In both cases, Biden put country over
self, overcame his own immense personal sorrow, and concentrated on how best to
serve his country. Biden has been, over the years, the embodiment of John F.
Kennedy’s dictum: “Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can
do for your country.” In the first case, the junior senator became famous for
commuting by train between his home in Delaware and his job in Washington as a
means of taking care of both the business of government and his duties to his
two surviving and motherless children, Beau and Hunter. In the second, he put
aside his grief and the sting of his former boss’s having passed him over in
favor of Clinton, and threw his hat into the ring for the presidency in the 2020 election,
with the well-placed conviction that he and his long experience in government
would be sufficient for him to defeat Donald Trump after Hillary Clinton lost
her bid to do the same in 2016.
In hindsight, had Obama thrown his support
behind his vice president in 2016, perhaps this would have been President Biden’s
second term in office rather than his first, and we would not have had to
witness the chaos and disarray into which the political arena has been thrown
by questions regarding his age, health and suitability for continuing as
president. More importantly, perhaps Donald Trump would have been a mere flash
in the pan and the US would not have had to endure the dire consequences of his
narcissistic, authoritarian machinations and his clear and present threats to
democracy. But we’ll never know. Maybe, however, this is part of the reason
that former President Obama is being so circumspect this time around.
Once again, this past weekend, we saw
President Joe Biden put his country and party before his own personal wishes
and goals. Despite his burning desire to remain in office for another four
years and continue the job he had started, as well as staving off the
unmistakable threat to democracy of another Trump presidency, he faced the hard
and painful fact that he had, because of his age and failing acuity, lost the
confidence of many Democratic voters and Independents, as well as of many of
even his staunchest supporters within the party itself. In light of this, he
seems to have clearly seen that his continued candidacy might well bring
another victory for Trump and end up being the death knell for American
democracy as we know it. As such, he last Sunday withdrew his bid for a second
term and threw his full support behind his vice president, Kamala Harris.
While Harris has been something of an
enigma and, for some, a disappointment as vice president, one could make the
case that she is largely misunderstood. The vice president is a politically
savvy person of truly superior intelligence, as she has clearly shown
throughout her political career in California—both as a firebrand prosecutor
and as state attorney general—and as a Senator for that state. Personally, I
see her as a very sharp and capable poker player as well.
A case in point. During the presidential
primary debates for the 2020 election, as Joe Biden’s rival on the debate
stage, she did the unthinkable and challenged him on his stellar record as a
civil rights activist. She made it personal as well as political. Harris
challenged Biden, saying that she wanted to make a point on “the issue of
race.” She then prefaced her remarks by saying that she didn’t believe him to
be a racist, but quickly went on to criticize him for making “very hurtful”
statements about how he had worked with segregationist senators in opposition
during the nineteen-seventies and eighties to a federal busing mandate.
Biden had made his comments in the context
of his being someone who knew how to work across the aisle in Congress as a
means to an end, even when in general disagreement with the other lawmakers’
politics. But Harris demonstrated that politics were about more than policy
victories. They had real consequences that affected real people. And to bring
the point home, she said, “There was a little girl in California who was a part
of the second class to integrate her public schools and she was bused to school
every day. And that little girl was me.”
The statement caught Biden off guard and
forced him into a half-truth when he countered saying his stance was being
mischaracterized, adding that, “I did not oppose busing in America. What I
opposed is busing ordered by the Department of Education.” In the days that
followed, the statement was fact-checked repeatedly and found to be false. In
point of fact, the record showed that Senator Biden had been a staunch opponent
of busing on principle, and not simply when ordered by the federal government. The
exchange had served Harris well and showed her to be a force to be reckoned
with.
