2024 Presidential Election: Time to Roll the Dice

Abandoning Biden: worth the gamble?

The televised debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump on June 27 has deeply shaken the Democratic Party with a shocking display of its presidential candidate’s weaknesses. Subsequently, support for Biden’s candidacy has been sinking with no bottom in sight.

Was Biden’s debate performance bad enough to justify forsaking his campaign? There are enough contradictory assessments of the debate and Biden’s electoral chances to make one’s head spin. But the drift away from Biden since June 27 is very much in evidence.

The latest discouraging commentary from one of the Democratic Party’s foremost sages, David Axelrod, on Sunday July 7:

In two email posts on Saturday I summarized veteran political operative Stuart Stevens’s argument in favor of the Democrats staying the course with Biden as the nominee, versus historian Anne Applebaum’s radical proposal for delegates to be freed from their obligations to Biden, and for the nominating process to restart. Applebaum’s proposal is the gamble.

The headline of Applebaum’s commentary in The Atlantic was ‘Time to Roll the Dice.’ 

Which says it all.  In a situation of maximum uncertainty, when there is no clear best path forward, gambling is warranted—as long as the status quo is untenable. The status quo here is Joe Biden’s candidacy. There’s a trendline among voters and increasingly among public statements by professional politicians, that Joe Biden is not up to the job, and even if he were up to it, he is not capable of winning the election.

Stevens says the gamble is “insane.” Applebaum says it’s imperative to save the republic.

It’s self-evident that not taking the gamble is itself a gamble. With such high stakes amid such uncertainty, there is no default position to fall back on safely.

Arguments in favor of staying with the status quo because there are insuperable structural impediments to change don’t hold water, according to Jerusalem Demsas in The Atlantic. Per Demsas, the only insuperable impediment to change is Joe Biden’s obstinacy.

Paradigm shift: American politics post-2015

The advice of Stuart Stevens for Biden and the Democratic Party to stay the course makes sense in terms of “normal” American politics, roughly from WWII to the economic crash of the Great Recession in the 2000-aughts. Normal politics began to fall apart starting with Newt Gingrich’s hyper-partisan take-no-prisoners strategy in the mid-1990s, fractured further with the Tea Party in 2010, and collapsed during the Trump presidency, when loyalty to a person replaced allegiance to party, country, or any set of consistent political or moral principles.

Politics of the kind that Stuart Stevens engaged in during decades past no longer exists.

What does exist, is a threat to the American republic itself, in the person of Donald Trump and a gang of thugs wearing vestments of varying degrees of outward respectability.  To that gang now belong six members of the United States Supreme Court who have given Trump immunity from crimes committed while he was President, with the disingenuous provision that what common sense would call a crime is instead called an “official act.” The Supreme Court ruling gives the U.S. President many of the powers of a king, contrary to the principle that no person is above the law and contrary to the spirit of the American Revolution. Contrary, that is, to the  foundations of the nation.

What looms before us is the high probability that Donald Trump will win the election if Joe Biden is the opponent— the unthinkable become grotesquely thinkable. You might be appalled that Donald Trump can get more than 40% of the popular vote, but even if Trump’s lead over Biden is half what the polls are showing, he’s still ahead.

A win by Trump, according to Applebaum, would plunge the country into authoritarianism of the kind she has described in numerous articles, the 2019 book Twilight of Democracy, and three histories of the Soviet Union, the last of which, Gulag, won the Pulitzer Prize.

Upsides to the gamble: a reinvigorated Party

1)  Donald Trump’s platform totters. Trump’s platform, if you can call it that, stands on two legs: immigration is destroying the country, and Joe Biden is the worst president in all of American history.  Remove Joe Biden, and it’s tottering on one leg: immigration is destroying the country. Nonsense, of course. A nimble, articulate replacement for Biden should be able to counter the immigration scare with the fact that immigration has always been good for this country. Tell the stories of immigrants who have created jobs for all Americans: put them before the camera with the candidate.

2) Absent Biden, the progressives’ hardest knock against Party leadership—Biden’s mishandling of the horrors of Gaza—goes quiet. Anthony Blinken might be freed from whatever pro-Netanyahu leash Biden has had him on.

