By Nick Catoggio
Wednesday, February 27, 2024
Typically
when a presidential candidate is putting up mega-landslide margins in the early
primary states, it’s clear to all that he’s on his way to becoming his party’s
nominee.
Nothing
is typical in American politics anymore.
Ask
the average Republican voter (or average Republican
presidential frontrunner) which Democrat will top the ballot this fall and
you’ll be surprised at how few, even now, answer “Joe Biden.” Some assume the
president can’t conceivably last another eight months, believing that he’s been
living on borrowed time for years. But for many, it’s not the Grim Reaper
blocking his path to a second term. It’s Michelle Obama.
A
“rumor” (i.e. a conspiracy theory) has circulated for months among the
right-wing faithful that Barack Obama’s better half will, by hook or by crook,
replace Biden on the Democratic ticket. Numerous political commentators of
the left and right have
caught wind of it and scoffed at it publicly. But it
persists. Why it persists is an interesting question, the answer to which
depends on how charitable you wish to be about the motives that drive
Republican politics.
The
cynical view is that a revanchist nationalist movement craves a political
nemesis more threatening to them than Joe Biden. It’s hard to galvanize voters
about the urgency of making America great again when the choice before them is
between two elderly white men who grew up before the civil rights era reached
full flower. It’s the Obamas, not Biden, who are avatars of the “new
America”—especially Michelle, who represents not just racial change in American
leadership but the growing political and economic power of women.
The
less cynical view is that right-wingers are simply reacting rationally to the
fact that Michelle Obama is a remarkably popular figure, much more so than Joe
Biden. She routinely places in the top 10 of women
whom Americans most admire and has finished first multiple times. Her
memoir became the bestselling
book of 2018 within 15 days of publication, moving millions of units.
And for all the hype about how she disdains politics, she’s a talented retail
messenger. Her speech at the 2016 Democratic National Convention urging voters
to “go high” when
the other party “goes low” was more memorable than anything Hillary
Clinton said that year.
Why wouldn’t Democrats
want her to replace Biden? And why wouldn’t a movement as conspiratorial as the
MAGA right believe there’s a secret plot afoot somewhere to make that happen?
Whichever
theory you prefer, the common denominator is that the right finds it genuinely
incredible that the president’s party intends to stick with a candidate who has
become so weak. “Biden does often look and sound so enfeebled it’s hard to
believe that a political party would really be pinning all its hopes—including
purportedly saving American democracy—on him,” Rich
Lowry marveled in a piece on the Michelle Obama scenario earlier this
month.
I
share their astonishment. Increasingly, so do left-leaning pundits.
Can
Joe Biden actually win this election?
***
A Dispatch colleague
pointed out to me this morning that this is the third straight presidential
cycle in which Democrats have seemed more confident in their nominee’s chances
than they should have.
In
2016 they took it for granted that Hillary Clinton would prevail over a
disgraced game show host, so much so that the candidate herself never
bothered to visit the swing state of Wisconsin. Democratic advisers
rejoiced that God had answered their prayers (literally!)
when Trump won the GOP nomination. Obama adviser David Plouffe predicted a
worst-case scenario of 324 electoral votes for the first woman president.
Republicans
ended up winning the White House and majorities in both chambers of Congress.
In
2020 the Democratic presidential field converged rapidly behind Joe Biden after
he won the South Carolina primary despite his dismal performances in Iowa, New
Hampshire, and Nevada. Pandemic restrictions gave him the perfect excuse to
campaign virtually from his home in Delaware, neutralizing his age and
endurance as major campaign issues. Liberals anticipated a mass repudiation of
Trump at the polls over his mishandling of COVID and his obnoxious daily
antics.
Biden
ended up winning by the skin of his teeth in battleground states and his party
was routed in competitive House races.
Here
we are again in 2024. Democrats seem oddly sanguine about letting their
presidential wager ride on a nominee who’s considerably less popular and seems
considerably more frail than he was during his first campaign. My colleague
wondered if the party has developed a “blind spot” for frontrunners in its
nominating process that’s left it unable to discern their electoral weaknesses.
There
might be something to that. But in 2016 and 2020, the cause of the Democratic
blind spot was straightforward and understandable: It was the polls that misled
them.
Clinton
led Trump comfortably for most of the campaign eight years ago, opening up
a 7-point
national advantage as late as three weeks before the election in the
wake of the Access Hollywood scandal. Biden’s margins four
years later were even gaudier: He finished 7.2
points ahead of Trump and had touched a 10-point lead in early
October. Democrats were overconfident because, for complicated reasons,
pollsters consistently underestimated Trump’s share of the vote.
This
time is different. Democratic passivity toward Biden’s renomination is a
product of paralysis in the face of incumbency and distressed denial that the
American people might truly reelect a coup-plotting deviant after January 6.
