By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, June 14, 2022
The media taboo against talking
about Joe Biden’s age and the obstacle it presents to his running
again in 2024 is finally off.
Which should put a lantern on another looming
problem for the Democrats — waiting in the wings is a deeply unpopular
officeholder, who makes Biden look like a prospective electoral juggernaut by
comparison.
Democrats can be forgiven for considering
the possibility of only Kamala Harris standing between them and a
return of Donald Trump and telling themselves, “Well, maybe 80 is the new 75,”
or, “Biden’s always been gaffe-prone, so what’s a few more gaffes between
friends?” or, “Biden campaigned from a basement in 2020 — surely, he can
campaign from some similarly secluded and safe space in 2024.”
Harris is the single best argument for
Democrats trying to prop up Biden no matter what. She has been a disaster as
vice president, even as she’s done nothing particularly noteworthy either good
or bad. She’s simply a political black hole, whose abysmal ratings reflect not
just Biden’s troubles but her own profound, inherent flaws as a political
figure.
Kamala Harris has the authenticity of
Hillary Clinton, the charm of Al Gore, and the common touch of Adlai Stevenson.
She could have been engineered in a lab as
a conviction-less opportunist lacking basic political horse sense — and she
more or less was. She came up in a California where the dominance of TV ads
makes retail politicking all but unnecessary, and internal Democratic politics
is largely based on identity politics. Compared to her, Biden really is Middle
Class Joe. The contrast with Chuck Schumer, another Democratic leader from a
deep-blue state, is instructive — Schumer had a tough statewide race against a
Republican within memory and is aware that not all voters are extremely online
“woke” progressives.
Harris could have run as an ideologically
interesting, tough-minded former prosecutor in the 2020 Democratic nomination
fight — a little like Eric Adams in the New York City mayoral primaries last
year. Instead, she got sucked into the idea that the winning lane would be a
couple of ticks to the right of Bernie Sanders. She co-sponsored his “Medicare
for All” proposal, before making a confusing hash of her position when she
realized the political implausibility of the plan.
She seemed defensive about her record as a
prosecutor, which came under withering assault from Representative Tulsi
Gabbard from the left.
Her signature moment — attacking Joe Biden
for his opposition to busing based on her own experience getting bused — didn’t
pay the expected dividends because of its self-evident calculation.
Harris is a politician who always seems to
be reading stage directions out loud. Her laugh, a target of critics, usually
sounds forced and highly deliberate, at times bordering on inappropriate
affect. It’s a valuable political skill to seem at ease even when reaching for
the brass ring at the highest level of American politics. Bill Clinton, George
W. Bush, and Barack Obama all had this ability. Harris has shown no indication
that she has it or will develop it.
Biden has done her no favors with her
assignments as vice president. Given the foolhardiness of the underlying Biden
policies, there was no realistic way she was going to diminish migration at the
southern border. Nor was she going to do anything to get a voting-rights bill
passed. That said, Harris hasn’t mastered any particular issue area and gives
the impression of seeking tableaus that will lend to her gravitas without ever
succeeding.
On top of all this, she hasn’t managed to
secure a close, trusted relationship with the president.
Any rational observer could have predicted
that Biden’s VP pick was going to be particularly sensitive given that, as de
Gaulle famously said, “Old age is a shipwreck.” Instead, Biden played identity
politics by choosing Harris, and it’s understandable now that some Democrats
would like, against all evidence, to bank everything on Biden’s youthful vigor.
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