on August 2. Since he announced that goal, children as young as 5 years of age may now be vaccinated. Now, as of January 19, over 209.5 million Americans are fully vaccinated, and nearly 82 million have received a booster, according to the CDC. Nearly 74% of those 18 or older are fully vaccinated.

20 formal interviews 

Mr. Biden has given 20 formal interviews with journalists, according to CBS News’ count. Former President Barack Obama, for contrast, gave a whopping 158 interviews his first year in office, according to CBS News’ count.

Here is the list of formal interviews Mr. Biden has given as president:

  • 2/3/21 People Magazine (with Jill Biden)
  • 2/3/21 Westwood One’s Jim Gray (with Jill Biden)
  • 2/5/21 CBS Norah O’Donnell Super Bowl interview
  • 2/7/21 Westwood One Sports Super Bowl interview
  • 2/17/21 CNN Town Hall with Anderson Cooper
  • 2/26/21 Univision’s Ilia Calderon
  • 3/16/21 ABC George Stephanopoulos
  • 3/31/21 ESPN’s Sage Steele
  • 4/30/21 NBC News’ Craig Melvin
  • 5/12/21 MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell
  • 5/20/21 New York Times’ David Brooks
  • 5/25/21 The Atlantic’s Edward-Isaac Dovere
  • 7/22/21 CNN Town Hall with Don Lemon
  • 8/18/21 ABC George Stephanopoulos
  • 10/22/21 CNN Town Hall with Anderson Cooper
  • 11/8/21 Cincinnati Local 12
  • 12/10/21 NBC Jimmy Fallon (virtual)
  • 12/12/21 CBS Sunday Morning Rita Braver (Jill Biden feature)
  • 12/14/21 WHIO TV in Dayton, Ohio
  • 12/14/21 CBS News19 in Columbia, South Carolina
  • 12/22/21 ABC News’ David Muir

10 news conferences

President Biden has held 10 press conferences, and the most recent one, on the eve of the first anniversary of his inauguration, lasted nearly two hours. For comparison, former President Trump held 21 press conferences his first year in office, and former President Obama had 42 news conferences his first year. Mr. Biden’s White House points out that the president has engaged in scores of regular informal interactions with the press.

  1. March 25, 2021 — Biden solo in East Room
  2. April 16, 2021 — Biden and Japan’s Prime Minister Suga at the White House
  3. May 21, 2021 – Biden and South Korean President Moon Jae-in, East Room
  4. June 13, 2021 – Biden solo in the U.K.
  5. June 14, 2021 – Biden solo in Belgium (at NATO)
  6. June 16, 2021 – Biden solo in Switzerland
  7. July 15, 2021 – Biden and former German Chancellor Angela Merkel, East Room
  8. October 31, 2021 — Biden solo in Italy
  9. November 2, 2021 — Biden solo in Scotland
  10. January 19, 2022 — Biden at the White House

77 executive orders signed in 2021 

The president has signed 77 executive orders.

  • January — 25
  • February — 9
  • March — 3
  • April — 5
  • May — 5
  • June — 4
  • July — 1
  • August — 3
  • September — 9
  • October — 3
  • November — 4
  • December — 6

1.7 million migrant apprehensions at the southern border in fiscal 2021

This number is a record, but it’s partially inflated by the unusually high rate of repeat migrant border crossings. In the prior fiscal year, 2020, there were only 458,000 who crossed. That lower figure is attributed to the fact that it was the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Over 1 million Title 42 border expulsions

Title 42 is the health regulation first used by the Trump administration in March 2020 to turn away asylum applicants at the border because of the contagiousness of COVID-19. But it has been used by the Biden administration, too, to expel migrants without allowing them to see an immigration judge or an asylum officer first. Over 1 million Title 42 expulsions have been carried out in Mr. Biden’s first full 11 months, according to Customs and Border Protection data. The Trump administration carried out 400,000 Title 42 expulsions.

11,414 refugees admitted

In May, Mr. Biden raised the U.S. refugee cap to 62,500, raising it from Trump’s historic low of 15,000. But ultimately, only 11,414 were admitted because the resettlement infrastructure underwent heavy cuts during the Trump era — the refugee resettlement agencies closed offices and scaled back services. For 2022, Mr. Biden has set an ambitious 125,000 refugee cap, which is likely not to be met because of the decimated resettlement infrastructure. In the three months of the 2022 fiscal year so far, only 3,268 have been admitted. And these numbers do not include tens of thousands of Afghan evacuees.

Immigration court backlog: nearly 1.6 million

The Biden administration’s immigration court backlog recently increased to another all-time high, nearly 1.6 million cases. When Trump left office, there were 1.3 million pending immigration court cases.

41 federal circuit and district court judges confirmed by the Senate 

President Biden has confirmed the highest number of circuit and district court judges of any president since Ronald Reagan, the White House noted in a statement in December. It went on to point out that “80% of those confirmed judges are women, with 53% being people of color.”