But I wouldn’t call that overconfidence. Look at the polls lately and you’ll
find that it’s impossible to be confident, let alone overconfident, about the
president’s chances in November.
Every
month or so I check
in with his numbers to see if there’s evidence yet of a backlash to
Trump’s dominance of the early Republican primaries. For months, optimists I’ve
theorized that swing voters who checked out of politics three years ago
believing that Trump was gone for good will now start checking back in with
alarm as they read news of him steamrolling his challengers for the GOP
nomination. Inevitably, the polls will begin to shift toward Biden.
We’re
now four primaries in. When does that shift begin?
Trump
currently leads Biden by
2.1 points in the RealClearPolitics national average,
about the same as he did in mid-November. In a three-way race with Robert F.
Kennedy Jr., he leads by
4.3 points. In a five-way race, adding Cornel West and Jill Stein to the
mix, he leads by
3.
The
battleground polls are gruesome. It’s Trump by 1.2 points in Wisconsin,
by 4.7 in Arizona,
by 5.1 in Michigan,
by 6.8 in Georgia,
and by 8.4 in Nevada.
Only in Pennsylvania does
Biden lead, and in that case it’s by less than a point.
It’s
not just one or two demographic groups that have shifted rightward since 2020
that account for Trump’s leads, either. Feast your eyes.
Some
of the polls these averages are based on were conducted before the South
Carolina primary, so it’s possible that swing voters who participated in them
still hadn’t fully “awakened” yet to the reality that Trump will be the GOP
nominee. But it must be stressed: The current averages represent deep
holes for Biden, much deeper than they might seem.
Remember,
he needed a 4.5-point win in the national popular vote in 2020 just to eke out
narrow victories in decisive states like Georgia, Wisconsin, and Arizona. That
means, if the current RCP averages are correct, he’ll likely need something
like a 6-point shift in national polling before November to be
reelected.
That’s
an awfully ambitious ask for a candidate who hasn’t topped 45.4 percent in
the head-to-head
average against Trump in more than a year of polling.
And
whose biggest policy liability, immigration, is now rated as the most
important issue in the election among a plurality of voters.
And
who trails his opponent by 22 points on the question of which candidate
would handle
the economy better.
And
whom 86 percent say is too
old to serve another term. That share is higher than the share of Americans
who believe
NASA landed on the moon in 1969, by the way.
How
does Joe Biden orchestrate a 6-point shift with all of that weighing on him?
At New York magazine, Jonathan
Chait gazes into the abyss:
On the one hand, there are still ten months
to go. The economy is in fantastic shape, and another almost-year of
prosperity—along with, hopefully, an end to the war between Israel and
Hamas—might give Biden a significant boost in the polls.
On the other hand, this is a way of saying
that there needs to be a lot of positive development, with no major bad news,
just to get into coin-flip territory. And while it is still somewhat early, the
electorate is deeply polarized, and Biden and Trump are both unusually
well-known figures. All that suggests there aren’t a lot of persuadable voters
out there.
It’s
true that the economy has become less of a liability for Biden than most of us
expected a year ago. But it’s also true, as Nate
Silver points out, that voters’ opinions of the economy have been
brightening for months—yet there’s still no evidence of any shift toward the
president in the polls.
Eight
months out from Election Day, Trump’s enemies on the left and right are forced
to face the terrifying fact that there’s little left that his opponent, the
most powerful man in the world, can do to meaningfully increase his chances of
victory. If Biden prevails, it’ll almost certainly be due to factors out of his
control—some health issue that forces Trump from the race, a conviction in one
of his criminal trials, a “hidden” anti-Trump
vote among the electorate that all of the polls are somehow missing.
When your best chance at victory depends on a deus ex machina,
you’re in grave political trouble.
“It’s
almost panic time” for Democrats, reads the subhead on Chait’s column. Almost?
***
Needless
to say, Chait isn’t overconfident about Joe Biden’s chances this fall. Neither
is Silver,
who proposed an ultimatum: If Biden is unwilling to prove that he’s fit for
command by doing a series of challenging interviews with serious non-friendly
outlets (such as, for example, “a team of writers at The Dispatch”)
then he should step aside as nominee. And no, Seth
Meyers’ late-night show doesn’t count.
And
if he does step aside, what should happen then? Ezra
Klein, another decidedly not overconfident liberal, argued recently that
Biden’s decision to end his reelection bid would free Democrats up to hold an
old-fashioned open convention this summer at which party delegates would huddle
and anoint a new standard-bearer against Trump this fall.
That
probably would be the “cleanest” way of replacing Biden on the ticket, the
least bad option available to liberals in a raft of terrible ones that begins
with riding with the president all the way to November. But even the least bad
option is plenty bad.
