By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, July 05, 2024
Kamala Harris can have anything she wants—except one
thing.
The only way Kamala Harris becomes president of these
United States is if Joe Biden vacates the office before Election Day. Were that
to happen, it is almost certain that her sole memorable act in office would be
handing the keys over to Donald Trump, who is set to thrash Biden in the
election and who might very well thrash Harris worse if the polls taken before
11 minutes ago are to be believed. With my usual caveat that the
man is unfairly maligned, Biden and Harris would end up with something like
Neville Chamberlain’s reputation if they usher Trump back into the Oval
Office.
If Harris could admit to herself the reality of her
political position—she isn’t going to be elected president in the foreseeable
future and currently is pointed like a rocket at a career-and-reputation-ending
disaster—then she would appreciate that she is in a terrific position
nonetheless. She ought to be the happiest person in Washington because she has
two things in her pocket: the capacity to drive Joe Biden off the ticket, and
the opportunity to benefit from this mightily.
You can imagine the press conference: “It has been my
honor to serve with such a great and honorable man as Joe Biden, but I can no
longer ignore his rapid decline in recent months, and the country cannot afford
to risk …” blah, blah, blah. And, then: “I am honored that so many
people in my party—people at the highest level—encouraged me to seek the
presidency on my own, in part because of what that would mean to women and
people of color. But I have decided that I can best serve my country by …”
Fill in the blank. There’s a gubernatorial election in
California in 2026, and Gavin Newsom could do a great deal to clear the way for
Harris if she wanted to be the Democratic nominee, which would all but ensure
her election. She might even be good at the job—better than she was at being
vice president, anyway. Maybe she’d like a prestigious professorship or the
presidency of a university and a couple of Silicon Valley board sinecures; I
suspect that the necessary vacancies could be arranged. Janet Napolitano was
president of the University of California, which is not a bad gold watch for
someone who topped out as a Cabinet member in Washington. The current UC system
president earns a million bucks a year. Harris would probably get an
eight-figure book deal, a cable-news contract if she wanted one—anything …
except the presidency.
If Harris clears the way for a more competitive Democrat,
she’ll win her party’s thanks; if she clears the way for a Democrat who wins,
they’ll try to put her on Mount Rushmore.
And if you can imagine the press conference in which she
gracefully steps aside, imagine the conversation before the press conference:
“Mr. President, it’s been an honor. I’m going to go make some money and maybe
run for governor of California. I don’t want to be blamed for handing the keys
over to Trump. Do you want to make your resignation announcement before I
gut you in public or a week and a half after the fact as you’re bleeding out?
Because I’d vote for before.”
Washington is full of bright, driven people, all of whom
want … something. Some of them are idealists, some of them are
professional grudge-nursers, some of them are status whores (in fact, all of
them are status whores, but some are only status whores) who have been
running for president since they were 15 years old, some of them just want to
get paid and went to the place where they have the biggest pile of money. All
of that intelligence and ambition, and nobody can figure out how to get what he
wants by giving the Democratic Party—and the country—what it needs, which is
Joe Biden gone.
I hope Harris is having those conversations right now,
though she should have been having them a year ago. If the so-called insiders
and elites and establishment were one-sixth as Machiavellian and subtle and
cynical as the conspiracy theorists would have you believe, Biden would have
been out on his ear before his hospice-ready “I will show
you fear in a handful of dust” debate performance terrified his party into
… not action—no, not that! not yet!—but thinking and talking in a
semi-serious way about action, of some kind, at some point, if conditions are
favorable, taking some meetings, making some calls, if …
Kamala Harris can go down in ignominy by losing as vice
president or, maybe, go down in ignominy by losing as president after serving
in the office for 11 minutes, the Lady Jane Grey of American politics. Or she
can do the country—and herself—a solid by sticking a political knife in the
back of her boss and reaping the rewards.
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