By Nick Catoggio
Monday, July 01,
2024
A useful way to think about the presidential election is
in terms of the three I’s—inflation, immigration, and infirmity.
All three are momentous political problems for Joe Biden.
Against a strong Republican candidate, each one in isolation might be fatal.
Against a mediocre Republican, one might be survivable
but perhaps not two. Incumbency is a powerful advantage, yet not so powerful
that it can’t be overcome by a minimally competent challenger with solid
material to work with. That was the lesson of 2020.
Against Donald Trump, any two of the three might be
survivable. Swing voters will look for excuses not to restore a maniac to
power, after all. They might have credited an aged Joe Biden who had lost
control of the border for the roaring economy and low cost of living, or for
securing the border if the economy were sluggish and inflation high. Or, with a
double whammy of rising inflation and immigration weighing him down, they might
have pointed to the president’s comparative good health and cogency as reasons
to give him the benefit of the doubt over whatever the hell this is.
But when all three of the three I’s are weighing him
down?
The irony of the three I’s is that the one that’s least
under Biden’s control as a practical matter is the only one that remained
somewhat under his control as a political matter as of last week. He’s never
been able to do much about inflation; he could have done
something about immigration but allowed that ship to sail long ago. So he was
left trying to manage public perceptions of his infirmity, which made
Thursday’s debate crucial. Voters dislike Trump enough that they might have
accepted a 90-minute simulacrum of vigor by the president as proof that he’s
not as infirm as he sometimes appears.
Instead:
He can’t win anymore. Not even against Trump.
Rather than face that fact and do what little they can to
avert the looming civic catastrophe they helped engineer, Joe Biden and his
entourage of relatives, cronies, and parasites seem prepared to try to brazen
it out until Election Day. I’ve written about the Republican
hostage crisis many times; four days removed from last week’s debate,
America is now trapped in a Democratic hostage crisis. With the president
himself as the captor-in-chief.
Through their vanity, hubris, and lust for power, he and
his team are going to bring about a second Trump administration and the
sustained constitutional crisis that will inevitably follow.
In time, they’ll be seen as villains of history.
***
Frankly, at this point, they’ll be seen as villains of
history even if Biden drops out tomorrow.
Only his inner circle knows how long he’s resembled the
man we saw onstage on Thursday more so than the man who does a serviceable job
reading the State of the Union teleprompter every February, but leaks have
started to spring since the debate. This weekend Axios
reported that Jill Biden and several top aides “took steps early in his term to
essentially rope off the president” from the White House’s residential staff.
A separate Axios story
cited sources who claim that Biden is reliably present and engaged each day
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. but that he’s more likely to become “fatigued” outside
those hours. Which sounds suspiciously like sundowning.
Foreign diplomats and Democratic donors also have begun
whispering to the press about episodes that
concerned them, with one donor left “shaken” at a fundraiser last September
after the president told the same anecdote twice.
“This was all predictable, and it pisses me off that
everyone is acting shocked now,” one Democratic operative told the Wall
Street Journal about the uproar over Biden’s debate performance. “The
shocking thing is that people engaged in this deception, or delusion, or both,
for so long.”
Why so many went on engaging in that deception/delusion
long after much of the public had already lost faith in Biden’s mental
wherewithal is a fascinating psychological question, but one partial
explanation is that the White House browbeat those who refused. “Biden’s allies
worked behind the scenes to stave off a potential primary challenge, making
clear that politicians and operatives who contemplated one would be summarily
blackballed,” the Journal reported. “Reporters and commentators who
pointed out the obvious got similar treatment, berated in public and private
and accused of helping Trump return to the White House.”
By early 2023 it was clear that Biden’s predecessor as
president would be a formidable candidate for the office again. After Trump’s
lead in the Republican primary soared following his first indictment in
Manhattan in late March, Biden and his team had every reason to take seriously
the possibility of a second MAGA administration. If they knew the president was
in serious decline—more so even than was obvious from his public
appearances—that was the moment for them to do something good for their party and
for their country by revealing the truth and clearing the way for a more
competitive nominee.
They didn’t. In the end, “our
democracy” meant less to them than Joe Biden’s vanity and their own job
security. For the second time in this era, the solemnly held principles of a
political party’s leadership turned out to be a
lie. We all already suspected
it, but now we know for sure.
We’re left today with a hostage crisis and an election in
which the outcome can only be terrible to greater or lesser degrees.
