It was a plausible plan, the political equivalent of stealing a base.
Joe Biden had promised South Carolina Democrats that their state would host the first primary of 2024. The state of New Hampshire declined to step aside. To honor his promise, Biden did not enter the New Hampshire primary.
That decision opened an opportunity for Biden detractors inside and outside the Democratic primary process: . . . How hard could it be to win a one-dog dog show?
Turns out, harder than it looks. Almost 100,000 people cast ballots in the New Hampshire Democratic primary. Not quite 25,000 chose a Biden alternative. Almost all the rest seem to have written in Biden’s name.
A lot of money has been raised and spent this cycle on the hypothesis that a big internal demand among Democrats exists for an alternative to President Biden. The anti-vaccine celebrity Robert F. Kennedy Jr. entered the Democratic contest in March 2023 (then switched to an independent candidacy in October). The gadfly academic Cornel West, seeking to attract Biden voters in the left wing of the Democratic Party, entered as a Green Party candidate before also switching to run as an independent. In the Democratic primary race proper, the spiritualist Marianne Williamson and Representative Dean Phillips of Minnesota have tried their luck.
A prospective No Labels ticket now looms—premised on the assumption that millions of centrist Democrats want to join hands with moderate Republicans in equal rejection of both ex-President Trump and President Biden.
Those who promoted a Biden challenge could cite proof points: the president’s soft approval numbers, apparent disaffection among younger and minority voters, the president’s age and alleged infirmity. The challenge-promoters argued that they had the best interests of the party at heart; they wanted a candidate more certain to defeat Trump.
Yet, when put to the test in New Hampshire, the proposition met a harsh rejection. It was rejected even though Biden did not campaign in the state at all.
That New Hampshire rejection does not necessarily mean the proposition is doomed for all time. Maybe Phillips was the wrong messenger, too obviously driven by ego and pique, too void of a message more powerful than “We need an alternative.
But maybe the challenge-promoters are also missing something important. Trump has generated a deep personal bond with members of the (shrunken) Republican Party. Biden has not done that. But that is not the nature of the transaction between Biden and his party. Biden typically opens remarks with the phrase “Here’s the deal”—and that’s exactly what Biden offers: a deal, not a cult.
The Democratic Party is a big, sprawling mess, and has long been that way. In the Trump era, it spans the ideological distance from Bernie Sanders to Cindy McCain. There is no one Democratic “base” . . . . Democratic coalitions are typically assembled by highly targeted benefits rather than mobilized by big messages as Republicans often are: $35 insulin, defense of abortion rights, student-loan forgiveness, environmental measures. The current coalition includes intense supporters and intense critics of the state of Israel. Altogether, not an easy horse to ride. . . . The best rider is one who is able to keep reminding each part of the coalition that it needs to get along with the other parts.
Once upon a time, American households contained large numbers of people and a single TV set. At peak viewing times, the whole family would have to agree on a show. Dad might want an action drama, Mom might want an edgy comedy, one of the kids might want something creative, another might want something scary, but everybody liked nature shows. So that’s what the network aired on a Sunday night. Network executives described their task as inventing “the least objectionable program.” As a candidate for president, Biden may be the “least objectionable” since Dwight Eisenhower (who won reelection in 1956 despite a near-fatal heart attack the year before).
Most reelections campaigns are a referendum on the incumbent. Four more years, yes or no? More of the same or something new? The 2024 election is different. Trump insists that everything always be a referendum on him. In 2024, Biden and his party are eager to agree. The anti-Trump coalition is bigger than the pro-Trump coalition: roughly 3 million votes bigger in 2016, 7 million votes bigger in 2020, probably somewhere between those two figures in 2024.
Yet Biden’s appeal and its limits may be the wrong place to pay attention. This year’s election is a contest between the constitutional and democratic forces in American society and the anticonstitutional and antidemocratic forces. The candidates are only incidentally the story; the fateful national choice, the deep social forces driving that choice—those are the story. Biden is not really the leader of the constitutional and democratic side of this mighty contest. Biden is the instrument of the constitutional and democratic side.
Trump is not going to be beaten by some charismatic newcomer, by some artful strategy. Trump’s going to be beaten by the revulsion of American voters. The message of New Hampshire? The nominee who is needed most is the one who gets in the way least.
Thoughts on Life, Love, Politics, Hypocrisy and Coming Out in Mid-Life
Thursday, January 25, 2024
Biden: The Least Objectionable Candidate
I have been actively involved in politics for over three decades and while I support idealism I also recognize that it can lead to the election of those who in reality are an open threat to the ideals who want to give their votes to a perfect candidate. The reality is that in most elections, no such perfect candidate exists and one is left with choosing between the better of the two options offered by the nation's two major political parties or, just as often, choosing the least objectional of the two main party candidates. In 2016 some voters in a pique who disliked Hillary Clinton voted for third party candidates - and basically threw away their votes - and the result was the election of Donald Trump and the deep damage he has done to the nation and the threat he now poses to American democracy. Self-claimed idealism and high mindedness had the opposite impact that those spurning Clinton claimed to support. In 2024, we see a number of Democrats and independents whining about Joe Biden - e.g,. college students claiming they will vote third party over their unhappiness over the situation in Gaza - who seemingly could put Trump back in office, something that would betray their supposed humanitarian concerns. Trump doesn't give a damn about anyone but himself and I suspect doesn't care how many Gazans die. Let's not forget that the Trump regime literally put children in cages and tore migrant families apart. Is Trump the man you want again setting policy? I think not and a piece in The Atlantic looks at Biden's possible hidden strength, especially if idealists will get their heads out of their asses and face reality. Here are excerpts:
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1 comment:
Uncle Joe is the best man for the job.
Not only because he's the anti-Cheeto but because he's done a great job, taking into account that the Repugs have tried to kneecap him every ten steps.
Also, Cheeto (and the repugs) are very scared of him.
XOXO
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