Of course, all of that is anathema to the openly
racist and sexist MAGA Republican leadership. Just forty-eight hours after Joe
Biden withdrew from the race and threw all of his support behind the vice
president, Harris has come under both racist and sexist attacks. The GOP dog
whistle for these attacks as voiced by Texas Republican Senator Chip Roy, for
instance, is DEI. Many of us would have to rush to the Urban Dictionary to even
know what the initials stood for—diversity, equity, and inclusion. Used in the
best sense of the term, DEI refers to policies which seek to promote the fair
treatment and full participation of all people, particularly groups who have
historically been underrepresented or subject to discrimination on the basis of
identity or disability. But in the mouths of MAGA racists like Roy, it becomes
a racist and sexist epithet.
Tennessee GOP Representative Tim Burchett
got even uglier a day after Biden backed the VP, not only calling her “a DEI
hire”, but also recalling that President Biden had said he would pick a black
woman as his running mate and wondering aloud, “What about white females? What
about any other group?” This could no longer be referred to as a “dog whistle”.
This was venturing to say the blatant racist part out loud. And by mentioning
white “females”, he was also seeking to lower the status of women to their gender
identity rather than seeing them as persons or individuals of equal weight in government
and all other walks of life.
On X, Burchett tweeted: “The incompetency
level is at an all-time high in Washington. The media propped up this
president, lied to the American people for three years, and then dumped him for
our DEI vice president.”
Doubling down when questioned by CNN’s
Manu Raju, he said, “Biden said he’s gonna hire a Black female for vice
president. What about white females? What about any other group? When you go
down that route, you take mediocrity and that’s what they have right now as a
vice president.” He reiterated on questioning by Raju that he believed Kamala
Harris to be, basically, a token black as vice president, saying, “One hundred
percent she was a DEI hire.”
Ex-president Donald Trump himself piled on
at his Doral Golf Club in Florida, saying that “If Joe had picked someone
halfway competent, they would have bounced him from office years ago. But they
can’t because she’s their second choice.”
There is really no way to see any of this
as any less shocking and egregious than it clearly is. But the impropriety of
this sort of racist and sexist talk is rendered even more ironic and
hypocritical considering that Trump’s own pick for the VP slot, J.D. Vance, has
all of about five minutes of political experience. And his only claim to fame is
of having been a failed hedge fund manager and having written a book about his
hillbilly upbringing that caught on and became a bestseller. Somewhere along
the line, he met up with far-right-wing tech-billionaire Peter Thiel, who
became his political mentor and financial backer, and the rest is history—five minutes
of history.
Trump clearly picked Vance because he was
sure to appeal to the former president’s far-right, white, evangelical base, not
because of any political or technical skill sets he brought to the table. So
questioning the current vice president’s political background and acumen seems
quite rich coming from Trump, whose own pick is so incredibly incompetent to
serve. Especially if the Trump ticket should win the election only to have
something happen to Trump while in office that requires his vice president to
stand in for him. If Trump was, is and always will be a government outsider who
plays everything by ear and based on his gut, Vance is a total novice, who
basically hasn’t the slightest idea how the world works.
It seems that in the ever more
authoritarianized and dominant MAGA wing of the GOP, Vice President Harris’s career as a renowned,
high-profile prosecutor, as the attorney general of the most populous and most
politically and economically powerful state in the union, as a senator for that
state, and as vice president to a man who has had one of the longest and most
storied careers in American politics are insufficient credentials to keep the Alt-Right
from characterizing her as anything but “a black female” and “a DEI hire.”
Fortunately, Harris’s stellar education, long political experience, maturity, poise,
ethics and intelligence are far more than enough to render such
characterizations ridiculous. This is especially true considering the
incredibly dubious credentials of the two men she and her ticket-mate will be
running against—one a convicted felon and insurrectionist, and the other an
absolute newbie in the world of politics.
In short, a prosecutor running against a
criminal should make for an interesting election.
Contrary to what many critics have suggested,
Harris has also played her cards incredibly well and close to her vest as vice
president. She has been there in whatever capacity the president has needed her
to be, offering her intelligence, experience and hard work to help find
solutions to problems the administration has sought to remedy. The rest of the
time she has been a friend and close collaborator to the president, a sounding
board for his ideas, treating him with utmost respect, and doing her job
without ever seeking to second-guess or overshadow the office Biden holds.
