By Matthew Continetti
Saturday, July 13, 2024
President Biden’s high-stakes press conference at
this week’s NATO summit was a triumph — for his challenger, former president
Trump.
Why? Because Biden’s performance did nothing to resolve
the Democratic Party’s dilemma over his status as its 2024 presidential
candidate. The press conference supplied Biden’s internal critics with
ammunition against his candidacy, such as when he misidentified Kamala Harris
as “Vice President Trump.” But Biden’s answers on foreign-policy questions were
also strong enough to reassure, at least for the moment, his allies within the
party. The result is that Biden lives to fight another day as the Democrats’
presumptive nominee.
Which is exactly what Trump wants. Since Biden’s terrible
debate performance on June 27, the former president has basked in the best of
both worlds: Biden has struggled to put down the revolt within his party, while
sinking in popularity and trailing Trump in national polling averages as well
as in swing states.
Prolonging the agony, with liberal media and Hollywood
celebrities as well as Democratic congressmen calling for Biden’s withdrawal
from the ticket or abdication from office, as the president engages in a
high-stakes campaign to show he is up to the job, only helps Trump’s situation.
Democratic divisions will remain in public view. The media’s attention will be
on the incumbent. And Biden is liable to commit another gaffe, misstep, or
brain freeze at any moment.
It’s hard to see any way out for the Democrats. Stick
with Biden, and he is likely to go down in defeat to Donald Trump, perhaps in
an Electoral College landslide. Move against him, and then . . . well, what?
Expect Biden to remain silent as Vice President Harris becomes the nominee?
Assume the Democratic Party, already divided by Israel and leery of Biden’s age
and Harris’s unpopularity, will accept the change peaceably and without
protest? Organize a “blitz primary” in the space of a month that will find a
dream ticket capable of defeating Trump?
How will Biden’s supporters, the men and women and
two-spirits who voted for him in the primary, react when the Axis of Arrogance,
Barack Obama, George Clooney, and Nancy Pelosi, throw him overboard? Will
Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ilhan Omar be fine with an
untested Democratic nominee who hasn’t committed to the “unity platform” Biden
endorsed four years ago? Will swing voters rally behind Gavin Newsom or
Gretchen Whitmer or Josh Shapiro or J. B. Pritzker?
There’s no guarantee. Far from it: The Democrats must
choose between going to November with an unpopular incumbent the public
believes is too old for the job, or an unknown and untested candidate who will
no doubt have her or his own scandals, challenges, and liabilities.
The party is responsible for this mess. Its officials,
donors, and spokesmen waited to move against Biden until after his decline was
impossible to ignore. The Biden inner circle, from key aides to family members,
have hid his condition from the public and fed his illusion that he is ahead of
or neck and neck with Trump. And Biden assumed he could outwit time. At one
point during his press conference Thursday, Biden said that one function of age
is that it makes you wiser. Maybe for some people. Not for him.
Biden’s fundamental problem is that we age in one
direction alone. He’s no Benjamin Button, and by the time you read these words,
Brad Pitt may have called on him to withdraw from the race, as well. The days
pass arithmetically, while Biden’s condition seems to have worsened
geometrically, from March to June and now July. Sure, he has good days, good
moments. That’s the issue. We shouldn’t have to count on Biden having a good
day or good moment. And America’s enemies will act as soon as they believe he’s
absent or weak.
In Star Trek they talk about the
Kobayashi Maru, the no-win scenario. The ship is under attack, defeat is
certain, and there are no good options. How does the captain respond? Look at
what Biden has done: He’s denied reality. He’s refused to change course. He won’t
give up the bridge. And this ship is going down.
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