By Matthrew Continetti
Saturday, June 29, 2024
It was clear within the first few minutes that the
presidential debate was not going to go well for President Joe Biden. His
breath was heavy, his voice was raspy and faint, his physical bearing poor.
When he wasn’t speaking, his mouth was agape. His answers rambled, and he was
sometimes incoherent. Every so often, he coughed noticeably. He did not look
well.
This wasn’t the hyped-up, partisan Biden who appeared at
the State of the Union in March. This was the Biden who mumbled argle-bargle at
the White House’s Juneteenth celebration.
The contrast with former president Donald Trump was
apparent. Trump was confident, direct, and forceful. Unlike in 2020, he did not
interrupt his opponent or the moderators. He followed the debate rules. He kept
his facial expressions, and even his sarcasm, to a minimum. I have watched
every Trump debate since he entered electoral politics in 2015. Thursday night
was his best performance.
I’ve missed quite a few Biden debates because of his
longevity, but this was easily his worst showing since 2008. And while his
answers became somewhat steadier over time, he could not overcome the visual of
the split screen with Trump.
On the left of television screens around the world, Trump
looked like he had just stepped off the 2020 campaign trail. On the right,
Biden looked like a diminished man who is not up to the job and cannot be
expected to complete a second full term as president. Biden’s presence
confirmed that Robert Hur, the special counsel who investigated the president’s
handling of classified documents, was, if anything, pulling punches when he
wrote that Biden is “a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.”
The split screen explains why the level of panic among
liberal commentators and Democratic strategists on social media was so high
during the debate. This wasn’t some “cheap fake” or altered video meme online.
This was happening in real time, in a television studio in Atlanta, with only
Biden, Trump, Jake Tapper, and Dana Bash in the room. How do you spin what
Americans saw Thursday night? You can’t.
Nor were Americans the only ones watching Biden’s
performance and assessing Biden’s demeanor. Xi Jinping, Vladimir Putin, the
mullahs, and Kim Jong Un tuned in as well. And the world has become a more
dangerous place.
Biden’s hubris might not only cost him a second term and
cause Democrats to lose Congress this November. It may provoke America’s
adversaries to commit hostile acts before January 20, 2025. And if that
happens, Biden won’t be the only one who loses. We all will.
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