By Matthew Continetti
Saturday, October 12, 2024
Michael Dukakis shows up in a tank. George H. W. Bush
checks his watch during a debate. John Kerry says he was for the $87 billion
for Iraq before he was against it. Mitt Romney writes off the 47 percent of
voters who receive government benefits. Hillary Clinton lambastes the
deplorables.
Such moments brought clarity. They defined the
candidates. They laid out the stakes. They changed the story.
Add another to the list. On Tuesday, Kamala Harris
appeared on The View. A friendly host asked if there’s anything she
would do differently than President Biden. Harris hesitated, as if she hadn’t
anticipated or understood the question.
That was typical. Her answer was not. “There is not a
thing that comes to mind,” she said.
Oof. Not only did Harris take ownership of the Biden
record. She displayed a startling lack of independence. Not a thing comes to
mind? Not the inflation that’s gnarled the economy, not the millions of illegal
immigrants who have crossed the southern border, not the widespread feeling of
social disorder in cities and on campuses, not the withdrawal from Afghanistan,
not the handling of Ukraine, not the regional war in the Middle East?
Harris says no. She’s proud of this administration. She
stands by her man. “I’ve been part of most of the decisions that have had
impact,” she added. And what impact: a president with 41 percent job approval
and a nation where just 22 percent of people are satisfied with the direction
of the country.
Thus Harris’s dilemma: She’s the incumbent vice president
of an unpopular administration, running to chart “a new way forward” without
saying anything fresh. Even the most talented political gymnast would have
trouble pulling off such a stunt. Harris stumbled at the outset.
Her loyalty to Biden is a mystery. What’s stopping her
from going her own way? She wouldn’t split the party. She wouldn’t alienate
swing voters. She wouldn’t hurt fundraising — her campaign has raised a billion
dollars. These are the last weeks before Election Day. Harris is free to be
herself.
Maybe that’s the problem. Harris doesn’t just show
loyalty when she defends Biden. She reveals intellectual bankruptcy. The policy
cabinet is bare. She has no substantive rebuttals to criticism of inflation,
the border, and the Middle East. Her proposals are rehashes of White House
initiatives on taxes, housing, and small business. Remember that she went on The
View to announce a new home health-care entitlement. No one noticed.
Any differences with Biden are cosmetic. Harris often
points out that she and Biden are not the same person. Well, I’m not Brad Pitt.
The issue isn’t who you are. It’s how you act, what you want, what you believe.
Harris said later on during The View that unlike
Biden, she plans to nominate a Republican to her cabinet. Another superficial
answer. Cabinet secretaries have little independent authority. Which Republican
is she thinking of? What post? To what end? Jeff Flake at Commerce is one
thing. Liz Cheney as secretary of defense — well, now you’ve piqued my
interest. More likely, of course, Harris would appoint a token Republican to an
unimportant office, adding a bipartisan veneer to a progressive administration.
The irony is that the more closely Harris hews to the
Biden line, the more she weakens her candidacy. Her momentum has stalled.
Polling shows Donald Trump shoring up his position in the Sun Belt and gaining
ground in the Rust Belt. Voters trust Trump on the economy. They don’t know
enough about Harris to embrace her candidacy. They see her as too liberal.
Hugging Biden won’t change that.
Nor has Biden reciprocated. He’s not exactly helping
Harris’s cause. He flaunts the connection with his veep, toying with her
prospects as he fills out his days in the White House. Rather than talk up her
agenda, he boasts of how she’s with him. Rather than take another long
vacation, he’s decided to become active in the campaign. Rather than join
Harris in her ridiculous feud with Florida’s governor, he’s been in regular
contact with Ron DeSantis and complimented Florida’s emergency response.
Democrats are worried. In an election this close, every
minute counts. Yet Harris’s rollout, convention, debate performance, massive
resources, and positive press haven’t given her a decisive edge. It may be
Harris’s race to lose. But right now, she’s losing it.
No comments:
Post a Comment