By Matthew Continetti
Saturday, October 05, 2024
The final month of election 2024 begins with J. D. Vance
triumphant, Tim Walz wounded, and the presidential race too close to call. By
now, it should go without saying that Walz bombed in Tuesday’s debate with
Vance. The Democratic vice-presidential nominee appeared nervous and
uncomfortable and uncertain of how to respond to the conflict between Israel
and Iran. He hardly landed a blow on the youthful, confident, fluent, and
unflappable Vance until the final minutes of the bout. Walz spoke too fast,
made silly faces, and squirmed when confronted with the fact that for years
he’d been lying about visiting Hong Kong during the Tiananmen Square
protests in 1989. “I’m a knucklehead at times,” Walz blurted.
That’s an understatement. Walz is more than a
knucklehead. He’s a liability. Why? Because vice-presidential nominees take an
electoral version of the Hippocratic Oath: Do no harm to the top of the ticket.
Walz had a good rollout and a quick and effective speech at the Democratic
National Convention. He entered the debate with positive favorable ratings. Yet he’s become a distraction
for Kamala Harris and her campaign. Walz is a walking reminder that Harris’s
judgment is questionable at best.
The problems began with evidence that Walz misrepresented
his military service. They mounted with further evidence that Walz
inflated additional items on his résumé. The campaign limited Walz’s contacts with the
media, fearing that he might display ignorance or misalignment with Harris’s
deliberately vague message. His stances on race and gender identity and, as J. D. Vance pointed out, abortion undercut the soft-focus moderation Harris is
selling in TV ads and interviews. Nor do his selfies with far-left scion Alex Soros reinforce Walz’s
preferred image as the aw-shucks football coach from Mankato.
The debate showcased these liabilities while revealing
others. Walz was lucky that there was, shockingly, a single question on foreign
policy. He was awkward and tongue-tied when asked if Israel had the right to
take preemptive action against Iran. He defended Obamacare’s individual mandate
to buy health insurance despite its long-standing unpopularity and repeal in
2017. His prevarication on late-term abortion enhanced his reputation for
dishonesty. His rat-a-tat delivery and awkward and jumbled turns of phrase,
including the utterance “I’ve become friends with school shooters,” left this
audience member alternately confused and zoned out.
This was not a man prepared to be president. This was not
a man prepared to be vice president. Walz came across instead as a
semi-competent progressive governor of a midsized state. Friendly guy, maybe,
but he’s not ready for the nuclear codes.
Democrats were also disappointed that Walz didn’t seize
every opportunity to attack J. D. Vance and Donald Trump as MAGA extremists
threatening the republic. Nor did he spend much time praising Harris’s
background, experience, and bold leadership for a new way forward. To the
contrary: He agreed with Vance throughout the evening.
The result was a debate over domestic policy that
established a few points of common ground and was praised in the media as civil
and substantive. That was not what the Harris team wanted. They would have been
much happier had Walz run out the clock calling Vance a lying weirdo.
Thus Harris was left with the worst of both worlds: Not
only did Walz lose, but he hardly tried to bring Vance down with him. Yes, Walz
scored points toward the end when he zinged Vance for refusing to admit that
Trump lost the 2020 election. But the exchange was also notable for being the
lone section of the debate where Vance played defense.
Walz said during his closing statement that Harris is
“bringing us a politics of joy.” Joy is what many Democrats and independents
felt after President Biden dropped out of the race and his party coalesced
around his 59-year-old vice president, who can read from a teleprompter, as its
nominee. That was two months ago. Joy is not what many Americans feel this
first week of October as war comes to the Middle East, survivors of Hurricane
Helene deal with the wreckage, and the first dockworkers’ strike since 1977 for
several days stopped half the nation’s ocean shipping.
The one major decision Kamala Harris has made in this
compressed campaign is choosing a running mate. That choice came down to Walz
or Pennsylvania’s Josh Shapiro. Rather than select the highly popular
51-year-old governor of the most important state in this election, Harris chose
Walz.
Why? Shapiro’s identity as a pro-Israel Jew might have
outraged the Democrats’ progressive anti-Israel base. And Shapiro came into his
job interview with demands, asking for guarantees and a seat at the high table.
How dare he. Shapiro’s “baggage” was his ethnicity and
his religion and his interest in recognition and authority. All this was too
much for Harris, who opted for the progressive agent of organized labor who
governs a state that hasn’t voted for a Republican for president in half a
century and who says that Representative Ilhan Omar’s presence in Congress
brightens his day.
Harris made the wrong decision. A bad decision. How many
more will she make if she becomes president?
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