Start
with what Klein gently describes as “the Kamala Harris problem.” Very simply,
there’s no way to hold an open convention without insulting America’s first
black, female vice president. She’s the nominee-in-waiting by dint of her
position; she wouldn’t (or rather shouldn’t) have been placed on a national
ticket to begin with if her party didn’t believe her fit to serve as its leader
if necessary. Yet, to all appearances, she’s unelectable as a national
candidate, polling below Biden and Trump in measures
of favorability. She can’t be the nominee.
Democrats
could and would strain mightily to atone to Harris’ admirers if she were
snubbed at the convention. As Chait suggests, they might insist on a ticket
featuring a woman and an African American—Gretchen Whitmer and
Cory Booker, say, or Raphael Warnock and Amy Klobuchar—but the fact that a
nominee-in-waiting who has both of those traits had been passed over would
surely sting some members of the party’s loyal base of black women. That’s
another reason why the Michelle Obama conspiracy theory endures among
Republicans, of course: The former first lady is the only figure in the party
who might plausibly solve “the Kamala Harris problem” singlehandedly.
Another
problem is that lots of voters—including many Democrats—won’t share Klein’s
vision of an open convention as a messy but exhilarating laboratory of
democracy. Last week Ed
Kilgore ventured down memory lane to the conventions of old and
discovered that nominees who emerged from a contentious selection process, like
Thomas Dewey and Adlai Stevenson, often lost the general election. And that
makes sense: A nominee chosen by the party’s voters in the primary process
enjoys democratic legitimacy, but a nominee chosen by shadowy party brokers at
a convention is easily demagogued as a favorite child of corrupt insiders.
That
critique would be especially potent given the enmity between neoliberal
Democrats and progressives, the latter of whom have despised
and distrusted the Democratic National Committee for years. Klein’s
scenario imagines the end of an open convention as a sort of kumbaya moment
for the left, united against Trump after resolving their differences. It would
more likely be the case that one or more factions would come away irate over
some real or imaginary backroom chicanery at their preferred candidate’s
expense. There wouldn’t be much time for that rift to heal before Election Day.
Imagine
a pro-Israel hawk narrowly defeating a pro-Palestinian dove in the delegate
count—or vice versa, perhaps, after progressives inevitably applied intense
pressure on the delegates to favor their agenda. The great virtue of an open
convention in theory is that Democrats would be free to prioritize
electability, anointing a nominee who compares favorably with Trump in terms of
youth and centrism. But it might not work out that way in practice: There’s a
chance they’d end up with a candidate with a few too many McGovernite
tendencies to entice undecided swing voters.
The
mere fact of dumping an incumbent president in favor of a candidate who’s
unknown to most of the country would be so extraordinary and disorienting that
it would strike many voters as a form of dirty pool, scaring them away from the
new nominee. Trump and Biden are the ultimate political known commodities;
replacing the latter at the last second with, say, the governor of Michigan
would feed perceptions that the president’s candidacy had been a scam from the
jump, a premeditated bait-and-switch. Voters would demand to know why, if he
now believed he couldn’t serve effectively in a second term, he had bothered to
run again in the first place.
Why
hadn’t Democrats held a normal primary so that America could get to know their
candidates? Why did they only seem to conclude that they needed a new nominee
after the president began to trail Trump consistently in polling? Some might
deem the gambit too cynical even for American politics in 2024 and resolve to
hold it against Democrats at the polls.
All
of these are serious concerns about an open convention. But there’s also a
serious, compelling response: At this point, none of it matters.
If
it’s true that Joe Biden can’t win the election absent a deus ex
machina then he shouldn’t be the nominee. The party would be better
off with anyone who might plausibly win without fate intervening, selected
through whatever quasi-legitimate means are available. In the end, no matter
who leads the Democratic ticket, the left’s argument will be the same: that
this election isn’t a choice, it’s a referendum on whether a twice-impeached,
four-times-indicted miscreant who tried to overthrow the government the last
time he held office deserves to be trusted with that office again.
It
would be painful to forfeit the advantage of incumbency in prosecuting that
case, but having a no-name as nominee arguably makes it easier. Which match-up
is more conducive to persuading voters that the election is a referendum on
Trump: Trump vs. Biden or Trump vs. Random Generic Democrat?
Trump
is the great Democratic unifier, a figure so repulsive that 81 million people
were convinced in 2020 to cast ballots for an underwhelming, senescent
establishment dinosaur in the name of defeating him. For all the anxiety about
the hard feelings that snubbing Kamala Harris or holding a divisive open
convention might create, party leaders might reasonably gamble that the specter
of another Trump term would lead Democratic voters disgruntled by the
nomination process to ultimately lay their grievances aside and come together
behind a nominee who will, if elected, at least remain lucid during their term
in office.
It’s
not a great option or even a good one. It’s the least bad option available.
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