***
The least bad outcome is one in which Biden is replaced
and his replacement defeats Trump. But that replacement is likely to be Kamala
Harris, a vice president who isn’t well liked and in
whom no one has much confidence. Thanks to the White House’s villainy,
she’ll now have all of four months—at most—to try to rally a leery electorate
around her. Her presidency would be haunted by perceptions that she was a
break-glass-in-case-of-emergency nominee by a party that didn’t really want
her.
The next best outcome is Biden hanging in there and
winning somehow, giving us a second term in which an already enfeebled
president will grow increasingly incapacitated and quite possibly be unable to
complete his term. Having seen his true condition on display at the debate,
America’s enemies will seek to take full advantage.
The worst outcome is, well, you know. It also happens to
be the most likely outcome.
Joe Biden controls enough delegates to ensure his party’s
nomination and so, unless and until he withdraws, Democrats and the broader
anti-Trump coalition are a hostage to his whims. Even if there were a way to
force him off the ticket, there’d be no non-divisive way to do so and not
enough time before November for the party to repair the divisions it had
created. So Biden can and probably will insist on fighting on to Election Day
as the Democratic nominee even as his polling disintegrates and he suffers further
humiliating “senior moments” in public, which he will certainly do.
If instead he chose to withdraw, he’d throw his party
into the unprecedented chaos of a nominee dropping out shortly before the
election. Desperate liberals would scramble to try to find a plausible
last-second alternative to Harris before inevitably concluding that they can’t,
achieving nothing in the process except to further undermine her publicly.
Already, in fact, Biden officials are warning donors that Harris
would control most of the campaign’s war chest if he drops out, which
sounds less like a statement of fact than a warning about the dire consequences
if they abandon him.
But it doesn’t look like he intends to drop out. The
president discussed the state of the campaign with his family this weekend at
Camp David and, wouldn’t you know it, the same people who have been using him
as a gravy train for all their lives want him to hang in there and roll the
dice on one more term. “One of the strongest voices imploring Mr. Biden to
resist pressure to drop out was his son Hunter Biden,” the New
York Times reported, which is true to the spirit of this wretched era
in politics. At this point, why wouldn’t the fate of American democracy
hinge on the selfish interests of a grifting crackhead?
The logic of hostage-taking has suffused Biden’s
operation so entirely in the last 72 hours that the campaign is allegedly
gaming out how to force the party to unify behind him. “They
know Biden just needs to make it to the Democratic convention in Chicago, which
opens eight weeks from today,” Axios
wrote of the president’s advisers. “After that, unity is the only choice.”
And what if he faints at a campaign appearance in October
or lapses into a fugue state during his September debate with Trump? You just
read the answer: Unity is the only choice.
Except it isn’t. It might be for strong Democratic
partisans and for diehard anti-Trumpers like me but there aren’t enough of us
to drag the old man over the finish line. Biden needs swing voters too. And
each time another “senior moment” happens, and they will, he’ll
lose more of them.
The president can’t win with three I’s hanging around his
neck. But Jill Biden might get another Vogue cover or
two before he leaves office if he stays on the ticket, which I guess is what’s
really important.
Biden’s operatives let greed, pride, and fear of
irrelevance steer them into a campaign they had every reason to know would
implode, and by so doing they’re going to end up midwifing a fascist succession
in the White House. They’re not villains of history to the degree that Republican
voters, the supreme political villains of this era, are.
But they’re villains all the same. And realistically
there’s not enough time left for them to do anything about it.
***
This tweet from Dartmouth College political science
professor Brendan Nyhan caught my attention.
Nyhan’s analogy isn’t perfect, as Biden is a sitting
president whose views on policy are in line with those of his party’s
establishment and Trump in 2016 very much was not. The difference between
Republican officials failing to stop him then and Democratic officials failing
to stop Biden in 2024 is the difference between not putting down an
insurrection and starting one.
But if it isn’t perfect, it’s uncomfortably close to
being true for those of us who ditched the GOP in order to align with liberals
in what we thought was common cause against a mutual illiberal enemy. The
Democratic hostage crisis that the Biden campaign has created resembles the
Republican hostage crisis that alienated conservatives like me in more ways
than one.
In both cases, extreme media malpractice helped bring it
about. In 2016 that malpractice took the form of too much coverage for Donald
Trump during the Republican primary, making him the “main character” of the
race and gifting him with earned media worth
literally billions of dollars. In 2024 the press had the opposite problem:
Whether because of self-delusion,
partisan bias, or bullying by the White House, the media failed to expose the
extent of Biden’s decline until it was laid shockingly bare at the debate.
