By Jonah
Goldberg
Wednesday,
January 25, 2023
There’s
an understandable compulsion in the media and among Democrats to emphasize the
differences between Joe Biden’s classified documents scandal and Donald
Trump’s.
The two
cases are different in many important respects. (For now, we’ll avoid any
speculation as to how the discovery of classified documents in Mike Pence’s
personal residence, announced yesterday, fits in with all of this. But:
Zoinks!) The most significant is obviously that the former president refused to
cooperate with the National Archives and Justice Department until a search of
his home was deemed necessary. Meanwhile, Biden’s team has endeavored to
highlight the fact they’ve been very cooperative, inviting various searches,
including of his home on Friday—which revealed even more
documents with classified markings, reportedly dating back to his days in the
Senate.
That’s
all fine. But there are two similarities that can’t be “messaged” away. The
first similarity has been widely discussed in the press and conceded by many of
the president’s most ardent Democratic supporters: He had stuff he shouldn’t
have had in places they didn’t belong. Yes, Trump had more documents and
possibly more sensitive ones. But the underlying misdeed is the same.
The
second similarity has largely gone unnoticed, as The Daily Beast’s Matt Lewis has noted well. Very much like
Trump, Joe Biden has a very difficult time admitting error.
On
Thursday, Biden said he had “no regrets” regarding the classified document mess.
Exactly one year earlier, he said “I make no apologies” for how he pulled
U.S. forces out of Afghanistan.
This was
after he’d assured the public that the withdrawal would be secure and orderly.
“There’s going to be no circumstance where you see people being lifted off the
roof of [an] embassy of the United States from Afghanistan. It is not at all
comparable [to Vietnam].”
On a
human level, never mind as a matter of common sense, it’s impossible to believe
that Biden had no regrets about Afghanistan or how this classified document
mess has unfolded.
And as a
political matter, this has been a fiasco. Does anyone believe he doesn’t wince
every time he sees that 60 Minutes clip of himself being shocked at Trump’s
“irresponsible” handling of classified material?
Has the
White House’s response really been flawless? On January 12, White House
spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre assured the public that “the search [for
documents] is complete.” That was before more documents showed up in his home
and garage.
Biden’s
stubbornness is only part of the problem. No doubt lawyers and political
advisers are reinforcing his instinct not to give an inch to the press. After
the post-Afghanistan withdrawal press conference, Biden asked a friend how he
did. The friend said “great.” Biden replied, “Yeah, but the press is going to kill me,”
Biden said, “I’m f***ed no matter what I say.”
There’s
also the larger political culture in which partisans believe any admission that
bolsters the enemy is intolerable. Indeed, Biden is hardly the first politician to struggle with admitting mistakes. Donald Trump
took it to cartoonish extremes. “I fully think
apologizing is a great thing, but you have to be wrong,” he once said. “I will absolutely apologize
sometime in the distant future if I’m ever wrong.”
I’ve
long thought that Trump’s insistence that his infamous call with the president
of Ukraine was “perfect” helped drive the effort to impeach him.
Politically, claims of perfection enrage critics and proving imperfection is a
lot easier than proving an admitted mistake was an impeachable outrage.
Therein
lies Biden’s opportunity. As Lewis notes, “Biden was elected to be the opposite
of Trump.” That’s
why Biden frequently falls back on one of his favorite folksy rhetorical refrains: promising to
“always level with the American
people and tell it to you straight.”
Biden
would be much better off if he followed his own advice—and I don’t just mean
saying “mistakes were made.” It would be much easier to argue
that what he did isn’t as bad as what Trump did, if first he admitted his own
missteps (and not for nothing: The legal standard isn’t “Is this worse than
what Trump did?” but “does this violate the law?”).
Saying
he has no regrets is not very different from saying what he did was perfect.
And Biden’s hand-waving dismissal that, “People know I
take classified documents and classified information seriously” isn’t very far
from Trump’s favorite lead-in for all kinds of groundless assertions: “everybody knows …” Either Biden is lying about
telling it straight or he honestly believes he is. If it’s the latter,
then he’s delusional.
I think
there’s a deep hunger among voters for politicians to admit mistakes. Biden ran
for office promising transparency, honesty, competence and normalcy. The way
he’s handled this documents mess breaks all those promises.
No comments:
Post a Comment