In her role as vice president, she has
taken a major political risk by taking charge of anything the president pushed
her way. Thus, she found herself overseeing the thorny issues of COVID
response, voting rights, women’s reproductive rights and civil rights in
general. She was also handed the explosive package of issues surrounding the border
crisis. This is the issue on which the GOP is now seeking to hammer her, despite
the fact that, thanks to actions taken by the Biden administration, border crossings
are significantly lower than previous highs. Furthermore, the GOP is seeking to
saddle Harris with the blame for continuing difficulties at the Mexican border,
when the remaining crisis is largely of the Republicans’ own doing. That is to say,
Donald Trump’s doing.
It is public knowledge that the Biden
administration—to a large extent thanks to the brokering efforts of Kamala
Harris—managed to cobble together an historic bipartisan legislative package to
effectively deal with the border crisis. But that deal never made it into law
for one simple reason. Donald Trump kicked over the negotiating table,
badgering his MAGA lawmakers into backing the GOP away from the deal. He made
no bones about the fact that such a deal could very well prove successful, and
he didn’t want to “give” that sort of win to the Biden administration, basically
telling GOP lawmakers to hold off until he was president again so he could take
the victory lap for a border security package created through the efforts of
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris and the most reasonable lawmakers in the GOP.
Most important of all, however, has been
the ethical capital that Harris has displayed as VP. She has shown unbending
loyalty to the president throughout recent months in which he has been
increasingly criticized for what people on both sides of the aisle have seen as
his failing physical strength and mental acuity. No matter how politically
devastating the attacks have been, the presidency and vice-presidency have
demonstrated a monolithic front against all comers. In other words, despite
having a shot at the presidency within her grasp, Harris has shown herself to
be of the highest political and ethical pedigree, a person of honor and loyalty
despite her soaring political and intellectual acumen, and her clear desire to
serve as president of the United States.
That said, however, she also has been
savvy enough to have her ducks in a row if called upon to serve, and within
twenty-four hours of President Biden’s decision to withdraw from the 2024 race,
she had consolidated overwhelming support among nearly all major figures in the
Democratic Party and had garnered such incredible grassroots support that her
campaign raised an all-time record eighty million dollars in a single day. This
stupendous show of support has left Democrats who were pushing for a “mini-primary”
dangling, with their feet kicking in the air. And it has rendered utterly
ridiculous and caricaturesque the tentative challenge by Independent (quasi-Republican)
Senator Joe Machin, who said he might re-register as a Democrat and go head-to-head
with Harris, whom he considers “far-left”, which just goes to show how
extremely far-right he is, despite presuming to call himself a centrist.
Sadder still was Manchin’s apparent
ignorance of the fact that this election has become one in which age has loomed
as a major issue, with the vast majority of Americans—and especially America’s
youth—feeling discouraged that they were once again being given a binary boomer
choice between two men who would either be, or would become, octogenarians
while in office. Joe Manchin, who will turn seventy-seven next month, falls
squarely within this rejected profile as well. This also casts a funereal pall
over the third-party bid of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., himself a septuagenarian,
much of whose momentum has been based on the otherwise unsavory choice between
Trump and Biden, especially since RFK Jr.’s campaign sounds basically like MAGA
without Trump.
In the end, after months in which the
shadow of an election where—despite President Biden’s extraordinary service to
the country—the best voters could hope for was “the lesser of two evils,” Americans
have been in a somber and hopeless mood. But with the arrival of Kamala Harris
on the electoral scene, the clouds have suddenly started to lift for both
Democrats and a large segment of independent voters. The political scene is
being very quickly injected with a new dose of energy and promise. There is now
a very genuine choice between more of the chaotic, hate-filled Trump era that
we know will just be more of the same, and a new political energy led by a
mature and experienced, yet still young and dynamic presidential candidate
whose entire career has been devoted to democracy and the rule of law.
Suddenly, Donald Trump is the only grumpy
ol’ man in the race. And MAGA’s barrage of open insults, racism and sexism
demonstrates just how suddenly off-kilter and desperate they are.