By Rich Lowry
Thursday, August 08, 2024
How did Kamala
Harris become so good at this?
How does a sub-par vice president get transformed nearly
instantaneously into a joyful performer who can do no wrong?
It’s easy.
One of James Burnham’s laws was, “Where there is no
alternative, there is no problem.” Since there was no alternative to pumping up
Harris to star status — or the only alternative would be to sub out Joe Biden
for a barely replacement-level politician — she’s now inspirational, hip, and
beguilingly moderate.
In other words, Kamala has reversed the usual dynamic for
getting considered a JFK- or Obama-level political talent: She is great because
she’s the Democratic nominee; she’s not the Democratic nominee because she’s
great.
If Biden had done the responsible thing and stepped aside
last year, there presumably would have been a contested nomination battle.
Kamala would have been the favorite and perhaps would have won the nomination.
But she would have had to fight for it — doing town halls and interviews,
participating in debates, defending her record, dealing with media scrutiny, and
winning the support of real voters.
Securing a nomination is a major accomplishment, and
there’s usually a moment when even the weakest nominee looks like he might have
something going on: Wow — Dukakis is leading by 17 points. Or: Maybe
this Jack Kemp pick has injected the note of energy into the ticket that Bob
Dole needs. Etc.
Kamala didn’t have to prove her chops this way. To the
contrary, that she did nothing to win the Democratic nomination has perversely
smoothed her way to stardom.
A real nomination process would likely have exposed
Kamala or at least would have made the current cocoon impossible. All her
positions would have been litigated, and any change in policy would have been
seized on and denounced by fellow Democrats. In the context of a Democratic
primary, the media would have been happy to cover all this and ask the tough
questions — for all we know, they might even have become vested in some
candidate other than Kamala.
By fast-forwarding past the primaries and caucuses,
Kamala went directly into a race with Trump, where the media is inevitably
deeply committed to her.
Meanwhile, she hasn’t had to interact with voters in
settings where she’s going to get challenged; hasn’t had to do dozens of
interviews fighting for attention with other Democrats; and hasn’t seen, as
nominees often do, key lines of attack against her developed by intramural
party competitors.
She simply ascended, yet she is being treated like she
swept through the primaries and caucuses like an unstoppable political
phenomenon when she still has never run in a Democratic primary (she got out
too early in 2019 and got in too late in 2024). The sheer fact of her ascension
created the incentive for Democrats and the media to declare her great.
In reality, she’s a cardboard cutout of a politician
whose main political talent is to be able to, just barely, simulate
determination, passion, and mirth while reading from a teleprompter.
Insulated from real interactions and from media scrutiny,
running against an unpopular former president, and boosted by a party and press
that have no alternative but to invest all their hopes in her, she is suddenly
more than the sum of her parts.
Coach Walz may have told his players at some point that
there’s no substitute for going out and earning it. Kamala 2024 is a testament
to the fact that, actually, there is.
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