By Noah Rothman
Monday, July 01, 2024
To call it “damage control” cheapens the
multidirectional disaster-mitigation campaign in which Biden’s team is now
engaged. The president’s camp is throwing haymakers at anyone on their side who
is imprudent enough to be honest about the president’s condition and his
dimming political prospects in November. But for all their denunciations of the
“bedwetters” in their midst, the last 72 hours cannot be
undone. Even if Democrats manage to rationalize themselves into accepting
Biden’s renomination to the White House, the incumbent has been done in by his
allies’ candor.
The New York Times editorial board led
the way last Friday afternoon. For Biden to run for reelection now risks “the
stability and security of the country” by “forcing voters to choose” between
Trump’s “deficiencies” and Biden’s. The president’s “age and infirmity” have
been laid bare (notwithstanding the paper’s best efforts to disguise them by
accusing those who noticed his frailties of misinforming their audiences). The
party needs to find someone “more capable” to serve in the White House.
The editorial was swiftly followed by similarly panicked
calls from left-leaning outfits for a deliverance from Joe Biden’s candidacy.
“This wasn’t a bad night,” the Atlanta Journal-Constitution declared.
“It was confirmation of the worst fears of some of Biden’s most ardent
supporters” that “age has finally caught up” with the president. The “mental
and physical rigors” of the presidency preclude another four-year term for
Biden, and that fact has become an insurmountable obstacle before his
reelection. “The shade of retirement is now necessary for President Biden,” the
paper’s editorial board concluded.
“Thursday’s debate was designed to answer the question of
whether Mr. Biden was fit to be president — and in this it succeeded,”
the Economist’s editors determined. He is “befuddled and incoherent
— too infirm, frankly, to cope with another four years in the world’s hardest
job.” For Biden to stay the course would be an act of “national endangerment,”
the New Yorker’s David
Remnick wrote. Onetime CNN correspondent Chris Cillizza shared an unsolicited
text he received from a Democratic operative and a delegate to the upcoming
Democratic National Convention, which crystalizes the conundrum facing
Democrats of good conscience. “I know I’m pledged to him, but how the f*** can
I vote for Biden?” the unnamed delegate asked. “How can I do that to my
country?”
How, indeed.
And yet, when the shock of the president’s cataclysmic
debate performance has worn off and the demands associated with tribal
affinities reassert themselves, it is a safe bet that these and other nervous
Democratic partisans will find a way to rally around the head of their party.
Even if Biden lacks the vigor necessary to corral his party’s more restive
elements, the threat they see in Donald Trump’s restoration to the presidency
will do that work for him. There is, however, no going back to the pre-debate
status quo — not for the outlets and columnists who put their reputations on
the line.
It’s not hard to imagine the conditions that might
prevail in the fall that would compel the pundits, editorial boards, and
weak-kneed politicians to take it all back. With sorrow and disappointment,
they will attempt to rally the troops against a man they will insist Americans
cannot trust with the presidency. But they will be making that case in service
to a figure they have already implied cannot be trusted to operate heavy
machinery, much less serve in the Oval Office. Do they expect that their own verdicts
will be stricken from the record, that Republicans will not throw their own
words back in their faces?
The calls for Biden to surrender his party’s nomination
clearly signal that he cannot serve in the presidency for another four years;
taken to their logical conclusion, they also mean that the president cannot
serve out the six months left in his first term. Republican politicians and
ad-makers will not let the voting public forget it.
The Democrats are right to fear the chaos that would be
unleashed if Biden were to abandon his party to its fate at this late date. The
most likely result would be to convince persuadable voters that the president’s
party is too disorderly to be rewarded with power. But Democrats delude
themselves if they think that voters are not already witnessing a party in
crisis.
Today, the Biden family is attacking the president’s own staffers, alleging that he
was over-coached and “not well-rested.” Those staffers are, in turn, throwing
the president under the bus:
The most influential outlets in the Democratic firmament
are calling on the president to step aside, and the president’s loyalists have
responded to those nudges by indulging in their barely repressed contempt for
those outlets.
This is chaos, but it’s not the forgivable sort. The
chaos we’re witnessing now has accompanied a flailing effort to preserve a set
of circumstances voters find intolerable. But whatever confusion follows the
struggle to oust Biden from the nomination, at least Democrats will be trying
to get right with the majority of voters, who think it’s time for Biden to be
set out to pasture.
Even if Democrats invent some new mechanism in order to rid themselves of their elected presidential nominee, there’s no going back to last week. The jig is up. Democratic partisans have written the president’s political epitaph. Biden’s allies cannot retract their noble (if imprudent) honesty. The longer it takes Democrats to recognize that there’s no coming back from this, the longer it will take them to repair the damage wrought by Biden’s vise grip on power.
No comments:
Post a Comment