President Joe Biden...to be or not to be |
Okay, let me preface any
further remarks with this: As long as the Republicans’ opposition candidate to
the incumbent president remains Donald J. Trump—court-confirmed sexual predator,
thirty-four-count felon, and the man who sought to overthrow the government and
remain in power as an ad hoc ruler—the only option open to anyone who gives a
damn about the future of American democracy will be the man or woman running
against him. The salient point of this upcoming election isn’t a choice between
candidates. It is a choice between democracy and authoritarian rule. (I defy
you to read Project 2025—aka Agenda 47—and tell me I’m wrong).
The truth is, if President Joe Biden remains the candidate for 2024, he is all we’ve got. Perhaps he’ll surprise us all by proving to be an even better leader in his second term than in his first, since he’ll no longer be distracted by the perpetual campaign cycle which is, unfortunately, part and parcel of the contemporary political scene. But even if he isn’t, let me make this clear as my unwavering stance: Joe Biden spark-shower short-circuited is a better president than a seditious and felonious Donald Trump and his band of neo-fascists. In fact, Joe Biden in a coma is better than the unspeakable alternative.
For any true patriot, any
person who cares about preserving the two-and-a-half-century democratic
traditions of the United States of America, Donald Trump is simply not a viable
alternative. On the contrary, he is a clear and present danger to American
democracy. If you don’t believe me, read Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, or watch the excellent TV series of the same
name, and then read the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025. Atwood couldn’t
have written Agenda 47 better (or worse, as it were). In fact, it’s almost as
if the Heritage Foundation had used Atwood’s novel as a blueprint for the kind
of dystopian, post-democratic world they wish to create.
That said, however, Mike Moore, typically, with much less diplomacy than I or anyone else has applied, is telling it like it is. In an interview on MSNBC, Moore said, “The problem here is that I think there’s a form of elder abuse going on here, where the Democratic Party and the people that are part of the apparatus are pushing and pushing and pushing him (Biden) to stay.” Moore, who himself is seventy, expanded on the image of “elder abuse”, saying that “watching the debate…was heartbreaking.” He went on to say, “Imagine that was your father up there…Why isn’t anybody doing anything? Why did they do it? Why did they even let him go out on the stage in this condition? Who was looking out for him? Who’s looking out for him right now?”
These are all questions
I’ve been asking myself as well. There are many, myself included, who are being
perceived as attacking the president over his disastrous debate performance, when
what we are instead asking is if the president was in the shape he was in, why
on earth did his campaign team, his closest aides, and indeed the first lady,
not say he was too ill to go on, and simply cancel or postpone the event?
Putting the party’s campaign ahead of the president’s health and welfare is
precisely how we got into this mess in the first place, and it has been a
disservice to both the president and to the Democratic presidential campaign. So
it is the campaign and the party that are to blame. Not the president, who,
through no fault of his own, was in no condition to totter out onto that stage.
Documentary filmmaker Michael Moore |
The NATO allies view with
horror a second Trump presidency. It nearly sank NATO the first time around,
and now after three and a half years of working with Biden to rebuild that
seventy-five-year-old alliance that Trump so undermined, they hear the former
president saying that Russian dictator Vladimir Putin should do “whatever the
hell he wants to” in Ukraine. European leaders don’t believe Putin will stop
with Ukraine. So hearing that, they can only see Trump 2.0 as not only a threat
to American democracy, but to a free and democratic Europe as well.
In that sense, President
Biden made a miraculous comeback from the debate episode when he this past week
hosted the annual NATO conference, this time in Washington. By all accounts,
the president was on his game, greeting world leaders, holding talks on
Ukraine, and handling other weighty topics with knowledge and aplomb. This was
President Biden in his element, since there has probably been no other
president in living memory with such an intimate working knowledge of
international affairs. But even at his current best, there was a glaring
disconnect when he spoke of the courage of Ukraine’s President Volodymyr
Zelensky in resisting Russian invasion, and then introduced him to the
conference as “President Putin”.
I watched the president’s
post-NATO summit press conference last evening. As I did, I think I probably
felt like many other viewers who have long admired President Biden, based on
his half-century in government and lawmaking, and think of him as the leader
who stopped Donald Trump and saved American democracy from dissolution. That is
to say, I found myself agitated and sitting on the edge of my seat, hoping with
all my heart that he would be able to show the country and the world that the
issues that affected him at the debate were merely the product of overwork and
exhaustion, not of any permanent cognitive failing.
The other feeling that I
had was one of growing irritation that the president was having to field
question after question regarding his fitness to continue serving for another
four years, when the man he is running against is a morally bankrupt, grossly
perverse, criminally unfit insurrectionist with a now well-documented
authoritarian agenda for the future of the United States. I was thinking that
President Biden was doing well, sounding strong and confident, despite knowing
that his debate performance has placed him under a magnifying glass.
The president worked so
hard to allay all of the concerns that have swirled about him since the debate,
and did such a good job at it, that there was a moment when I asked myself if
we hadn’t all just panicked and made a mountain out of a molehill. But then it
happened. In answer to a query about whether he was confident in Vice President
Harris’s ability to lead the country if, for some reason, he couldn’t.
"Look,” the president responded, “I wouldn't have picked Vice President
Trump to be vice president if she was not qualified to be president.”
