Biden failed to inspire confidence because his team was too busy doing the actual work, his press secretary Jen Psaki says

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On his inauguration day in January 2021, President Joe Biden inherited a bad economy. More accurately, he inherited a lot of bad things, mainly due to the then-dire pandemic and all its reverberating, devastating impacts. From hamstrung supply chains to slowed business growth to vast unemployment to civil unrest, it was as difficult an entry point as any president could expect to navigate—and Biden got right to work providing relief.

As he signed those orders, the economy “was in a downward spiral,” recalled Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary for the first half of President Biden’s first term—and a current MSNBC host. “There were a range of impacts, including the supply-chain slowdown, and the fact that so many businesses, small and large, across the country were shut down,” she told Fortune in a recent interview.

Addressing each of those dire impacts can necessarily mean more time working around the clock, and less time crafting a compelling, outward-facing narrative. “When you’re sitting in the government, your job is not just to communicate about the moment, it’s to act,” Psaki said.

In other words, the Biden administration put more emphasis on the action.

But even if Biden’s team hadn’t been bogged down trying to turn around a battered economy post-COVID, those communications probably wouldn’t have landed anyway.

A hard lesson of the presidency: Even if you’re making things better for working people day-in, day-out; delivering on each of your campaign promises; and then making new ones—and delivering on those—many people will nonetheless remain unimpressed.

That’s because the commander-in-chief doesn’t get credit for making things slightly, gradually less bad, Psaki said.

“You’re trying to communicate that you’re pulling yourself out of a ditch,” Psaki said. “I know this because I worked for Barack Obama when he was trying to communicate about pulling the country out of a recession.” (Psaki was Obama’s deputy communications director in the first years of his first team.)

“While [Obama’s] circumstances were different, it was a similar challenge, and you’re trying to communicate to people: ‘I know we’re losing 300,000 jobs a month, but a month ago, we were losing 600,000 jobs a month. So we’re moving in the right direction. It’s just we’re not there quite yet.’”

The president—and indeed the press secretary—doesn’t “get credit for making things less bad, and in the moment, that can’t be what your bar is, because your job is to make things less bad, not to get credit for it, necessarily.”

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