WASHINGTON – With President Joe Biden set to deliver his first State of the Union address Tuesday, Colorado representatives and a political strategist said they expect Biden to address COVID-19, inflation and national security.
Sen. Michael Bennet, who plans to attend the address, said it was important for Biden to highlight how Washington leaders are helping return the country to normalcy after a three-year pandemic.
“People in Colorado want to keep their kids in school and leave their masks at home, and I think we’re coming to a moment in the pandemic where we really do have to get back to normal,” Bennet said. “... I hope he projects the idea that the worst is behind us and that we’ve got a bright future ahead.”
Bennet said he hoped Biden would address rising costs, inflation and child poverty, the latter of which Bennet has made a keystone policy focus.
The annual address, given near the start of the year’s legislative session, allows the president to reflect on victories and challenges of the past year and introduce a set of policy priorities for the year ahead. Biden last addressed members of the House and Senate in April 2021 the night before his 100th day in office.
Ben Stout, communications director for Colorado Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert, said Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has made domestic energy independence a priority. The attack has created concerns that gas prices might rise if the nation’s energy supply is disrupted. Russia is among the top exporters of natural gas and oil.
“Colorado could be doing a whole lot to lead on energy ... and (Boebert) feels like the valley, the Western Slope, certainly the 3rd Congressional District, could play a key role in producing energy that benefits America and benefits our allies,” Stout said.
Boebert called for Biden to “immediately unleash our full energy production capabilities” in a Thursday video posted to Twitter. Stout said in his interview with The Durango Herald that Boebert believes this could best be accomplished by resuming construction of the stalled Keystone XL pipeline and allowing oil and gas production on federal lands.
The U.S. is the top-producing country in the world, according to the U.S. Energy information Administration.
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis also addressed energy production in a statement Thursday, calling for Congress to “double down on a rapid clean energy transition to ensure that our energy future cannot be tied to geopolitical conflicts and global commodities.”
Simon Rosenberg, a political strategist and the founder of liberal think tank New Democrat Network, said the focus instead should be on ramping up clean energy efforts, because many authoritative powers profit from selling fossil fuels.
“Battling climate change is one of the central tools we have of combating authoritarianism and autocracy, and in order to counter (Russian President Vladimir) Putin, we need to accelerate decarbonization and to throw the weight of the United States fully behind a global race to decarbonize,” Rosenberg said.
Beyond climate change and resisting autocratic governments, he said Biden likely would address the path toward economic recovery after the disruption of COVID-19.
“I think that’s the tone that he has to take, of being a proud father of the nation and acknowledging the grit and resilience of the American people during a time of enormous challenge and that we’ve come through the other side together,” Rosenberg said.
The State of the Union address can be viewed live through the White House website and will begin at 7 p.m. Tuesday.
Skye Witley, a senior at American University in Washington, D.C., is an intern for The Durango Herald and The Journal in Cortez. He can be reached at switley@durangoherald.com.