By Noah Rothman
Monday, May 20, 2024
President Joe Biden and his allies have invested mountains of political capital and mortgaged their credibility trying to
convince American voters that, but for their leadership, the country would be
in a far darker place than it is today. Apparently, that public-relations
campaign was a failure. That’s what we must conclude from Biden’s address to
the graduates of Morehouse College over the weekend. There, the president
shifted tactics. Rather than promote his administration as an obstacle before
the forces of regression and misrule, he insisted that those forces are on the
march — successfully implementing their nefarious program despite the Biden
White House’s best efforts.
“Extremists closed the doors of opportunity,” Biden
informed the school’s deflated student body. He castigated the Supreme
Court for striking down affirmative action — a body that is representative of
those who would “attack the values of diversity, equality, and inclusion.” He
savaged Republicans, who he claimed have embarked on a successful “national
effort to ban books” to “erase history.” Those Republicans “don’t see you in
the future of America,” he informed the audience at the predominantly black
school.
Who are these ugly calumnies for? Biden’s lament for the
fate of affirmative action is meant to mimic a sentiment Democrats assume black
Americans share, but there’s little evidence for that presupposition. A Gallup poll produced shortly after the Court’s
decision in June 2023 found that a majority of black adults (52 percent) and
even more younger black Americans under the age of 39 (62 percent) said doing
away with racial preferences was “mostly a good thing.”
Likewise, these students are unlikely to be enlivened by
the threat posed by a campaign to “ban books” insofar as the campaign he
alleges is not happening. If Biden objects to the attempt to impose
age-related restrictions on accessing sexually explicit material in publicly
operated libraries, he should say so. If he takes offense to restricting access
to literature in whatever form it takes, he might spare a word of condemnation
for the book “de-emphasizers” on his side of the aisle who have limited students’ intake of classic works such as
the Little House series, Huckleberry Finn, To
Kill a Mockingbird, The Cay, Of Mice and Men, The
Odyssey, and so many other déclassé titles. Biden abandoned a foolish
consistency on this subject because honesty would get in the way of his
attempts to depress his audience.
The bleakness of life in modern America is unrelenting,
as the president explained. “Today in Georgia,” Biden
continued, “they won’t allow water to be available to you while you wait in
line to vote in an election. What in the hell is that all about?” Once again,
Biden and his spectators should take heart — their dour outlook on the state of
the nation is fueled by misapprehensions.
Georgia election law does not prohibit voters
from consuming whatever they like while waiting to vote, and it doesn’t
prohibit service providers from doing business with prospective voters. What
it does do is block electioneering from within 150 feet of a
polling place or 25 feet from voters queueing up at a polling place. Biden must
be aware of this elementary distinction by now; he’s retailed this false attack
on Georgia’s election laws for years now. We must assume the truth would
inconvenience the president in his effort to dispirit Morehouse’s graduating
class.
Biden sank further into despondency from there. “It’s
natural to wonder if democracy you hear about actually works for you,” the president said of the constitutional framework he
is bound by oath to defend.
“What is democracy if Black men
are being killed in the street? What is democracy if a trail of broken promises
still leave Black — Black communities behind? What is democracy if you have to
be 10 times better than anyone else to get a fair shot? And most of all, what
does it mean, as we’ve heard before, to be a Black man who loves his country
even if it doesn’t love him back in equal measure?”
Biden eventually got around to defending the legitimacy
of the system he stewards, but listeners to his speech could be forgiven for
concluding that the president believes the fight to save representative
self-government is already lost. It is his job to “call out the poison of white
supremacy, to root out systemic racism,” Biden insisted. But the litany of
victories Biden attributed to xenophobes and chauvinists surely left his more
credulous spectators disconsolate. If Morehouse students came into Biden’s
speech convinced, as so many young people are, that the Biden years have been a
failed experiment, the president’s speech only convinced them of their own
wisdom.
Biden’s speechwriters are struggling to reconcile their
conflicting motivations. On the one hand, job number one for an incumbent
president is to convince voters that they are better off than they were four
years ago. But there is no appetite for optimism among the political class,
certainly not among progressive social reformers. Given the scale of the
challenges before the nation — the unchecked avarice of its wealthiest
citizens, the corruptibility of its institutions, the immorality of its foreign
policy, and the resurgent bigotries threatening to roll back “progress” on a
variety of fronts — what cause is there for optimism? Whether they genuinely
believe all this is immaterial; they want us to believe it.
The Biden campaign hopes to mobilize unenthusiastic black
voters by convincing them that, no matter how bad things are under this
president, they could always be worse. And who knows? That worked for Barack
Obama. But as an electoral strategy, Biden’s is fraught. The president wants us
to believe that the American social fabric is coming apart, and it will only
fray further absent dramatic changes to the status quo. If Biden is not
careful, a critical mass of voters might agree with him.
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