The cowardice of party chieftains is another common
denominator. In 2016, establishment Republicans knew that their populist base
despised them and that the party would fracture if they moved in unison to try
to quash a Trump nomination. They opted to bite their tongues and play along
with him instead, believing that he’d lose to Hillary Clinton and that the
grassroots would learn a hard lesson about electability before everything got
back to normal. And now here we are.
Establishment Democrats are biting their tongues after
last week’s debate too but not (mostly) because they fear a revolt from below.
They fear retribution from above. Biden is the leader of the party and its
nominee for president until he chooses not to be; calling on him to drop out
will offend him, invite reprisals, draw accusations that the critic isn’t a
“team player,” and require an embarrassing reversal if he decides to stick it
out such that “unity is the only choice” come November.
There’s a third way that the two crises are similar. Both
demonstrate the pathologically toxic psychology of devout partisanship.
In the case of Republicans, that toxicity is a daily
preoccupation of this newsletter. For the sake of maintaining populist control
of the GOP and encouraging unity behind its leader, the grassroots right has
resolved to excuse or defend literally anything Donald Trump does, no matter
how malign. As I said: The supreme political villains of this era.
But many Democrats spent the last few days enabling
Biden’s hostage-taking by descending into nasty “join or die” partisanship of
their own. Few former Republicans have endeared themselves to liberals more
completely since 2016 than Tim Miller of The Bulwark, who wrote a
bestselling book
of regrets describing how he and his former party paved the way for Trump’s
ascendance. Yet Miller was attacked repeatedly from the left on social media
this weekend for finding Biden’s debate performance mortifying and demanding
that Democrats stop
gaslighting Americans (not to mention their
own donors) about the president’s condition.
As a result, for the first time since 2016, a rift is
forming in the anti-Trump coalition between the left and center-right that
boils down to tribalism. People like Miller, yours truly, and many members
of The Dispatch staff shed our partisan loyalties years ago
and have since grown to despise political tribalism as it turns uglier and more
idiotic. Despite my rooting interest in the election, my judgment about what’s
politically useful for the candidate I intend to support—Joe Biden just had
a bad night!—will not influence my belief in what’s true. There’s already a
party that specializes
in that and I’ll never be part of it again.
But many partisan Democrats feel differently. They’re on
a team, now and always. And they resent it terribly when some of the players
take to undermining the coach in public, even if the coach is drooling on
himself—especially if the coach is drooling on himself. If you’re
not willing to engage in a bit of calculated emperor’s-new-clothes denial about
Biden’s cognitive wherewithal at a fraught moment, what are you doing on this
team in the first place?
What a political coup it’ll be for the villains of
history if, by foolishly persisting with this doomed candidacy, they manage to
set the pro-democracy movement at each other’s throats and lead it to splinter
into camps of those who think Joe Biden can’t win, that he can win but
is in no condition to govern for five more years, and that he can win and will
muddle through a second term somehow, magically.
That’ll be a productive use of the next four months of
the campaign. And all because the president has convinced himself that he’s an
indispensable man, of whom the graveyards are full.
***
When I was younger and heard references to “the stupid
party and the evil party,” I didn’t know which was which. Or maybe I did know
and, being a conservative, resented the suggestion that I was evil for voting
Republican.
Now that I’m older and have lived through this era, I
understand how evil the evil party is. And this past week has reminded me how
stupid the stupid party is.
It’s indescribably stupid as a political matter for
Democrats to persist with Biden as their nominee after that debate. Their
strategy for winning was to try to turn the race into a referendum on Trump’s
fitness for office. Instead they’ve turned it into a referendum on Biden’s
fitness, with every nail-biting verbal hiccup on the campaign trail for the
next four months destined to reignite the “how far gone is he?” debate.
He and his operation might move heaven and earth for
weeks to come in order to convince reluctant liberals to circle the wagons
around him—only for him to trip and fall at a rally or wander around during a
public appearance or what have you.
Every bit of goodwill they might regain through sheer
partisan exertion can be lost in an instant. And, at some point, almost
assuredly will.
Then, after it happens and Trump is handed a second term
on a silver platter, the president’s party will engage in the most ferociously
bitter political recriminations of our lifetimes. As vicious as I thought
those would be before Biden’s horrific debate, it’ll be an order of
magnitude worse now. The president, his family, his advisers, Democratic
leaders, the media—no one will be spared from accountability for their role in
maneuvering America into an election in which reelecting a demagogic
coup-plotting felon became the “responsible” thing to do. They could have
stopped this candidacy months or years ago. They knew the stakes. They refused.
Everyone will recognize them as the villains of history that they are.
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