By Charles C. W. Cooke
Wednesday, November 03, 2022
Rich observes that Biden’s speech this evening was
“abysmal.” “Stylistically,” he submits, “the speech was meandering, cliched,
and repetitive, and Biden’s delivery was notably lifeless.” Jim describes it as “the same old stuff, served many times
before, zapped in a microwave.” I agree. Moreover, I think that this was
probably inevitable. The president has convinced himself that claiming to
represent democracy is a winning message, but he also knows that, last time
around, he looked absolutely ridiculous while doing so. The resultant
compromise yielded the worst of both worlds: Biden eschewed the Star Wars
aesthetic that so excited his partisan fans, while delivering a dull, partisan,
self-serving address that anyone with a brain could see straight through. It’ll
be forgotten by tomorrow morning — if not sooner.
I’m not convinced that political rhetoric of any type is
going to change the trajectory of the coming midterms, but, regardless, I
cannot help but notice just how poor a campaigner Joe Biden is in his current
state. The clips of Barack Obama that have been circulating on Twitter of late
serve as a reminder of how good Democrats can be on the stump. Biden, by
comparison, is a shadow — of his former self, of his party’s successful phase,
of the president he promised to be. Schadenfreude notwithstanding, I must
confess that there is a part of me that is absolutely dreading hearing what
Biden attempts to say next week if his party struggles in the midterm
elections. If, a week out, democracy is contingent upon the Democrats winning,
what on earth is the president going to claim if they’ve lost big?
No comments:
Post a Comment