I'll bite.
I think the Administration was caught flat-footed on the withdrawal from Afghanistan. Not even talking about the terrorist attack that killed US soldiers--thats an impossible standard, just a fundamental lack of coordination with allies and not having a better worst-case-scenario plan ready to go. I'm a big believer in planning for the worst and hoping for the best. After Trump ignored the Afghans and only negotiated with the Taliban, it's wild that the Biden Administration didn't plan for an immediately crumbling.
I think the same is true with a lot of their domestic policies. Biden had record *high* approval ratings and the Administration clearly was planning to drop COVID-19 like a bad habit and watch the economy surge ahead... instead they were caught flat-footed again and surprised by the inflation. The limited options to fight inflation, and the time table to see results, have to be as frustrating for them as they are for us.
Oh you wanted what went well? I think the Administration's handling of Ukraine and bolstering NATO and alliances has been terrific. Particularly in the build up to war and sharing intelligence with Ukraine showing Russia's entire game plan. Assuming the GOP doesn't elect another asshat with a personal mission of destroying alliances, then the Biden Administration will probably be successful in undoing the Trump damage and should get credit for bringing the Europeans, US, and Asian allies much closer together to formally oppose Russia/China. This could end up being the wake up call that Obama and Trump tried unsuccessfully to accomplish in their terms. I think the Biden Administration was handed a golden opportunity and did not drop the ball.
Domestically, working in government myself, the American Rescue Plan Act, ARPA, streamlined a lot of state and local grant money that allowed for consistent planning and budgeting from state and local agencies, and our respective engineering firms. ARPA didn't print a ton of money so much as codified a long-term infrastructure budget that was otherwise cobbled together every year or so by Congress. In previous years it was a lot tougher to plan larger projects because you didn't have confidence in the funding being available. ARPA did a lot to improve that system.
Generally speaking, the onshoring of manufacturing and specifically the national security sector manufacturing (think microchips) is something that a lot of Presidents talked about but this administration actually got done. Intel's massive investment in Columbus, and others like it, are going to make America more secure.
I think the pandemic and the resulting supply chain shortages exposed the fragility of just-in-time manufacturing and global supply chains and I think the administration has done a lot of the ground work to make sure crucial industries can be brought back to the US. I am involved in corporate site selection and the consultants I work with have never see the demand for square footage that is happening right now.
I basically think it's a mixed bag presidency with a lot of bad luck and things that are outside the Administration's controls but they haven't done themselves any favors by not actively planning for worst-case scenarios as often as they should be. IMO the PR of last summer was similar to the infamous "Mission Accomplished" flop as the post-COVID return to normalcy was going to be a multi-year thing and they wanted to declare victory before it even began.
At the end of the day every single US president has seen the US economy reach a record size and the market reach a record high. Every single one. Inflation and global economic turbulence will subside.
You may now resume the Biden-has-dementia-and-is-actively-destroying-the-US-every-day-omg-the-sky-is-falling circlejerk...