Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Biden and The Central Issue of the 2024 Election

Today Joe Biden formally announced his re-election campaign for 2024.   Many - myself included - would like a younger candidate, but in politics and elections one typically does not get to vote for their ideal candidate, but rather the better of the options presented.  As we face the 2024 election, the choice between Biden or Donald Trump (or some Trump mini-me like Ron DeSantis) poses a start choice between the forces on the right who want to diminish the rights of the many in favor of the few (typically Christian extremists and white supremacists and enemies of democracy), and Biden and the forces who support rights for all and personal freedoms, not to mention the survial of democracy itself in America.  In his re-election campaign announcement, Biden rightly framed the over arching issue as one between regaining the soul of America and protecting democracy and personal freedoms versus the ugliness and extremism that now fully defines the Republican Party and its ever more hideous base. As a gay American - and the grandparent of five children - I have grave concerns for what a Republican victory in 2024 could mean in terms of lost rights and an increasingly fascist regime where many would be written off if not erased.   A column in the Washington Post looks at this framing of the central issue voters will face in 2024.  Here are highlights:

What’s striking about the video launching President Biden’s reelection campaign is not what is different from the one he put out exactly four years earlier, but what is the same: Both show scenes of violence and hard-right extremism in the opening moments.

And both put the focus right where it should be, on the question that will define the future of the United States.

In 2019, his campaign announcement featured the August 2017 march in Charlottesville, during which, candidate Joe Biden recalled, “Klansmen and white supremacists and neo-Nazis come out in the open, their crazed faces, illuminated by torches, veins bulging and bearing the fangs of racism. Chanting the same antisemitic bile heard across Europe in the ’30s.”

Four years later, his announcement recalls the bloody riot that took place at the U.S. Capitol in the weeks before his inauguration, in which supporters of then-President Donald Trump tried to overturn the result of a fair election in which the results weren’t all that close. “When I ran for president four years ago, I said we are in a battle for the soul of America — and we still are,” Biden said.

[f]}ormer president [Trump] is shown only fleetingly, embracing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who at this early stage of the race is considered Trump’s leading rival for the 2024 GOP nomination. As the other face of “MAGA extremists,” the video features Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) in her Cruella de Vil fur-lined coat heckling during Biden’s State of the Union address. The message is that extremism is not a problem that has been — nor will be — cured by barring Trump from the Oval Office.

In the title of his announcement video, Biden also seizes ownership of a word that Republicans, notably DeSantis, have claimed as their own and twisted beyond recognition: freedom.

This is surely a note Biden will keep sounding, although Americans should not need reminders in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision overturning Roe v. Wade, the measures that are being taken by Republicans across the country to make it harder to vote, the lies with which Trump and his supporters have undermined the integrity of our election system, the efforts to roll back LGBTQ rights.

“Every generation of Americans have faced a moment when they have had to defend democracy. Stand up for our personal freedom. Stand up for the right to vote and our civil rights,” Biden says. “And this is our moment. Let’s finish this job.”

“Finish the job” is hardly the most electrifying of battle cries. . . . And, of course, there will be many unknowable events between now and November 2024, at home and in the international arena, that could shift what voters see as their top concerns.

And as an incumbent president, he has the most demanding of day jobs, which gives him the luxury — which his advisers say he will use — of not being expected to spend all that much time on the hustings, where his lifelong tendency to say the wrong thing is sure to create instantly viral awkward moments.

Finally, he has a record. No, these four years haven’t been the New Deal or the Great Society, as much as his strategists and most ardent supporters would like us to believe otherwise. But there have been achievements: an infrastructure program that his predecessors couldn’t deliver, pandemic aid, massive investments to curb climate change, an economy that is growing despite rough waters. It is hard to see how he could have gotten much more done, given the domestic and international challenges — including the pandemic and rallying the Western allies after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — and the political constraints of a sharply divided government.

In 2020, Biden was right. Americans were looking for a corrective to extremism and division. He can’t argue convincingly that things have gotten all that much better since then, even without Trump in the White House. But the stakes are even clearer. This is still about the character of the country.

No comments: