By Matthew Continetti
Saturday, May 04, 2024
Higher prices, a broken border, raging wars, violent
campuses — is this what Joe Biden promised Americans four years ago?
Quite the opposite: In his 2020 convention address, Biden
said that he would lead America away from Donald Trump and toward “a different
path,” where “together” we would “take this chance to heal, to be reborn, to
unite. A path of hope and light.”
Leave aside, for a moment, the garbled metaphors and
syrupy language. Consider instead how far away America is from Biden’s gossamer
vision. Here is a man who pledged a restoration of national unity and global
tranquility if he became president. Not only has he failed to achieve his
goals. His very policies put them out of reach. We were promised competence. We
got chaos.
Back in 2015, Jeb Bush warned his fellow Republicans that
his billionaire rival for the GOP presidential nomination was “a chaos
candidate. And he’d be a chaos president.” Republican primary voters ignored
him. Trump won the nomination and the presidency. His years in office were
tumultuous, to say the least. Yet today’s electorate views the instability that
Trump brought to Washington differently than the disorder that Biden unleashed
at home and abroad. Once there was a single “chaos president.” Now there are
two.
My colleague at Commentary magazine, Abe Greenwald, points out
that the past three and a half years have seen a whittling away of the
arguments Biden used against Trump. Biden said Trump and his family business
were corrupt — only to find himself embroiled in his own family scandal. Biden
flogged Trump’s mishandling of classified presidential records — only to have a
special counsel investigate him for a similar offense. Biden described Trump as
a sower of discord — only to preside over an America coming apart.
The widespread sense of confusion and disappointment, the
general feeling that the country is a mess, best explains why Biden is losing to Trump. A recent New York Times/Siena
poll found that just 25 percent of registered voters say
Biden’s years as president have been “mostly good for the country.” Forty-two
percent of voters say the Trump years were mostly good. A whopping 46 percent
of voters, meanwhile, told the Times that Biden’s presidency
has been “mostly bad” for the country. Thirty-three percent said the same of
Trump’s term in office.
Nostalgia is a powerful drug. But voters are not simply
looking at the past through rose-tinted glasses. They have perceived, on their
own schedule and in their own fashion, the connections between Biden’s policies
and the economic and social conditions they deplore. The trillions in federal
spending that gave rise to inflation. The unwinding of immigration protocols
that sparked the border crisis. The botched withdrawal from Afghanistan that
killed 13 U.S. servicemen and signaled to Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping that
America was in retreat.
Rather than move swiftly to address the sources of public
discontent, Biden and his team have alternated between denial and spin. Price
increases would be temporary — and when the cost of living continued to outpace
wages, we were told to blame corporations and “big sandwich” and be grateful for high employment and GDP
growth.
Migration would be seasonal — and when the number of
unauthorized border crossings since Biden took office rose to more than 6 million, with more than 2 million illegal
immigrants allowed to enter the country, we were told to welcome the
newcomers, or blame Republicans, or remember that, as Biden said during a May 1 fundraiser, “immigrants [are] what make
us strong,” unlike “xenophobic” countries such as Russia, China, and . . .
“Japan.”
America would spy on terrorist groups in Afghanistan and
fight militants with our “over-the-horizon” capability — and when ISIS-K began
killing Afghans, Pakistanis, Iranians, and Russians, we were told that
everything was under control. When Putin resumed his invasion of Ukraine in
2022, we were told that America would stand with Ukraine for as long as it
takes and that Putin “cannot remain in power,” even as fear of escalation led
us to slow-walk weapons deliveries that would have given the Ukrainians a strategic
advantage.
And when Hamas invaded Israel on October 7, 2023, and
killed 1,200 men, women, and children, injured thousands more, and kidnapped
hundreds of civilians, including American citizens, Biden visited the Jewish
state and pledged his support, before gradually distancing himself from
Israel’s war on terrorism in a desperate effort to placate the left wing of the
Democratic Party.
Biden’s combination of bold statements and lazy and
clumsy execution allowed America’s adversaries to work their will, from eastern
Ukraine to the Middle East to the South China Sea. His reluctance to confront
the antisemitic Left contributed to the atmosphere of ambivalence toward
pro-Hamas protesters on America’s college campuses. On May 2, when Biden
denounced the campus violence in hastily scheduled remarks, it was after much
prodding. His comments were brief and late and ineffectual. They were a reminder
that a chaotic world reverberates inside the White House, where failed
presidents hurriedly react to events rather than establish new facts on the
ground.
In a contest between chaos presidents, Trump has a double
advantage. Not only is he a challenger whose record is viewed more favorably
than Biden’s. He is also associated, rightly or wrongly, with authority, with
law and order, with the police and the military and the working-class elements
in American society. Biden, on the other hand, leads a party highly dependent
on the college-educated and advanced-degreed, on campus culture, on
pro-Palestinian and even pro-Hamas factions, on activists who desire nothing
more than to take to the streets, harass “Zionists,” and tear down the
established order.
A few commentators, watching the unfolding disaster on
campus, have drawn parallels between 2024 and 1968. While there are some
similarities, you do not have to look decades into the past for a precedent to
the current election. Look at 2016. Then, Donald Trump benefited from chaos on
the southern border, rising terrorism, violence against police, and voter
dissatisfaction with the economy. He benefited from an opponent whom few voters
liked and who often seemed elitist and out of touch. He benefited from the
notion that his peculiar brand of crisis was preferable to the crises generated
by contemporary American liberalism. That is why people chose Trump. And why
they look like they are about to choose him again.
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