By
Michael Brendan Dougherty
Monday,
January 16, 2023
The normal
people in my life — the non–political junkies — have started asking me if the
Democrats are setting up Biden with this classified-documents scandal.
They aren’t the only ones wondering. They woke up shortly after the new year
and suddenly Merrick Garland was appointing a special counsel, Republican
Robert Hur, to investigate the president. What gives? Tucker Carlson floated
the idea that the documents mess is the beginning of the end for Joe
Biden.
And now
the headlines are rolling in. Democrats
worry it will
be Biden’s “Hillary emails moment.” The AP says that Biden’s political future
is “clouded by
classified document probe.” His chances of winning in 2024 are “getting more
unlikely.”
I have
no idea if Biden is being pushed under the bus. But it would be really stupid
if he was. Even if Biden were 20 years older and started doing guest
appearances on HBO as the Crypt Keeper, he would remain the best option for the
Democrats.
Even
with a tiny congressional majority, he and the octogenarian leadership teams in
Congress were able to steer a course between Republicans on one side and the
House Progressive Caucus on the other. Once inflation in fuel prices began to
abate, Biden’s poll numbers steadied and Democrats refused to crash and burn in
the midterms.
Biden is
never going to inspire Democrats the way Bill Clinton or Barack Obama did.
Clinton marked the advent of power for the Baby Boomers. Obama’s historic
victory speaks for itself. But in an age of polarization, a lack of inspiration
on one side implies a consequent lack of fear on the other, which has its
political advantages.
While
it’s easy to find this or that conservative commentator denouncing Biden as the
worst president the country has ever had, the truth is that the
conservative-base voter and the Republican-leaning independent voter have never
hated or feared Biden the way they hated and feared Bill Clinton, or the way
they eventually came to hate and fear Barack Obama. Biden, whether because of
his age or affect, just does not inspire conservatives to reach for their sick
bags, to produce and consume as much political kitsch, or to turn out for
Republicans in midterm elections. Biden is the reason the 2022 midterm
elections didn’t look more like 1994 or 2010.
Why is
that? Partly, because Biden does not strike the average voter as a member in
good standing of the Democratic Party of soulless, upwardly mobile,
overeducated Millennial technocrats and identity-politics tyrants. Those people
kind of hate Joe Biden. And Joe Biden’s triumph in the Democratic primary of
2020 was a victory — perhaps the last — for a multiracial, working-class
coalition within the Democratic Party led by relatively moderate, older black
voters.
Another
reason is that Biden’s obvious frailty — his lack of vigor — is his greatest
strength. It prevents him from ever being a utopian or appearing like one. It
forces him to keep the implicit promise of his anti-Trump campaign, that there
would be entire weeks during which most Americans don’t even have to think
about the president. Once the Biden administration was disabused of Jon
Meacham’s plan to turn him into a hybrid of FDR and LBJ, Biden’s approval
ratings started their slow march back up. A president who is no longer
determined to have a historic presidency — merely a successful one — is one who
isn’t threatening his political opponents with historic defeats and reversals.
After
Donald Trump’s hostile takeover of the Republican Party and ascent to the
presidency, and then two of the strangest years of everyone’s life during the
pandemic, Biden is becoming the candidate of normalcy. And like a normal
candidate, he is preparing for his reelection by quietly emphasizing his
moderation — his passage of a popular infrastructure bill and more recent
attempt to do something about the scenes of chaos at the American border.
I
understand why Democrats are nervous about running such an aged and frail man
for president again. But, if the alternatives are people such as Kamala Harris
or Pete Buttigieg, well, you’re going to miss Joe when he’s gone.
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