3) Applebaum flips the Awfulness-of-a-Party-in-Disarray script on its head, saying a contested nomination race can generate excitement and enthusiasm a Party in the grip of the Old Guard cannot. I quote Applebaum at length at the end of this post putting a positive spin on just about every aspect of a sans-Biden race. Her proposal includes  suggestions for dynamic candidates, and concludes, “He or she would emerge from the convention with energy, attention, hope, and money. The American republic, and the democratic world,  might survive. Isn’t that worth the gamble?”

4) Catching the Republicans flat-footed in their upcoming nominating convention. With the foil of Joe Biden wiped from the table, they might be forced to talk about their less popular policies—tax cuts for billionaires, national abortion ban, cutting Social Security. . . .

5) Fun. Face it, whatever your age, you may well have tired of Joe Biden hanging around the leadership of the Democratic Party since forever.  I love the guy, but I also love Robert DeNiro, and the latter’s days as a leading man are numbered.  And, look, Joe may have said “look” just one too many times to get people to look. I’m looking forward to a candidate whom I can fall in love with all over again.

6) Relief.  You may have been carrying around a burden of suspecting Joe Biden isn’t up to snuff, and feeling guilty for such disloyal thoughts. You may have been angry that he didn’t groom a successor as he was expected to when he called himself a “bridge” four years ago. You may have been angry at his presumption that he alone could take on Donald Trump for a second time, disrespecting younger and more energetic candidates.  You may be angry that he thought saying umpteen times that he ‘had a bad night’ in the debate absolved him of responsibility for a monumental screw-up. If he withdraws his candidacy in a gracious manner, that negativity goes away, forgiveness takes its place, and you can thank him for his honorable service and for honorably passing the reins to a successor. A successor who can win.

=== Anne Applebaum on upsides to rolling the dice ===
(this is fun!)

The Democrats can hold a new round of primary debates, town halls, and public meetings from now until August 19, when the Democratic National Convention opens. Once a week, twice a week, three times a week—the television networks would compete to show them. Millions would watch. Politics would be interesting again. After a turbulent summer, whoever emerges victorious in a vote of delegates at the DNC can spend the autumn campaigning in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania—and win the presidency. America and the democratic alliance would be saved.

There are risks. The Democrats could gamble and lose. But there are also clear benefits. The Republican convention, due to take place in less than two weeks, would be ruined. Trump and other Republicans wouldn’t know the name of their opponent. Instead of spending four days attacking Biden, they would have to talk about their policies, many of which—think corporate subsidies, tax cuts for the rich, the further transformation of the Supreme Court—aren’t popular. Their candidate spouts gibberish. He is also old, nearly as old as Biden, and this is his third presidential campaign. Everyone would switch channels in order to watch the exciting Democratic primary debates instead.

By contrast, the Democratic convention would be dramatic—very, very dramatic. Everyone would want to watch it, talk about it, be there on the ground. Tickets would be impossible to get; the national and international media would flock there in huge numbers. Yes, I know what happened in 1968, but that was more than half a century ago. History never repeats itself with precision. The world is a lot different now. There is more competition for attention. An open, exciting convention would command it.

Whoever wins—Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, Vice President Harris, or anyone else—would be more coherent and more persuasive than Trump. He or she would emerge from the convention with energy, attention, hope, and money. The American republic, and the democratic world, might survive. Isn’t that worth the gamble?

 

 

 

 

Tribal Dynamics 1: Loyalty

Sarah Huckabee Sanders aces the loyalty test

“I’m amazed she would make a speech like that!  I know her! She’s a nice person! She has a sense of humor. . . .” That was the immediate reaction of Van Jones following Sarah Huckabee Sanders’s response to President Biden’s State of the Union speech on February 7. Jones was participating in a CNN panel performing a postmortem on Biden’s speech and the morose rejoinder by Sanders. The rhetoric of Sanders, the newly elected governor of Arkansas, bore the imprint of Trump’s inaugural “American carnage” address seven years earlier.

The opening mood on the CNN panel was one of shock and head-shaking perplexity at the bizarre content and bellicose tone of Sanders’s speech, made especially dark by contrast with the upbeat tone of the address by Biden that preceded it. Sanders ran through the litany of right-wing victimology from the tyranny of a bloated federal government, to hordes of illegal immigrants swarming across the Mexican border, to defunding the police, to transgender turpitude,  to disregard for the patriotic white working class, to the critique of institutional racism embodied in Critical Race Theory, and other “woke fantasies.” On behalf of victims of imagined religious oppression, she protested being told “every day” that “we must . . . partake in their rituals, salute their flags, and worship false idols.” Especially shocking was her disrespect toward President Biden, whom she called “the first man to surrender his Presidency to a woke mob who can’t even tell you what a woman is.”

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Trump Stolen Document Drama: Even Split on Responsibility

An inexplicable delay: what really happened here?

Who’s to blame for Donald Trump having a horde of classified documents including Top Secret and Top Secret compartmentalized (a narrower category than mere Top Secret) at Mar-a-Lago for 18 months?

Well Donald Trump obviously. But he had plenty of help, starting with the people who elected him President in the first place, and even more the large segment of them who took to worshiping him to the degree that he really began to believe in his own godlike status–not bound by the  rules and laws by which all American citizens, including the top office-holder, are bound in principle. Next layer above voters consists of Republican politicians, primarily hypocrites who felt it was necessary to support Trump publicly for the sake of their political skins (and given the violence of Trump’s True Believers, perhaps their literal skins) even when they were well aware of his wrongdoing. The layer closest to Trump comprised members of his administration, most notably Bill Barr as Attorney General, who sank the Mueller investigation, and even launched a counter-investigation led by John Durham—a counter-investigation which basically in three years turned up nothing corrupt about the Mueller team. Bill Barr, first fired by Trump for dismissing Trump’s fraudulent charges of election fraud that cost him the 2020 election, and now horrified by the trove of classified documents found at Mar-a-Lago, has withdrawn his support of Trump . . . a bit late to curtail much of the enormous damage the ex-Prez has done to the country. (Done even if he hadn’t taken all those documents.)

We could go on naming enablers and Trump cult members on the Right,  lawyers with preposterous claims about the 2020 election, and other lawyers who knew the facts but nevertheless created a legal cocoon around the ex-President, but you already know most of them, if not by specific names then the groups to which they belong.

Enough rightward finger-pointing.  Let’s try some
more targeted finger pointing.

At this point, it’s evident that half the blame belongs to the parties named above.

The other half belongs to the Biden administration, in particular Attorney General Merrick Garland.

Continue reading “Trump Stolen Document Drama: Even Split on Responsibility”

Joe Biden’s Perfect Storm

A storm of woes haunts the Biden presidency

*COVID-19 Original
*COVID-19 Delta
*Fox News
*Divisive social media
*Donald Trump
*Russia
*Countless claims that Biden lost the 2020 election, believed by 78%
of Republicans
*Trump toadies Kevin McCarthy, Elise Stefanik, et al
*Trump thugs Marjorie Taylor Green, Paul Gosar, Matt Gaetz, et al
*Senate obstructionist Republican team, head thug Mitch McConnell
*Senate obstructionist pseudo-Democratic tag team Manchin-Sinema
*Militant House progressives
*Pigheaded House moderates
*Anti-Mask rebellions
*Anti-Vaccine rebellions
*Republican governors taking every opportunity to undermine his authority
*Anti-democratic Republican state legislatures
*Sinister conspiracy theories
*Bloodthirsty crazed dupes of conspiracy theories
*Threats against his life rising along with deadly threats against all office-holding Democrats (and some non-Democrats who refuse to be intimidated by the thugs)
*Emboldened white supremacists
*Irresolute Attorney General
*Bungled Afghanistan pullout
*Chinese saber-rattling
*A tsunami of pandemic-rebound shopping
*Oil price shocks
*Clogged supply chains

and now . . . 

The headline in the November 10, 6:24 pm story in The Hill was: “Biden Gets Inflation Gut Punch.”  Sure enough, just when it looked like a coalition of moderates and progressive Democrats was going to stitch together enough of the remains of Biden’s Build Back Better legislation to have all House Democrats call it a win, along comes inflation to poison the deal.

The result of too many dollars chasing too little capacity as the economy ramps up boosts inflation, and makes big government spending—of the magnitude that would benefit Americans up and down the economic ladder—enough of an inflation risk to stall or starve Biden’s Build Back Better legislative agenda.

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