As a veteran newsman, I knew that the press would jump on such a short circuit with both feet. It was what everyone was waiting for as they listened, reconfirmation of their growing suspicions that Biden’s mind was indeed addled. I wasn’t wrong. The gaffe has been in headlines all day today. But they weren’t wrong either. The error went right by the president. He never caught himself, never self-corrected. To their credit, the reporters who asked the President about his mental health afterwards, never mentioned the fact that, right there, while he was defending his fitness to serve, he had called his own vice president by his bitter rival’s surname.
Perhaps this gaffe
wouldn’t have been quite as noticeable if it hadn’t followed another
crossed-wire incident earlier in the week. I’m referring to when, in an
interview with Philadelphia-based WURD Radio anchor Andrea Lawful-Sanders the
president said, “By the way, I’m proud to be, as I said, the first vice
president, first black woman, to serve with a black president.” Obviously, he
meant that he had been the VP of the first black president and that he was the
first president to appoint a black woman as his running mate and vice
president. But it came out as a brain salad.
Leaving that aspect aside
for a moment, however, those of us who are capable of looking at this from a
human as well as political viewpoint are heartbroken to see how a man with an
admirable and uncommon half-century political career, who preceded his own term
in the Oval Office with an eight-year stint as vice president to one of the
most popular leaders in US history, is being politically manhandled, humiliated
and raked over the coals, essentially, for being unwell, instead of being
placed under the care of the elite teams of physicians that, as president, he
has at his disposal.
Unfortunately, these
meltdowns didn’t take place in the privacy of President Biden’s own home in
Wilmington, Delaware. They happened in the homes of many millions of Americans.
And no one with any experience in these matters believes that his shocking
debate performance was a one-off, or “a bad night”, as the campaign is spinning
it. Rather, to anyone who has known someone who has suffered through such old-age
problems is bound to feel that it is likely only one in a series of frightening
moments.
Bernie Sanders |
Like Moore, I don’t
believe age alone is a disqualifying factor. There are people whose mental
acuity and physical resilience continue to be more than acceptable at the
president’s age. For instance, anyone seeing and hearing Vermont’s Independent
Senator Bernie Sanders—Biden’s most successful liberal contender for the
presidency and later staunch supporter—would still have trouble making a case
that he is too old to remain in politics, despite the fact that he is eighty-two.
But by the time one reaches, as I myself have, one’s mid to late seventies,
continuing to function like a well-oil machine becomes less and less of a
certainty. It becomes the thing you fear.
Still, there are
incredible cases, like that of renowned linguist, philosopher, sociologist and
democratic activist Noam Chomsky who, at least until a very recent stroke,
continued to have one of the most brilliant minds in America, even into his
nineties. I’m thinking too of renowned newsman Robert Cox, the man who was my
mentor when I started out in journalism fifty years ago this year, and who, at
a lucid ninety, continues to travel internationally and to accept public
speaking engagements and TV interviews in his second language. But these tend
to be admirable and enviable exceptions to the rule.
As usual, Michael Moore has jabbed his finger into a gaping open sore that many others are trying hard to ignore. That’s what he does. He tells “the awful truth”—which was the name of his riveting and sometimes hilarious investigative TV show on the Bravo Network, prior to the fame he has accrued as a brilliant documentary film-maker. The truths that most people would rather not hear, he tells and demonstrates in such a way that, like a train wreck you can’t turn away from despite your best efforts, he forces you to face “the awful truth”.
While some people close
to President Biden, including First Lady Jill Biden, might see as traitors the—up
to now—seventeen Democrat members of Congress who have openly asked the
president to step down, or other highly influential Democrats like former
President Barack Obama or retired House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who are
reportedly discussing the issue in private. But they are not. Most of them have
both the well-being of the president and the well-being of the nation in mind.
In the end, the most
patriotic mission that the president has right now is to ensure that Donald
Trump never again sets foot in the White House. And if that means stepping down
and handing over the mantel to a more viable candidate, then that is clearly
what he needs to do.
2 comments:
As an eighty-six year-old who sometimes has to search for a word that used to come easily I empathize with President Biden. I also know that throughout my lifetime, occasionally a totally inappropriate or random word used to drop into my conversation, particularly when my attention was focused in more than one direction. I also know that after long jet flights my mental focus is not my best. All these were part of what we saw in the debate. Additional pressure has not helped. We still have a president who is by far the better candidate in terms of knowledge and experience than his challenger. We still have a vice-president whom we have already trusted for four years to be capable of stepping in at a moments notice. The alternative is the candidate whose history and current behavior mark him as unfit for the office and whose choice of V-P is still unknown but the list of possibilities does not show expertise in foreign policy. With either candidate, the potential for the 25th amendment is very real. There is only one best choice in this race and that is Biden-Harris.
Thanks for the thoughtful comment, Jane. Clearly, I empathize as well. That said, is the president in any condition to continue for another four years, no matter how great his commitment to democracy might be, and can he actually still beat Donald Trump? A negative response to either of those questions is much more consequential than the loyalty and admiration any of us might feel toward such a respected career statesman. This time, losing doesn't simply mean that the other party will rule for four years. It very likely means an end to democracy and the beginning of a dark and dystopian era in the once great history of the United States.
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