By Rich Lowry
Sunday, August 11, 2024
Joe Biden made Donald Trump feel fresh and vital.
No matter how commonplace Trump’s tropes and mode of
campaigning had become, they seemed compelling compared with the bleached-out
president of the United of States who had become a shell of himself.
With the Trump–Biden contrast no longer relevant, the
former president is operating in a new, much less forgiving environment. Kamala
Harris wants to run a youth-vs.-age and future-vs.-past campaign against Trump,
and she has some chance of making it work.
Against Biden, Trump represented the past, but also
change. Against Harris, he’s potentially just the past.
It’s not “old” as a matter of age that’s the issue,
although all those concerns are now about Trump. Ronald Reagan was old when he
took office, but he was offering a complete change of direction in policy and
exuded a youthful optimism and self-confident patriotism. The problem for Trump
is “old” as a matter of feeling familiar, tired, and played out.
The Mar-a-Lago press conference last week was a typical,
nay, stereotypical, Trump event — Trump looked commanding against a vivid
backdrop of American flags, but how many times have we seen that image?
He was a bit of everything — on message and off message,
confident and defensive, charming and insulting, and so it went. Again, how
many times have we watched it?
Even Trump’s outrages aren’t that surprising. That he
went with the “Kamala suddenly became black” line of attack wasn’t exactly
predictable, but nor is this kind of thing unexpected.
And, of course, we’ve repeatedly experienced cycles of
hope for a new, more disciplined candidate dashed by Trump’s insistence on
doing it his way.
Again, none of this mattered so much against a doddering
81-year-old man who a vast majority of the public thought incapable of serving
another four years. Biden was the past in everything he said and did. The
future doesn’t walk or talk the way Biden does, and he was the incumbent in the
race with a pitiful record to defend.
Although Trump was relatively disciplined in his campaign
against Biden, he seemed more interesting, spirited, and robust almost no
matter what he did.
That’s not true anymore. Kamala Harris may not really be
hip, but she is hipper than Trump. She’s certainly energetic enough for a full
slate of campaigning, and she’s presenting herself as a third force: neither
Biden nor Trump, a politician with an entirely new “vibe.”
All the memes and the “brat” branding may be annoying,
but it’s certainly new compared with anything that was going to feature in
Trump vs. Biden II.
Harris has another advantage. It wasn’t truly possible to
cover up Biden’s weakness.
Even if Biden wasn’t doing many interviews, he had to be
out in public — at international meetings, at White House events, and the like.
No matter how much the Democrats insisted everything was okay, he could be seen
stumbling, wandering, and losing his train of thought.
With Harris, Republicans might (for good reason) say that
she will lose herself in word-salad incoherence upon her first contact with a
challenging interview, but there is no way to establish it without such an
interview.
On the teleprompter, she seems just fine — pointed,
amusing, determined. So, it’s not as though her inability to sit through an
interview is being demonstrated every other day the way Biden was showing his
decline.
Most importantly, Trump was winning a change election
against Joe Biden. Now, he’s essentially tied with Harris on who will bring
positive change. The new CNBC poll had Harris at 39 percent on this question and
Trump at 38 percent.
There is plenty for Trump to work with to pull ahead on
this metric. People remember his record in office, if not his conduct, fondly,
and she has been an integral part of a failed administration and now embraces
almost all of Biden’s policies.
This isn’t a case that makes itself, though. It’s not
enough simply not to be Kamala Harris, the way it was not to be Joe Biden.
Trump is going to have to make focused attacks that break
through and aren’t lost in the haze of pointless controversies. This presents a
tactical question: If the choice is between an overly controlled candidate who
is relentlessly on message and an ill-disciplined candidate who is off message,
is it clear that the former (Harris) is worse than the latter (Trump)?
The comparison could be worse for Harris if her mode of
campaigning becomes a way to highlight her falsity and weakness, but that’s not
going to happen on its own, either.
Trump has a new challenge — his opponent is no longer an
aged incumbent president who has worn out his welcome.
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