  1. Deborah L. Boardman, confirmed 6/23/21 as United States District Judge for the District of Maryland
  2. Tiffany P. Cunningham, confirmed 7/19/21 as United States Circuit Judge for the Federal Circuit
  3. Lydia Kay Griggsby, confirmed 6/16/21 as United States District Judge for the District of Maryland
  4. Ketanji Brown Jackson, confirmed 6/14/21 as United States Circuit Judge for the District of Columbia Circuit
  5. Candace Jackson-Akiwumi, confirmed 6/24/21 as United States Circuit Judge for the Seventh Circuit
  6. Julien Xavier Neals, confirmed 6/8/21 as United States District Judge for the District of New Jersey
  7. Zahid N. Quraishi, confirmed 6/10/21 as United States District Judge for the District of New Jersey
  8. Regina M. Rodriguez, confirmed 6/8 as United States District Judge for the District of Colorado
  9. Margaret Irene Strickland, confirmed 9/21/21 as United States District Judge for the District of New Mexico
  10. David G. Estudillo, confirmed 9/14/21 as United States District Judge for the Western District of Washington
  11. Tana Lin, of Washington, confirmed 10/21/21 as United States District Judge for the Western District of Washington
  12. Christine P. O’Hearn, confirmed 10/19/21 as United States District Judge for the District of New Jersey
  13. Gustavo A. Gelpí, confirmed 10/18/21 as United States Circuit Judge for the First Circuit
  14. Angel Kelley, confirmed 9/14/21 as United States District Judge for the District of Massachusetts
  15. Lauren J. King, confirmed 9/14/21 as United States District Judge for the Western District of Washington
  16. Eunice C. Lee, of New York, confirmed 8/7/21 as United States Circuit Judge for the Second Circuit
  17. Veronica S. Rossman, confirmed 9/20/21 as United States Circuit Judge for the Tenth Circuit
  18. Karen McGlashan Williams, confirmed 10/26 as United States District Judge for the District of New Jersey
  19. Jia M. Cobb, confirmed 10/26 as United States District Judge for the District of Columbia
  20. Sarah A.L. Merriam, confirmed 10/6/21 as United States District Judge for the District of Connecticut
  21. Sarala Vidya Nagala, confirmed 10/27/21 as United States District Judge for the District of Connecticut
  22.   Florence Y. Pan, confirmed 9/23/21 as United States District Judge for the District of Columbia
  23. Myrna Pérez, confirmed 10/25/21 as United States Circuit Judge for the Second Circuit
  24. Omar Antonio Williams, confirmed 10/28/21 as United States District Judge for the District of Connecticut
  25. Jane M. Beckering, confirmed 12/17/21 as United States District Judge for the Western District of Michigan
  26. Shalina D. Kumar, confirmed 12/17/21 as United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan
  27. Michael S. Nachmanoff, confirmed 10/27/21 as United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia judge
  28. Toby J. Heytens, confirmed 11/1/21 as judge of the United States Circuit Judge for the Fourth Circuit
  29. Jennifer Sung, confirmed 12/15/21 as judge of the United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit
  30. Patricia Tolliver Giles, confirmed 10/26/21 as judge of the United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia
  31. Mary Katherine Dimke, confirmed 12/18/21 as United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Washington
  32. Beth Robinson, confirmed 11/1/21 as United States Circuit Judge for the Second Circuit
  33. Maame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong, confirmed 12/17/21 as United States District Judge for the Central District of California
  34. Lucy Haeran Koh, confirmed 12/13 as United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit
  35. Katherine Marie Menendez, confirmed 12/18/21 as United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota
  36. Gabriel P. Sanchez, confirmed 1/12/2022 as United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit
  37. Jennifer L. Thurston, confirmed 12/17/21 as United States District Judge for the Eastern District of California
  38. David Herrera Urias, confirmed 12/17 as United States District Judge for the District of New Mexico
  39. Samantha D. Elliott, confirmed 12/15/21 as United States District Judge for the District of New Hampshire
  40. Linda Lopez, confirmed 12/17/21 as United States District Judge for the Southern District of California
  41. Jinsook Ohta, confirmed 12/17/21 as United States District Judge for the Southern District of California

20 states visited by Harris

US Vice President Kamala Harris visited 20 states during her first year in office, with nearby Virginia receiving the most with five visits.

  1. California
  2. Colorado
  3. Connecticut
  4. Florida
  5. Georgia
  6. Hawaii
  7. Illinois
  8. Maryland
  9. Michigan
  10. Nevada
  11. New Jersey
  12. New York
  13. North Carolina
  14. Ohio
  15. Pennsylvania
  16. Rhode Island
  17. South Carolina
  18. Texas
  19. Virginia
  20. Wisconsin

Courtesy/Source: CBS News